The Trial of Dr. Sam
Sheppard: Bibliography
and Links
Books
Bailey, F. Lee, The Defense Never Rests
(1971).
(This book devotes
approximately 40 pages to the Sam Sheppard
case.
It begins with a background of the case, but focused
primarily on the
second trial when F. Lee Bailey served as
Sheppard's
attorney. In the book, F. Lee
Bailey reveals his strategy in the re-trial.
F.
Lee Bailey was a pallbearer at Sheppard’s funeral.)

Cooper, Cynthia L. and Sheppard,
Sam Reese, Mockery
of Justice: The
True Story of the Sheppard Murder Case
(1995).
(In this
comprehensive
reinvestigation
of the case, Sam Reese Sheppard and Cynthia Cooper
follow a trail of
secret contacts, false leads,
confessions,
tips, and new evidence to unravel mysteries
surrounding the
case.
With the help of a private investigative agency,
they delve into
original files, recently recovered documents,
Sheppard family papers,
forensic
evidence, and interviews with new witnesses and
prime suspects.
The
book is written from the family’s viewpoint.
It includes 328
pages of text, 21 illustrations, 40 pages of
endnotes,
and a 15-page index.)

DeSario, Jack, and Mason, William D.,
Dr. Sam Sheppard
on Trial: The Prosecutors
and the Marilyn Sheppard Murder (2003).
(This
book is a detailed and passionately argued
narrative of the third
Sheppard trial, Sam
Reese Sheppard's 2003 wrongful
imprisonment suit against the State of
Ohio. William Mason
successfully defended Ohio in the trial
and the book is
clearly written from Mason's perspective. He
attacks the the
Richard Eberling- as- the- real- killer theory,
paints the picture of
an unhappy marriage between Sam and Marilyn, and
finds little of
significance in recent DNA evidence. The
book argues that
Sheppard was guilty as charged.)
Holmes, Paul, Retrial: Murder and Dr.
Sam Sheppard
(1966).
(This is Paul
Holmes’ sequel
to his 1961 book (below). It suffers from
being rushed
into print within weeks of the verdict. Only
88 of the 240 pages
are devoted to the trial, and 50 of those are
transcripts of testimony
by Mary Cowen and Dr. Paul Kirk which had already
been summarized;
apparently
they were added to fill the book. This book
does not contain an
index
or notes.)
Holmes, Paul, The Sheppard Murder Case
(1961).
Paul Holmes, a
reporter for
the Chicago Tribune, wrote this bestseller, the
first book arguing that
Sheppard was wrongfully convicted. Holmes
theorizes that two
people, a man and a woman, committed the
murder. (He seems to
suggest, without saying so directly, that Mayor
Spencer Houk and his
wife Esther were the actual murderers.)
Kilgallen, Dorothy,
Murder One
(1967).
(This book describes six murder trials the
reporter
covered, with
“When Justice Took the Day Off”--about the Sheppard
trial-- as the last
and longest chapter.
Kilgallen calls
the Sheppard trial “the most extraordinary murder
trial of the century”
and offers
her opinion that the decision of the jury was
“incomprehensible...I was
aghast.”)

