In 1982, Atlanta was rocked by a case that blurred the line between vengeance, justice, and moral outrage.
Yvette Strong was a 23-year-old beauty with a secret that would destroy lives-and ignite a courtroom firestorm. After contracting AIDS from a married lover, she vowed revenge on every man who lived a double life. Seducing husbands across Georgia, she left behind more than broken vows-she left fear, scandal, and disease.
When Yvette confessed her actions on national television, the outrage was immediate. Twelve men came forward. The press called her "The Black Widow of Atlanta." The prosecutor called her a murderer. Her defense claimed she was a victim of betrayal, not a criminal.
But the question that haunted the nation remained:
Can consent protect the guilty... or damn the wounded?
As the trial unfolds, so does a story of race, rage, and raw sexuality that exposed the deepest hypocrisies of the American South. A Poisoned Georgia Peach is a chilling portrait of revenge, morality, and the twisted pursuit of justice-torn from headlines that changed Georgia law forever.