On Metaphors, Mirrors, and Murders: Theodore Bundy and the Rule of Law*
ON METAPHORS, MIRRORS, AND MURDERS: THEODORE BUNDY AND THE RULE OF LAW* MICHAEL MELLO** I. Introduction ................................................... 888 H1. Bundy's Interaction With the Capital Punishment Bureaucracy: Where Did the Time Go? ...................................... 894 Ill. The Mirror, the (Mixed) Metaphor: Bundy as Cultural Construction, Bundy as the "Crystallization of Culture" ......... 918 IV. Conclusion: Bundy as Other, Bundy as Us ...................... 936 © 1991 Michael Mello. ** Professor of Law, Vermont Law SchooL B.A., 1979, Mary Washington College; J.D., 1982, University of Virginia. In the interest of full disclosure, I note that from 1983 to 1986 I worked as an assistant public defender in Florida (first at the office of the state Public Defender in West Palm Beach and later at the office of the Capital Collateral Representative in Tallahas- see). All of my clients were death row inmates. During 1987 and 1988 1 was an associate with the law firm of Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering, the firm that represented Theodore Bundy in past- conviction litigation. I presently represent three condemned inmates. This article is dedicated to the memory of the late Judge Robert S. Vance, United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, for whom I clerked (1982-1983). Although we often disagreed about the appropriate role of the federal judiciary in reviewing state-imposed death sentences, Judge Vance always remained a mentor, teacher, and friend. This, like most scholarly projects, has been a collaborative enterprise. The many students, friends, neighbors, and colleagues who have discussed its ideas with me, suggested articles and other resources, commented on earlier versions, shared personal experiences, or allowed me to glimpse their own fears and angers have collaborated with me on this project and have made its development possible, whether they knew it or not.
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