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The Shooter at Midnight

Murder, Corruption, and a Farming Town Divided

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
“Gripping . . . A potent account of the crime and its aftermath, placing its story of heartbreaking violence and injustice in a larger portrait of a rural American town.”The Wall Street Journal

The harrowing true story of a cold-blooded murder and the campaign to bring justice to a suffering Midwestern town

On a November night in 1990, Cathy Robertson is murdered in her home outside Chillicothe, Missouri. After law enforcement conduct a haphazard investigation, the sheriff’s office puts the case in the hands of a Kansas City private eye with his own agenda. In a close-knit town still reeling from the aftereffects of the farming crisis, friends and neighbors abruptly fracture into opposing camps. Mark Woodworth, a Robertson family neighbor, eventually receives four life sentences for a crime that a growing group of local supporters believe he didn’t commit.
In a surprising, dramatic narrative that spans decades, Mark’s family turns to Robert Ramsey, an attorney willing to take on a corrupt political machine suppressing the truth. But the community’s way of life is irrevocably damaged by the parallel tragedies of the farming crisis and Cathy’s unsolved murder, in a gripping story about the fault-lines of a fracturing America that continue to cut across the farm belt today.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 19, 2024
      Journalist Cooper debuts with an enthralling account of the murder that tore apart a hard-hit farming community in Missouri. Cathy Robertson and her husband, Lyndel, were gunned down while they slept in Chillicothe, Mo., in 1990. Cathy died immediately; Lyndel was gravely injured. Although Lyndel first identified his daughter’s boyfriend as a suspect, the PI he tapped to work with local law enforcement ended up pointing the finger at Mark Woodworth, the 16-year-old who lived next door. Mark was tried and convicted twice (for second degree murder, then first), in rulings that were subsequently overturned. Through interviews and dogged research, Cooper lays out why the case against him eventually fell apart. Lyndel and Mark’s father were at odds over their joint business venture, which was decimated by the farming crisis of the 1980s, and Lyndel faced an embezzlement lawsuit. He hired the PI and leveraged local law enforcement connections to take the heat off that suit and close the murder investigation in one fell swoop. It wasn’t until the Woodworths hired attorney Robert Ramsey, who highlighted the overwhelming lack of concrete evidence keeping Mark in prison, that they were able to get the case thrown out for good in 2013. Cooper’s suspenseful narrative nimbly interweaves procedural beats and a vivid portrait of rural America in crisis. It’s an arresting work of true crime. Agent: Seren Adams, United Agents.

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  • English

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