
What if the system never corrected its mistake, even after the truth surfaced?
In 1987, a young woman was murdered in Florida. Within months, her husband, Leo Schofield, was convicted and sentenced to life in prison. There was no DNA evidence. No eyewitness. No confession.
Thirty-seven years later, another man, Jeremy Scott, confessed.
Leo Schofield's Endless Night is a meticulously researched true crime and legal nonfiction account that examines how a conviction built on assumption, circumstantial evidence, and investigative pressure endured long after new evidence emerged. It traces the full arc of the case, from the early days of the investigation to the courtroom drama of the 1989 trial, through decades of appeals, overlooked forensic evidence, and a recorded confession that challenged the original verdict.
This book goes beyond headlines and documentaries. It places readers inside the machinery of the criminal justice system and reveals how wrongful convictions persist even when doubt grows louder.
Inside this book, readers will discover:
Written with clarity, restraint, and respect for the facts, Leo Schofield's Endless Night is not a polemic. It is a careful examination of how justice can fail, how truth can be delayed, and how the fight for recognition continues long after the verdict is read.
For readers of true crime, legal nonfiction, and justice reform, this is a story that demands attention.