All The Mass Corruption - All The Mass Corruption
Roberts R. Kevin
Editora: BookRix
Sinopse
All the Mass Corruption examines a criminal case that exposed serious concerns about policing, prosecution, and political influence in a small Massachusetts town.For decades, allegations of police misconduct in Massachusetts have surfaced and faded, often without consequence. In recent years, however, those issues have intensified, revealing patterns that can no longer be dismissed as isolated mistakes.At the center of this book is the case of a woman who faced prosecution for a crime she consistently denied committing. Despite major inconsistencies in the investigation, conflicting evidence, and unanswered questions, the case moved forward aggressively—raising alarms about how conclusions were reached and why alternative explanations were sidelined.But this story does not stand alone.In the same community, another case involving the death of a pregnant woman was ruled a suicide under circumstances that many found deeply troubling. Evidence suggesting otherwise was overlooked, until federal authorities eventually stepped in. That intervention exposed broader failures and reinforced concerns about how power and influence can distort justice.These cases represent only a fraction of a much larger problem.Across Massachusetts, law enforcement agencies have faced repeated scandals involving evidence tampering, internal corruption, abuse of authority, and oversight breakdowns. Thousands of past convictions were later invalidated after it was discovered that key forensic evidence had been compromised—failures that were known but left unaddressed for years.All the Mass Corruption documents these events and connects them to a larger pattern of institutional self-protection. Using documented cases, public records, and careful analysis, the book shows how investigations lose objectivity, how accountability stalls, and how official narratives harden even when facts remain unsettled.This is not a sensational account.It is a factual examination of what happens when justice systems stop questioning themselves—and why restoring public trust requires more than confidence and authority.
