Life Sentence by Amy Bell
CBC Books | Posted: May 8, 2023 7:25 PM | Last Updated: May 17, 2023
A nonfiction book about how a father's defense of two murderers ruined his life
On December 15, 1974, when Amy Bell was one year old, the city of Moncton, New Brunswick, was consumed with the search for two missing police officers –Corporal Aurèle Bourgeois and Constable Michael O'Leary. They had been abducted by petty criminals Richard Ambrose and James Hutchison after a kidnapping that had scored them $15,000. The search would lead to a clearing in the woods where the officers were found — murdered, and buried in shallow graves.
Amy's father, Ed Bell, stepped up to defend the killers. His unpopular stance–"every person accused of a crime deserves a defence" — eventually led to the ruin of his career and his marriage, and Amy and her brother lived with the aftereffects: poverty and isolation. Ed Bell never spoke of his involvement in this case. It wasn't until forty-two years later, when he lay dying, that Amy, now a crime historian, stumbled upon a Polaroid photograph of one of the killers among her father's things. That discovery led her on a search for answers.
Life Sentence: How My Father Defended Two Murderers and Lost Himself is a riveting work that fuses personal and criminal justice history to tell the story of a horrific crime and examine its terrible costs. (From Nimbus Limited)
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- Her father defended the men who killed 2 Moncton police officers. It destroyed him — and her family
Amy Bell is a professor of history at Huron University College in London, Ontario. Her research focuses on the history of crime and forensics, Britain during World War II and histories of emotions.