Directed by
Jean-Xavier de Lestrade
Produced by
Denis Poncet et Jean-Xavier de Lestrade
Director of Photography
Isabelle Razavet
Images
Jean-Xavier de Lestrade, Brian Murie
Sound
Jay Lyons, David Doerr et William Lewis
Editing
Pascal Vernier, Ragnar Van Leyden
Music
Hélène Blazy
Release date : september 2001 à in New York
First aired on France 2, May 16th 2002
Aired in 25 countries (UK/BBC, Germany/Spiegel TV, Canada/TéléQuebec, Switzerland/TSR, Danemark/ Dr TV, Belgium/RTBF, Netherlands/VPRO, Switzerland/SVT, Israel, Portugal, Australia…)
- FIPA d’argent 2002
- Prix Italia 2002
- Oscar-winning documentary 2002
Murder on a Sunday Morning
A 110 minutes documentary in coproduction with France 2 (France) and HBO (USA)
French documentary about the trial of a black American teenager accused of robbing and murdering an elderly white tourist at a Florida hotel. The film follows the teen's defense team as they build a case that shows ineptitude and prejudice on the part of the Jacksonville Sheriff's Office
On May 7, 2000, in the parking lot of a Ramada Inn in Jacksonville, Florida, 65-year-old Mary Ann Stephens is shot in the head before her husband's very eyes. Ninety minutes later, 15-year-old Brenton Butler is arrested. Everything is against him: he is formally identified by the only eye-witness, Mr Stephens, and he signs a confession. For the investigators and the media who cover the story, it is just another messed-up youth, just another wasted life. But when the case for the defense comes into the hands of Patrick McGuinness, the story ceases to be quite so ordinary. The boy proclaims his innocence. He has bruises on his face and thorax. He tells that the detectives beat him up and forced a confession out of him. And the one who hit the hardest is a certain Glover, son of Nat Glover, Sheriff of Jacksonville. Everyone - police, media and public opinion - is ready to sentence Brenton Butler in advance, but Patrick McGuinness begins a battle to restore his client's rights and to point an accusing finger at those he considers to be the real culprits: detectives Williams, Glover and Darnell.


