Death Angels
ConradMcKelly
あらすじ
Death Angels: San Francisco's Zebra Murders, 1973-1974 In the autumn of 1973, a city that prided itself on tolerance and progressive idealism became the hunting ground for one of the most organized and ideologically driven murder campaigns in American history. Over one hundred and seventy-nine days, a cell of radicalized men calling themselves Death Angels - operating out of a moving company on Market Street and drawing their theological warrant from a distorted interpretation of Nation of Islam doctrine - killed at least fifteen people and wounded eight others on the streets of San Francisco. Their victims were chosen for one reason only: the color of their skin. Death Angels tells the full story of the Zebra murders - the terror, the investigation, the constitutional crisis of Operation Zebra's mass racial profiling, and the year-long trial that sent four men to prison for life. Drawing on the trial record of People v. Cooks, the memoir of the investigation's lead detective Prentice Earl Sanders, and Clark Howard's foundational account, Conrad McKelly reconstructs not only the crimes but the city they nearly broke: its empty streets, its fractured institutions, its slow and incomplete recovery. This is narrative history at its most urgent - a case that anticipated every debate about domestic terrorism, racial profiling, and civil liberties that America is still having today.