Murder in Akron (Intentional or Unintentional) is a firsthand account of a night that became a prosecution-and a life recast through the language of intent.
Told by Tiffany Powell, the book traces the events leading up to a fatal encounter in Akron, Ohio, and the aftermath that followed: arrest, indictment, jail, and the slow grind of pretrial confinement. What begins as an effort to document a violation of the law becomes, in the state's telling, a theory of orchestration.
Blending memoir, true crime, and legal narrative, Murder in Akron examines how fear, miscalculation, and third-party actions are transformed into criminal intent-and how once a story is chosen, everything that follows is forced to fit inside it.
This is not a whodunit. It is a study of how meaning is assigned, how language hardens into charges, and how the system decides what a person meant to do.
Related Subjects
True Crime