This is a story that needs to be told, and read, and heard. This is a book told from the victim's side. How this crime affected Cortney Naisbitt and his family, and several other families. Horrible crimes are committed every day, however, this one is particularly vicious. You hear on the news, and read in the newspapers, all about the criminals. But you never hear any follow-up on the victims. It's as if they're forgotten.
Cortney Naisbitt was only 16 years old in 1974 when he was part of the Hi-Fi Murders in Ogden, Utah, perpetrated by Pierre Dale Selby and William Andrews. He didn't ask to be part. He was forced to be part. He and four other people, including his mother. Three people were killed, including Cortney's mother, while two survived. As Cortney's father says, "At least Pierre and old Whatsie down there have guaranteed hospitalization, food, shelter, clothing-for life. As the perpetrators. But no one guarantees Cortney anything like that. As the victim. Who was perfectly innocent. And didn't ask for this kind of treatment, and certainly didn't want it. No one guarantees him anything.I don't know what the answer is, but I know that the perpetrators get taken care of, and the victims get ignored."
He also says, "They've spent several million dollars on the guys' trials and retrials and all that sort of thing. But nobody cares what the hell happens to the victim. No one has given Cortney a thought. His rights have never been discussed, his problems have never been discussed, from a government standpoint. They're willing to spend millions of dollars on this bullshit, but they're not willing to spend anything to take care of the people that were damaged."
And he this, which about says it all: "I wish they cared as much about him as they do about that guy in prison."
There is something severely flawed in our judicial system. Severely. Those two killers got to live thirteen years on death row. Cortney only got to live another 28 years before passing away due to complications of the injuries he suffered during the crime. He was only 44 when he died on June 4, 2002. And he never had a "normal" life after the crime. How sad is that?
Just one writer, Gary Kinder, took the time to tell Cortney's story. Thank God he did. It's a story that deserves to be told.