In May 1993, the bodies of three 8-year-old Cub Scouts were discovered in Arkansas, tragically murdered, hogtied, and discarded in a ditch. The mutilation of their genitals was so severe that prosecutors characterized the incident as indicative of a satanic ritual.
The brutal nature of these killings sent shockwaves through the community of West Memphis, where the crimes took place, prompting a fervent push to convict three 17-year-old individuals who were fans of Metallica, in a region predominantly influenced by country music.
These teenagers Damien Echols, Jason Baldwin, and Jessie Misskelley Jr., collectively known as the West Memphis Three were ultimately exonerated in 2011 after spending 18 years in prison. Their release came as part of an agreement that permitted them to maintain their innocence while conceding that the prosecution possessed adequate evidence for their conviction.
The agreement, commonly referred to as an Alford plea, was a significant affront to Misskelley's attorney, Dan Stidham, whose recent publication, A Harvest of Innocence: The Untold Story of the West Memphis Three Murder Case, introduces an alternative hypothesis: that the Cub Scouts were victims of a serial killer traversing the highways of America.
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