The Tenth Appeal
This is a true-crime story that Alex wrote for The New Yorker in 1993, but that was never published. Most writers have a story or two that “got away,” and this is one of those that Alex thinks holds up over time.
“The Tenth Appeal” is about the once-famous, emotionally-fraught case of the New York Three — three members of the Black Panther Party who had been convicted of murdering of two police officers in Harlem in 1971 — and their appeal for a retrial based on newly-discovered evidence. The case, known as NEWKILL (for New York Killing), involved President Nixon and J. Edgar Hoover, and was the subject of a controversial book (written by the prosecutor, Robert Tannenbaum, later the mayor of Beverly Hills) and a movie (starring James Woods and Yaphet Kotto), both of which were called “Badge of the Assassin.”
The case remains well-known in law-enforcement circles, and, as the accompanying clips and links show, it is still capable of raising strong emotions from both sides — more than thirty years after the fact.
Read Article
This article is available for you to read a PDF file.Here is the working galley of “The Tenth Appeal” from March 1993. The pages are set in the distinctive New Yorker font, and include the editor’s queries; most, though not all, of the story’s facts have been checked.
Download PDF file. 2.3 Mb download
New York Times of May 13, 1993.
James Woods editorial, NY Post, January 19, 2004
NY Post op-ed, January 19, 2004
Herman Bell denied parole, February 2004Related Articles:
Ex-panthers Lose Retrial Motion
May 13, 1993
Download PDF file. 401 Kb download
Let This Vermon Rot
Download PDF file. 136 Kb download
The Battle of Herman Bell
Download PDF file. 124 Kb download
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"Both drought and flood are on the rise, and Alex Prud'homme, in this fine new account, helps you understand why. We've taken the planet's hydrology for granted for the 10,000 years of human civilization; that's a luxury we can no longer afford."
- Bill McKibben, author of The End of Nature and Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet; founder of 350.org
"By illuminating the central issues -- water quality, water quantity, ownership, waste, infrastructure -- through the tales of individuals who wrestle with them, Alex Prud'homme makes a vast and desperately serious topic flow beautifully through the rocks and hard places that our planet is caught between"
- John Seabrook, staff writer at The New Yorker and author of Flash of Genius
“The problem of water quantity, quality and use are upon us. Alex Prud’homme’s book identifies some of the culprits, including us inattentive citizens and the combination of regulations and markets needed to make clean water usable and available in the Twenty-first Century. This book should wake you up.”
- William D. Ruckelshaus, EPA Administrator under presidents Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan
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Phone: (310) 288-4545
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Reporting for the book I traveled from inside New York City’s new Water Tunnel No. 3 (the $6 billion water tunnel being drilled 600 feet beneath Manhattan) to the disputed aquifers of Poland Springs, ME, the “intersex” fish and Dead Zone of the Chesapeake Bay, poisoned wells and flooding rivers in the Midwest, the “water-energy nexus” in oil and gas fields, the failed levees of Katrina-wracked New Orleans, drought-threatened Las Vegas, California’s vulnerable San Francisco Delta, and up to the resource wars of the Alaskan Peninsula.Fan Page





