In a powerful true-crime memoir, an Emmy Award–winning journalist seeks closure in a decades-long series of crimes and freedom from her own personal demons.
In April 1999, reporter Tamara Leitner woke to an active crime scene out of doors her Arizona apartment. Her neighbor had been sexually assaulted by a man who would later be identified as Claude Dean Hull II, a serial rapist who escaped justice for decades. New identities. New states. New sufferers—multiple hundred suspected around the country and thousands more victimized in myriad ways. Tamara’s twenty-year compulsion to follow the investigation started.
She had to question a failed system. She had to know the ladies whose lives were irrevocably altered. And she had to face the foundation of her obsession with Hull and his crimes.
In interviewing, befriending, and profoundly connecting with Hull’s survivors, Tamara crafts a unique true-crime narrative. It not only reveals the struggles of the justice system to lend a hand sufferers of sexual violence but explores how these resilient women—and Tamara herself—strove to reclaim their power within the wake of indelible trauma.