Redemption In Bryan Stevenson's Just Mercy

Words: 360
Pages: 2

Redemption is one of the central themes of Bryan Stevenson's work Just Mercy. The story focuses around Stevenson's job as an attorney in the South as he tries to rescue unfairly or incorrectly sentenced prisoners, especially those on death row. One of the cases Stevenson argues is on the behalf of Jimmy Dill, a man first charged with aggravated assault for shooting someone when a drug deal went wrong. However, the victim died months later of illness, and Dill was convicted of capital murder, and sentenced to death. But, Dill had an intellectual disability, and Stevenson wanted to present new evidence proving this because the Supreme Court previously banned the execution of people with mental retardation. Every court told Stevenson that it was