The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Juror examines her role in 2006 Mississipp­i execution

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“Lindy Lou, Juror Number 2” is one of the most sobering and powerful documentar­ies about a political issue I’ve seen in years.

The film follows one woman’s journey to examine her role as a juror in a Mississipp­i death penalty case.

Bobby Glen Wilcher, at the age of 19, most certainly slashed two women to death along a wooded road where he lured them. He barely knew the women and never expressed a shred of regret for their murders. Not in the 24 years that he was on Mississipp­i’s death row before being executed in 2006.

Lindy Lou Wells Isonhood is a conservati­ve grandmothe­r who, along with 11 other jurors, helped make the unanimous decision in the capital murder case. The film follows along as she tracks down the other jurors 22 years later to find out if they are as disturbed by what had happened as she has been.

Or as she says in the film, “I couldn’t let it go.”

“I can’t say that I’m totally against the death penalty,” she said as the film toured Missouri, where it premiered and is now touring, with plans eventually to show overseas.

In the documentar­y, you watch her driving back county roads where poverty is rife, and you glimpse the sprawling, manicured lawns of better-heeled jurors. All of their views are represente­d as told to Isonhood.

She’s perturbed by the male juror who can’t seem to recall much about the trial at all, as if he was asleep and unaware of the gravity of his vote condemning a man to death by lethal injection. One juror did a “180 flip” from her decision after she survived cancer and began to value every moment of her own life, and that of others.

This is how she sums up her philosophy on capital punishment: “I’m not here to force anybody to change their mind. You have to vote your own moral conscience. But just don’t go in there blind, dumb and happy.”

That’s how she would describe where she was when she joined the jury at the age of 42. “Inadequate,” she says, to describe her fitness to make such a decision.

Ten years after the trial Isonhood sought the convicted murderer out, meeting him face to face four times. She learned about his family and met them, too. She learned the dire stories of Wilcher’s youth, about his abusive, alcoholic father and his time as a teenager at a juvenile detention center, where he was raped. She learned about his troubled marriage. Besides his attorney, Isonhood was his only visitor. His mother was in prison for selling prescripti­on drugs when her son was executed.

Isonhood felt empathy, but also revulsion for his actions.

Most people know they will never personally face the question of sentencing another man or woman to death. Even if they live in one of the 31 states with the death penalty, capital punishment is under siege.

But activists hounding capital punishment into oblivion isn’t the same as society coming to terms with the moral dimension of enshrining the death penalty in law.

And that’s the power of “Lindy Lou, Juror Number 2.” Isonhood calmly asks people to think about the death penalty deeply, to examine how they might feel if faced with condemning another human being to death. Their meditation­s on life, death and justice are raw and direct — and necessary for all of us to hear.

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