The suspect collects his thoughts just before his homicide trial. While on bail Woodson had resumed an anonymous life back in the slum, generally avoiding dealing with the problem.
Out on bail near his housing project home, Woodson says goodbye after visiting his son. The boy's mother, who was not married to Woodson, waits to take back custody of the child.
In their lawyer's unorthodox office, Woodson's parents try to figure out how to raise bail money. The electric chair replica was given to the attorney by a former client now doing life.
Woodson stood shamefully as a police detective crawled to retrieve the 22 used in the killing. He had hidden the gun four days before and claimed to have been robbed and beaten before firing.
After a fatal shooting in a back alley of the city's worst slum, suspect Rodney Woodson turned himself in. As a condition of bail, the son of a cop with no previous record told police he would show them where he hid the gun he used in the killing.
Jack Murray poses at the garage he's run for forty years. He still drives his 1934 Chevy Standard to work and says, 'Treat people right and they'll come back.' This was one of a series of labor day portraits in Grindstone, PA.
Hilda East has enjoyed taking walks in the great outdoors her entire life. Hilda declined to give her age but admitted that she is probably older than the tree she is standing against.