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Crime Fictions

How Racist Lies Built a System of Mass Wrongful Conviction

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Crime Fictions

By: Nicole Gonzalez Van Cleve
Narrated by: Nicole Gonzalez Van Cleve
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About this listen

From award-winning sociologist Nicole Gonzalez Van Cleve comes the first account of mass wrongful conviction in America, indicting a system purposefully designed to ensnare Black youth in order to close cases

Wrongful convictions have long been dismissed as rare exceptions to an otherwise well-oiled criminal justice machine. But, after years spent investigating the largest criminal courthouse in the nation, Chicago’s Cook County, Dr. Nicole Gonzalez Van Cleve began to uncover a far more chilling truth. Wrongful convictions are not accidental, nor anomalous: There are at least hundreds of cases indicting innocent Black youth of crimes they didn’t commit. Arresting and incarcerating kids is the point—the “evidence” is tailored to fit.

In a suspenseful narrative account based on years of interviews, archival research, and the excavation of hidden documents, Gonzalez Van Cleve presents an ironclad “howdunit,” illustrating the steps that our supposed system of justice takes to “find” criminals, coerce confessions, and bury evidence.

A clear pattern emerges as Lee Hester, a disabled fourteen-year-old boy, is branded a “super predator” and convicted of killing his teacher. At just seven years old, Romarr Gipson is charged with a murder that is physically impossible for him to commit. Groups of boys like the Roscetti Four and Dixmoor Five are characterized as “wolf packs” in a pattern that connects them to the Central Park Five. These “crime fictions” are actively produced, perfected by police, enshrined in our legal records by the courts, and reinforced by the media.

Placing the exonerated boys at the center of their own story, Crime Fictions is a devastating, systemic account that leaves us to wonder just how many innocent souls have been claimed by the racist lies police tell.
Corruption & Misconduct Politics & Government Racism & Discrimination Social Sciences

Critic reviews

“At once a beautiful rescuing of so many Black lives that have been irreparably scarred by wrongful accusation and conviction and an unflinching reminder that it is on all of us to insist that this broken system is dismantled, this is a must-read reckoning with past and present alike.”—Heather Ann Thompson, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Fear and Fury and Blood in the Water

“Nicole Gonzalez Van Cleve is a masterful storyteller and a rigorous scholar. Yet again, she has written a book that is deeply moving, brilliant, and righteous. You will never look at the institutions of criminal law the same way again after reading this book.”—Imani Perry, National Book Award–winning author of South to America

Crime Fictions exposes a racist shadow system run by police and enabled by unethical prosecutors, anti-Black stereotypes, and junk science that brands Black children as ‘monsters’ and deliberately convicts them of crimes they did not commit. The stories she tells are searing—almost too painful to read—yet far too urgent to ignore. . . . A compelling call for radical change.”—Dorothy Roberts, author of Killing the Black Body and Torn Apart

“Beautifully written and powerfully argued, Crime Fictions is a devastating indictment of criminal injustice.”—James Forman Jr., Pultizer Prize–winning author of Locking Up Our Own

Crime Fictions is a gripping exposé that reads like a thriller—except every devastating detail is real. Dr. Nicole Gonzalez Van Cleve spent years uncovering a chilling system designed not to find justice, but to lock up children. A landmark work of investigative storytelling, Crime Fictions forces a reckoning with a criminal legal system embedded with racism, corruption, and lies.”—Paul Butler, author of Chokehold
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