Neff, James, The Wrong Man: The
Final Verdict on the
Dr. Sam Sheppard Murder Case (2001).
(Based on 10 years of
research and
interviews, Neff provides a well-written account of
the Sheppard
case. Neff suggests Richard Eberling was the
true
perpetrator--and makes his case in a convincing way
that leads many to
conclude that this book effectively closes the
case. Neff's book
is probably the best ever written on the Sheppard
case. )
Pollack, Jack Harrison, Dr. Sam an American
Tragedy (1972).
(New, important
facts about
Sheppard's life are disclosed in this absorbing
biography. The
tragic collapse of Dr. Sam is sensitively
recounted
from the morning of the murder: the suicide of his
mother, the
premature
death of his father, his alienation from his two
brothers, his ten-year
imprisonment, and his legal failures until F. Lee
Bailey represented
him
before the U.S. Supreme Court and in a
retrial. The final
tragedy--
Sam’s stint as a professional wrestler, his resort
to drugs and liquor,
and his death-- are all discussed. The book
has 16 pages of
photographs
and
an index. It served as the basis of a 1976
television movie
called Guilty or
Innocent?)
Seltzer, Louis B., The Years Were Good
(1956)(Chapter
26).
(Chapter 26 is devoted to the Seltzer's reasons
(Seltzer
was the editor of The
Cleveland
Press) for his series of editorials about
the case.)
Sheppard, Sam, Endure and Conquer: My
12-Year Fight for
Vindication
(1966).
(This is the
defendant’s own
story, including details from his prison
experiences.
This book does not contain an index or notes.)
Sheppard, Stephen and
Holmes, Paul, My
Brother’s Keeper
(1964).
(Dr. Steve
Sheppard’s account
of his family's ordeal caused by
Marilyn's murder and Sam's prosecution. The
book is less focused
on the guilt or innocence of Dr.
Sam Sheppard that on what it means to a family to
have a member of the
family accused
and convicted of a murder that other members of the
family are
convinced
that he did not commit. The book describes the
family as it deals
with defeat after defeat in the legal system, comes
to terms with such
personal tragedies as the suicide
of a mother, and suffers the slings and arrows of a
sensational
press.)
Thorwald, Jurgen, Crime and Science: The
New Frontier in
Criminology
(1967).
(This book devotes five of its 63 chapters
to the
Sheppard case
and
Dr. Kirk’s investigation of the murder. The
author maintains that
Dr. Gerber
was
incompetent. The author, a German, gives no indication
that
he
visited the United States in researching the book.)
Video
A & E Television
Network, American
Justice: "The Sam
Sheppard Case" (A & E Home Video)
(50 minutes)(1996).
ABC, The
Fugitive (1963-1967).
(A television series on ABC
starring Dr.
Richard Kimball,
played
by David Jansson. Kimball had been wrongfully
convicted of his
wife’s
murder but escaped and was trying to find the real
killer- “the
one-armed
man.” In the final episode, one of the
most-watched television
shows ever, Dr. Kimball and the small-town
Lieutenant
Gerald find the true killer, a one-armed drifter who
falls to his death
from the top of a carnival ride as they chase
him. As the show
closes,
Dr. Kimball walks away from the courthouse, a free
man. He
hesitates
slightly at the sight of a police car, then nods to
say hello
and walks on. The message: everything will be
fine. The
Fugitive was
almost universally believed to be based on the
Sheppard case, although
its creator, Roy Huggins, insisted it wasn’t.
When the show was
canceled
in August of 1967, the New York Times
suggested it was because its
ratings
had fallen following Sheppard’s release.
Differences between the
show and the Sheppard case include: Kimball’s wife
was not pregnant,
Sheppard’s
was; the Kimballs were arguing the evening of the
murder, the
Sheppards
were not; the Kimballs were infertile, the Sheppards
were not.)
Guilty or
Innocent? (1975).
(A television docudrama
co-starring George
Peppard
and William Windom.
This three-hour show was based on the
book Dr. Sam: An
American
Tragedy
by Jack Harrison Pollack.)
My Father’s Shadow: the Sam Sheppard Story (1998).
(This two-hour movie, shown by CBS,
starred
Henry Czerny as the
adult Sam Reese Sheppard and Peter Strauss as his
father, Dr. Sam
Sheppard.
The film is not a docudrama of the Sheppard
murder
case and trial, but rather the story of “the
lost son who had to
find
out what really happened.”)

NOVA: The
Killer's Trail - The Story of Dr. Sam
Sheppard (1999)
(Video includes a reconstruction of the
Sheppard house,
examines previously ignored evidence, and offers the
insights from such
forensic experts as DNA specialist Barry Scheck, a
member of O.J.
Simpson's legal "Dream Team.")
Warner Brothers, The Fugitive (2
hrs., 17
min.)(1993).
(Rated PG-13,
starring
Harrison
Ford as Dr. Richard Kimball, whose character is very
loosely based on
Sam Sheppard.)
Links