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Paperback Last Man Standing: The Tragedy and Triumph of Geronimo Pratt Book

ISBN: 0385493681

ISBN13: 9780385493680

Last Man Standing: The Tragedy and Triumph of Geronimo Pratt

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Book Overview

With the epic scope ofA Civil Action,Last Man Standingis an unforgettable chronicle of the twenty-seven-year struggle to break a conspiratorial abuse of power and free one of America's most famous... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

wonderful

This is probably the best book I've ever read. It's almost impossible to imagine the horror this man endured. The book moves the reader to tears.

Tragedy and Triumph

This is certainly one of the best books I've ever read. Jack Olsen did an outstanding job of weaving together all the facts in a highly readable narrative of one of the most blatant chapters of injustice in 20th century legal history. I already had considerable knowledge of the case before I read this book. In the early 1990s, the case was being publicized again. I was a reporter for Wave Newspapers in Los Angeles and journeyed with a co-worker to the state prison at Tehachapi where Pratt was then being held and we interviewed him. I then wrote several stories about his situation. Pratt was imprisoned for 27 years for a crime he clearly did not commit. The prosecution was part of the FBI's notorious COINTELPRO operation-essentially a war against numerous dissenting groups in the 1960s including the Black Panther Party. As Olsen makes clear, in Pratt's case this also involved LAPD and the L.A. County District Attorney's office. Pratt was convicted of the December 1968 Santa Monica tennis-court murder of school teacher Caroline Olsen. There was considerable doubt about the credibility of key-witness Julius Butler, who had a previous falling out with Pratt, and was later proven to be an informant. (When I was a reporter, I actually contacted Butler. He yelled that he was "tired of this" and hung up on me.) Plus, numerous other Panthers could have confirmed he was at a meeting in Oakland the day of the murder but most wouldn't testify because of a severe split in the ranks. Appeal after appeal was turned down despite more and more evidence being discovered pointing to Pratt's innocence. In all probability the crime was committed by two low-level Panther members to obtain money for drugs. That ties in with the only complaint I would make about Olsen's book. He really glossed over the fact that the FBI and police campaign against the Panthers (which I am not defending) was not just because of their militant political rhetoric. They had a lot of criminal types within the group. Regardless, this is an extraordinary book about another era and the governmental abuses of that time. Johnnie Cochran redeemed himself in my eyes by getting Pratt released. That was after he was involved in a travesty of justice, himself, by getting O.J. Simpson off. But that's another story.

Last man Standing Stands Alone

When the Black Panther Party for Self Defense burst upon the social and political scene in 1967 it was populated by some of the most colourful and frightening personalities ever to emerge in American history. In the maelstrom that followed "Panthers" would die, police would be shot and a nation would be confronted with the image of black leather-clad "Panthers" Huey Newton and Bobby Seale, berets askew, shouting "All power to the people" and brandishing guns. Black Panther "Minister of Information" Eldridge Cleaver would travel to Moscow, Libya and Syria seeking support for "the black people's struggle in the US" and the FBI's Herbert Hoover would launch his organization's most secret, widespread and extralegal program; COINTELPRO, in an attempt to destroy the "threat" of black nationalism. At the virtual epicentre of all of this stood Geronimo Pratt, a soldier in the Black Panthers who not only played a key role in the development of the party and its subsequent notoriety but perhaps also paid the steepest price for his involvement. In Last Man Standing-The Tragedy and Triumph of Geronimo Pratt author Jack Olsen outlines Pratt's involvement in the Black Panther Party, chronicles some of the day to day realities of living and working within "The Party" and then details how Pratt was accused and ultimately convicted of the murder of a woman during a robbery. The bulk of the book is then concerned with the efforts of Pratt's ever-changing legal team (including the infamous Johnnie Cochran) to prove Pratt's innocence. Last Man Standing is a well-written, well documented book which manages to maintain its objectivity while discussing a subject that obviously has significant political overtones. Olsen deserves credit for his refusal to engage in hyperbole and for refusing to gloss over the less attractive aspects of the Black Panther Party (BPP). Olsen, and by extension Pratt himself don't make apologies for what the BPP was, or what was done in its name. But then again the book isn't really so much about the BPP as it is about one man (Pratt) and his struggle to clear his name. In recounting this struggle the book really comes in to its own. Olsen manages to compress a long timeline and a plethora of events into a compelling and informative narrative without any obvious oversights. More importantly, in his discussion of the people on the "other side" of the equation Olsen -like, we are told, Pratt himself- shows compassion and objectivity. Not once does Olsen sink to the crass generalizations and petty characterizations which are so often characteristic of books which chronicle the struggle of individuals against "the establishment" Make no mistake however, "the establishment" is present in this book. The reader is guided through the labyrinthine court proceedings not only against the charge itself but also against the California Department of Corrections for its treatment of Pratt while in prison, and ultimately the FBI for its surreptitious inv

