Lay Down with Dogs
Hugh Otis Bynum and the Scottsboro First Monday Bombing
On the morning of December 4, 1972, the small north Alabama town of Scottsboro was shaken when a bomb ripped through the car of a prominent attorney. What followed were two years of unyielding
investigation resulting in the arrest of the town's wealthiest landowner. The trial that followed pitted Bill Baxley, a young, ambitious Alabama attorney general, against the state's most prominent lawyers.
Lay Down with Dogs is the story of a small southern town as it makes the transition from an agrarian hamlet to progressive New South suburbia. It is also the story of a twisted but powerful character, bent on revenge, whose motive was as enigmatic as the man himself. And it is the story of a young prosecutor, willing to risk a promising political future in order to pursue his sense of justice.
This book is not only a well-researched account but also a fascinating story of crime, the court, and the many characters brought together at one time and in one place to participate--for good or evil--in an unforgettable drama.
A gripping true account of a criminal investigation and trial in a small southern town. The characters represent many of the elements so common to southern studies, and Woodfin has done a fine job pulling all this together into a fascinating and compelling dramatic account.'
—Harvey H. Jackson III, Jacksonville State University
Lay Down with Dogs presents an intriguing story in good journalistic fashion. It has wonderful characters, suspense, a good plot, and the additional appeal of some of the state's best-known political and legal names. It provides a probing look at the underside of life in a small Alabama town.'—Melton McLaurin, University of North Carolina at Wilmington