Title: Bobby's Trials
Author: Bobby Wilson
Apache Publishing|Amazon|B&N|Kobo
Author: Bobby Wilson
Publication: June 27, 2011
Publisher: Apache Publishing
Source: Author/Publisher
Source: Author/Publisher
Genre: Biography, Memoirs
Audience: 17+
Apache Publishing|Amazon|B&N|Kobo
SYNOPSIS:
A real-life, true crime, memoir about the incredible story of a poor teenage Oklahoma farm boy who was charged with murdering his mother and sister in cold blood and then burning down the family home in a supposed attempt to cover up his crimes and his ten-year court battle to clear his name.
In the early morning hours of June 19, 1963, just four days before he was to leave for basic training, Bobby Wilson was awakened by his mother.
She held a loaded gun to his head and had a crazy, yet familiar, look in her eyes. Alongside his sister, Bobby had suffered her rants for years, but tonight was different. Bobby knew without a doubt that the demons that his mother had struggled with for years had their sights on him.
He realizes he has nowhere to turn and nowhere to run, but he has no idea that the nightmare has just begun. It is a nightmare that changes the course of his life. It is a nightmare that will ultimately take Bobby ten years to wake up from.
Excerpt:
Butch was barking like crazy and trying to lick my face.
Every dog within a mile was barking. I looked around and could see dawn was
breaking and our house was blazing, totally in flames, and so was my pickup
parked nearby. It was a surreal scene.
Suddenly with a loud crash, our brick chimney collapsed onto
the top of the burning house, causing the entire structure to become a roaring
fire pit.
The neighbor helped me to my feet, and I leaned on a fence
post for support. I was shaking badly and confused about everything. I was not
sure if I was just having a terrible nightmare and I would soon wake up. I
don’t remember how it happened, but the next thing I knew, I was here.
Fire trucks and ambulances arrived, and I was taken away to
the hospital where I was treated for smoke inhalation, cuts, and burns on my
face and back. The doctor told the deputy sheriff that I was in shock and very
confused. The deputy offered to drive me back home, and he questioned me about
what happened.
I told him I really did not know what had happened. He told
me matter-of-factly that my mother and sister were dead and their bodies had
been removed from the fire debris and were being taken to Oklahoma City for
autopsies. He watched me closely for a reaction. There was none. The deputy
could have just as well told me it was Thursday morning, June 19, 1963, and my
response would have been the same: nothing. I was totally numb and confused.
One thing I did remember that would bother me for years was a very strange odor
in my nostrils that I could not identify, and my clothes still reeked of that
unknown odor.
Author Bio:
Bobby was born in San Francisco, CA, on September 3, 1944,
to a waitress mother and mysterious father.
His younger years were years of endless relocations until his mother and
younger sister, Judy, ended their sojourn in Hugo, Oklahoma, the area of his
mother’s upbringing, Indian country in Southeastern Oklahoma.
Intent on a military career, Bobby enlisted in the National
Guard while beginning his high school senior year. His plans for the future were suddenly cut
short when he was jailed and criminally charged with his family’s deaths.
After his release from jail, Bobby had to rebuild his life
from scratch and worked his way through the University of Texas and Texas Tech
School of Law, all the while supporting a wife and daughter.
Bobby graduated from Law School in 1973 having already
passed the State Bar exam. He was
admitted to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court in 1980.
He soon established himself as a fearless trial lawyer in
the State of Texas, unafraid to take on the establishment or its leaders in
civil and criminal litigation. He made
enemies in the legal profession, but his clients worshipped him.
In the early 1990’s Bobby quit the law business to become a
professor of law. He moved to Arizona
and became certified to teach law and political science and was named
Outstanding Business Faculty Instructor at Rio Salado College in 1999.
In 2001 he was retained by the disgraced Arthur Anderson and
Company to write an Ethics guide for their employees in Arizona.
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