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My Midnight Years: Surviving Jon Burge's Police Torture Ring and Death Row

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

My Midnight Years: Surviving Jon Burge's Police Torture Ring and Death Row

Contributors:

By (Author) Ronald Kitchen
By (author) Thai Jones
By (author) Logan McBride

ISBN:

9781613737668

Publisher:

Chicago Review Press

Imprint:

Chicago Review Press

Publication Date:

7th November 2018

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Biography: general

Dewey:

364.66092

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

256

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 228mm, Spine 22mm

Weight:

548g

Description

In the Margins Book Award Winner

Ronald Kitchen was walking to buy cookies for his young son on a summer evening in 1988 when Chicago detectives picked him up for questioning. As the officers car headed toward the precinct, the twenty-two-year-old called out the window to his family, Ill be back in forty-five minutes.
It took him twenty-one years to make it home.
Kitchen was beaten and tortured by notorious police commander Jon Burge and his cronies until finally confessing to a gruesome quintuple homicide he did not commit. Convicted of murder and sentenced to die, he spent the next two decades in prisonincluding a dozen years on death rowbefore at last winning his release and exoneration.
Written with passion and defiance, My Midnight Years is more than just a memoirbecause Ronald Kitchens ordeal is not his alone. Kitchen was only one of scores of victims of Jon Burge and his notorious Midnight Crew, a group of rogue police detectives who spent decades terrorizing, brutalizing, and incarcerating men118 have come forward so farin Chicagos African American communities.
Overcoming overwhelming difficulties, Kitchen cofounded the Death Row 10 from his maximum security cellblock. Together, these men fought to expose the grave injustices that led to their wrongful convictions. The Death Row 10 appeared on 60 Minutes II, Nightline, Oprah, and Geraldo Rivera and, with the help of lawyers and activists, were instrumental in turning the tide against the death penalty in Illinois. Kitchen was finally exonerated in 2009 and filed a high-profile lawsuit against the Chicago Police Department, Jon Burge, Mayor Richard Daley, and the Cook County states attorney.
Kitchens story is outrageous and heartbreaking. Largely absent from social justice narratives are the testimonies of the victims themselves. The atrocities of the Midnight Crew were brought to light through Kitchens actions, and he is a rare survivor who has turned his suffering into a public cause. He is poised to become a powerful spokesperson who will play a major part in the ongoing discussion of institutional racism.

Reviews

"Ronald Kitchen's story is scalding, emotional, and ultimately redemptivea descent into hell with a happy ending. My Midnight Years should be read by all Americans, but especially those who still live in denial about police corruption and institutional racism. Read this book, then pass it on to a friend, neighbor, sibling, or coworker; it will open eyes and raise the ire of anyone who cares about criminal justice in the United States." T. J. ENGLISH, author of The Savage City , The Corporation , and Havana Nocturne
"Decades of police torture and prosecutorial complicity devastated black Chicago and filled Illinois's prisons. In this moving memoir, Ronald Kitchen chronicles what that violence meant for him, his family, and so many others. . . . Don't miss this harrowing, heartbreaking tale of injustice, survival, and resistance." DAN BERGER, author of Captive Nation: Black Prison Organizing in the Civil Rights Era
"Ronald Kitchen not only survived his prison ordeal but describes his experience in moving detail; he has emerged as a strong spokesman against the atrocities of Jon Burge and his Midnight Crew." JEFFREY HAAS, author of The Assassination of Fred Hampton
"Ronald Kitchen's memoir of surviving and resisting racist police torture and thirteen years on death row is maddening and moving. It's hard to read and hard to put down. . . . The full rot of the criminal injustice system is on display here, but Ronnie's stark prose makes us also see the courage and resilience of those on the inside." MARTHA BIONDI, author of The Black Revolution on Campus and To Stand and Fight

Author Bio

Ronald Kitchen was tortured into a false confession and spent two decades in prison. He cofounded the Death Row 10 to fight his conviction and was exonerated in 2009.

Thai Jones is the author of More Powerful than Dynamite and A Radical Line.

Logan McBride has a PhD in American history, specializing in the origins of mass incarceration.

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