An excellent book.

I just read the book in one sitting on a flight from San Francisco to Sydney. The book held my interest and kept me awake. I have a new appreciation for life from the perspective of a black man, especially several decades ago. Also I no longer think Johnnie Cochrane is a worm - he comes through as one of the heroes in the book, an the phrase "if the glove doesn't fit ..." is not there at all. I found the book moving, especially at the end when Geronimo sees his mother for the first time in over 20 years. And I found it inspiring, that folks hung in to battle for over 20 years against an injustice and they finally prevailed.

Pratt book is dead-on

I crossed paths with author Jack Olsen a few years ago, when he was researching his book, "Hastened to the Grave: The Gypsy Murder Investigation," about a suspected serial murder case I covered as a reporter. He interviewed me, checked my documents, and came up with many more on his own. I was impressed by his thoroughness, and when I learned he was writing about framed former Black Panther Party leader Geronimo Pratt, I decided to not only pick up the book as a good backgrounder on the case, but to write a profile for my newspaper, The San Jose Mercury News (the piece has yet to be published), about how Pratt's been spending his time as a free man after years behind bars as a political prisoner, convicted wrongfully by a government set-up. Evidence now strongly suggests he was framed because of his radical politics.A couple of weeks ago, I traveled to Morgan City, LA, Pratt's hometown, to interview him. He's read Olsen's book and said its facts were dead-on, a good testimony of accuracy for a work of non-fiction. I also found no discrepencies when I interviewed other key players.I live in Oakland, where the Panthers got their start. But the story's chilling message should resonate far beyond my community -- it's a story about how unchecked local and federal police authority corrupt democracy, about judges too frightened of the FBI to carry out their duties, about a man unbent by his time in "the hole" -- a hellish box where Pratt spent eight of his prison years -- and of the selfless lawyers who fought to win his freedom.Defense attorney Johnnie Cochran of O.J. Simpson fame was one of Pratt's two key lawyers throughout this time. And, even though my belief is that Simpson was guilty, I can see -- after knowing that Cochran had to battle his way through government conspiracies and coverups in the Pratt case -- why he might actually think Simpson was framed.Great book, important book. And, what the hell, it's also a fun read.

The truth of the american justice system

The story of geronimo pratt and his tragic and finally triumphant journey through the american criminal justice system is a classic story of the power of the human spirit and the political and racial injustice of our criminal justice system. I know something about geronimo's case and our criminal justice system: I have been a criminal defense attorney for 26 years and one of geronimo's attorneys for 28 years, beginning working on his case while in law school.Jack Olsen has captured the truth, horror and ultimate victory of this case . The story is not just geronimos; it is the story of many people who fought for his freedom beause of their belief in justice. The book should be read by everyone who is interested in our legal and political system; it should be read in high schools and colleges and law schools so that young people can get an honest view of what can happen in this country when police get too much power, when we let someones political views or race determine whether they are a "criminal".Jack Olsen worked for three years to create this book. The result is a brilliant book that is engrossing and that once again proves that truth can be stranger and ultimately more uplifting than fiction.
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