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Editor’s Note: Joyce Ann Brown will
be available for interviews. Call Elizabeth Smith for more
information.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Sometimes the court system fails miserably
and there is no justice at all. Such is the case with Joyce Ann
Brown, who was wrongly accused and convicted of a crime she did
not commit. She then spent more than nine years in the Texas
Department of Corrections working to secure her release.
Brown will be on The University of Alabama campus on
Thursday, March 6, at 5:30 p.m. in the Ferguson Ballroom to
deliver a lecture titled “Justice Denied.” She is the author
of “Joyce Ann Brown: Justice Denied,” a book that details
her ordeal. A reception and book signing will follow the
colloquium, and copies of her book will be available for sale.
The event is free and open to the public.
Brown will explore how she was convicted of the aggravated
robbery of a fur store in Dallas, Texas, though she worked
across town and several co-workers testified that she was at
work during the commission of the robbery. She’ll detail
prison life, life without family and children and what it was
like to lose her freedom.
Brown’s story of perseverance, hope and joy in the face of
great adversity is unique. Her case has aired on “60
Minutes,” “Donahue” and other television shows. After her
release, Brown founded MASS, Mothers (Fathers) for the
Advancement of Social Systems, in 1993 to help people released
from prison readjust to life without bars.
On Tuesday, March 5, at 7 p.m., Brown will deliver a lecture
at Stillman College in the Birthright Auditorium. For more
information about the Stillman appearance, contact Dr. Chinita
Heard at 205/366-8840.
UA’s lecture is sponsored by the College of Arts &
Sciences diversity committee, department of women’s studies,
department of criminal justice, African American studies,
department of American studies, New College and Stillman College
(Harte Honors College and Pre-Law Program).
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