"Fisher, a former FBI agent . . . has—we may very well hope—driven the final nail into the coffin of the Lindbergh revisionists."—Rapport
"Former FBI agent Fisher offers an arch, engaging rebuttal to a recent generation of Lindbergh conspiracy theorists and to true-crime revisionists generally. . . . This latest addition to the post-Lindbergh flood stands as an entertaining, readable, and comprehensive summation of a dark event and its transcendent cultural afterlife."—Kirkus Reviews
"Jim Fisher offers a devastating critique of the conspiracy theories that continue to swirl around the 'crime of the century,' the kidnapping of the Lindbergh baby. Sifting through the primary sources, Fisher shows that much of the so-called evidence put forth by defenders of Bruno Richard Hauptmann is either misinformation or totally irrelevant. Anyone concerned with the way publishers and the media promote lurid fictions at the expense of historical truth is in his debt." —Joyce Milton, author of Loss of Eden: A Biography of Charles and Anne Morrow Lindbergh
"It is inconceivable to me that any rational person could study the Lindbergh case for more than a few hours and not emerge with a belief bordering on certainty that the evidence against Bruno Richard [Hauptmann] was, and is, too overwhelming to warrant even a single Hauptmann-didn't-do-it book. . . . [Fisher has] written a fine and needed book. The revisionist irrationality in the Lindberg case demands point-by-point refutation, and [Fisher] supplied it."—Gerald Tomlinson, author of Murdered in Jersey