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Gaithersburg
Book Festival

May 17, 2025

10am – 6pm

Bohrer Park


Barbara Bradley Hagerty

Latest Title: Bringing Ben Home: A Murder, a Conviction, and the Fight to Redeem American Justice
Bringing Ben Home: A Murder, a Conviction, and the Fight to Redeem American Justice

How states are making their legal systems more equitable, seen through the story of a Black man falsely imprisoned for thirty years for murder.

In 1987, Ben Spencer, a twenty-two-year-old Black man from Dallas, was convicted of murdering white businessman Jeffrey Young—a crime he didn’t commit. From the day of his arrest, Spencer insisted that it was “an awful mistake.” The Texas legal system didn’t see it that way. It allowed shoddy police work, paid witnesses, and prosecutorial misconduct to convict Spencer of murder, and it ignored later efforts to correct this error. The state’s bureaucratic intransigence caused Spencer to spend more than half his life in prison.

Eventually independent investigators, new witness testimony, the foreman of the jury that convicted him, and a new Dallas DA convinced a Texas judge that Spencer had nothing to do with the killing, and in 2021 he was released from prison.

As Spencer’s fight to clear himself demonstrates, our legal systems are broken: expedience is more important than the truth. That is starting to change as states across the country implement new efforts to reduce wrongful convictions, and one of the states leading the way is Texas.

Award-winning journalist Barbara Bradley Hagerty has spent years digging into this issue, and she has immersed herself in Spencer’s case. She has combed police files and court records, interviewed dozens of witnesses, and had extensive conversations with Spencer, and in Bringing Ben Home she threads together two narratives: how an innocent Black man got caught up in and couldn’t escape a legal system that refused to admit its mistakes; and what Texas and other states are doing to address wrongful convictions to make the legal process more equitable for everyone.

By turns fascinating and enraging, personal and provocative, Bringing Ben Home is the powerful story of one innocent man who refused to admit that he was guilty of murder, and how his plight became part of a paradigm shift in how the legal system thinks about innocence as it institutes new methods to overturn wrongful convictions to better protect people like Ben Spencer.

About Barbara Bradley Hagerty

Barbara Bradley Hagerty is a New York Times best-selling author and an accomplished journalist. She is a contributing writer to The Atlantic and her work has appeared in The Washington Post, Christian Science Monitor, Los Angeles Times and PBS, among other outlets. She was a longtime correspondent for NPR, where she covered the Justice Department and religion, earning her several national awards for her reporting, including the Gracie Award (twice), National Headliner Award, the Religion News Writers Award, and the Dupont and Overseas Press Club Awards. Her profound and intimate engagement with religion, the law and the U.S. legal system led her to the story of Ben Spencer, a Black man from Dallas falsely imprisoned for more than 30 years for murder. Barbara investigated the case for The Atlantic and discovered new evidence of his innocence. Haunted by this innocent man serving a life sentence because he wouldn’t admit to a crime he didn’t commit, she was compelled to return to Dallas, immerse herself in Spencer’s case and bring it to people’s attention. In the process, she tells the larger story of injustice and the innocence movement. Now Hagerty brings her impeccable reporting, incisive writing and compassion to this astonishing new book, “Bringing Ben Home: A Murder, A Conviction, and the Fight to Redeem American Justice.”

 X (Twitter): @barbarabradleyh