From Howard and Nina Brown:
Nina and I are pleased to announce the publication of our book, 'East Side Story", the chronological
history of the murder of Carrie Brown which contains previously unknown facts and official files. Included
in East Side Story are over 100 photos and sketches. Most intriguing among the previously unseen files is
an affidavit filed by George Damon regarding his 'Danish Farmhand' which dismisses the very man he
claimed may have been the murderer.
Weighing in at 327 pages and spread over 40 chapters, East Side Story also looks at the abysmal treatment
the female witnesses endured in court and in the press; behind the scenes efforts of French New Yorkers
in securing a pardon for Ali; a list of sordid tales and other deaths occurring in the East River Hotel; letters
from Ameer Ben Ali to four different Governors; and the chain of events stemming from a letter written by a
convicted murderer to New York Governor Benjamin Odell in 1901 which may have led to the release
of a man who may have been guilty all along.
Our aim in writing East Side Story was not to provide a final solution to the question of who murdered
Carrie Brown but rather to put things in their proper perspective. The list of questions in the case has actually
increased, some of them appearing for the first time anywhere due to the newly available files presented in the book.
East Side Story contains chapters on subjects such as:
Correspondence from Inspector 'Clubber' Williams to Governor Benjamin Odell, in
which the former policeman claimed to have information that would lead to Ali's release from prison.
A chronology of events from 1891 to 1902, up to the day Ali left the United
States for France, exactly 11 years to the day that Carrie Brown was discovered murdered in
Room 31 of the East River Hotel.
The chain of events which began with a convicted murderer's letter to Governor Odell which
would lead to the discovery that all was not what it seemed regarding the 'Danish Farmhand',
plus a comprehensive media guide including magazine articles, book references,
audio/visual programs, and other available sources on the internet and elsewhere.
Price: $20.99
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