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Fifty-Four Days of Terror: The Alton Coleman and Debra Brown Serial Murder Spree
Coles
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Fifty-Four Days of Terror: The Alton Coleman and Debra Brown Serial Murder Spree in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $5.99

Coles
Fifty-Four Days of Terror: The Alton Coleman and Debra Brown Serial Murder Spree in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $5.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
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Fifty-Four Days of Terror: The Alton Coleman and Debra Brown Serial Murder Spree
During fifty-four days in the summer of 1984, Alton Coleman and Debra Brown committed a series of murders across six Midwestern states that would become one of the most intensive multi-state manhunts in American history. This comprehensive historical and criminological analysis examines not only the crimes themselves but the systemic failures that allowed Coleman to escalate from documented sexual predator to serial killer despite eleven years of prior arrests and charges.
Through detailed examination of criminal justice records, trial transcripts, and investigative files, this work explores the psychological dynamics of their killer couple partnership, the tactical paradox of Coleman's disorganized violence combined with sustained mobility, and the structural inequalities that made predominantly African American working-class communities particularly vulnerable to predatory violence. The book analyzes the unprecedented coordination among over fifty law enforcement agencies, the legal complexities of accomplice liability when intellectual disability and psychological domination are factors, and the enduring trauma experienced by survivors and communities across the Midwest.
From Coleman's execution in 2002 to Debra Brown's continued incarceration, this account grapples with difficult questions about justice, responsibility, and the limits of legal resolution while maintaining focus on the eight confirmed victims whose lives were destroyed and the families forever marked by extraordinary violence.
Fifty-Four Days of Terror: The Alton Coleman and Debra Brown Serial Murder Spree
During fifty-four days in the summer of 1984, Alton Coleman and Debra Brown committed a series of murders across six Midwestern states that would become one of the most intensive multi-state manhunts in American history. This comprehensive historical and criminological analysis examines not only the crimes themselves but the systemic failures that allowed Coleman to escalate from documented sexual predator to serial killer despite eleven years of prior arrests and charges.
Through detailed examination of criminal justice records, trial transcripts, and investigative files, this work explores the psychological dynamics of their killer couple partnership, the tactical paradox of Coleman's disorganized violence combined with sustained mobility, and the structural inequalities that made predominantly African American working-class communities particularly vulnerable to predatory violence. The book analyzes the unprecedented coordination among over fifty law enforcement agencies, the legal complexities of accomplice liability when intellectual disability and psychological domination are factors, and the enduring trauma experienced by survivors and communities across the Midwest.
From Coleman's execution in 2002 to Debra Brown's continued incarceration, this account grapples with difficult questions about justice, responsibility, and the limits of legal resolution while maintaining focus on the eight confirmed victims whose lives were destroyed and the families forever marked by extraordinary violence.


















