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Emily Galvin Almanza with Michele Storms

The Price of Mercy

Date:
Sat Feb 21, 2026
Time:
7:30 pm PST
Cost:
$10 – $35 + Optional Book Add-on
Additional fees may apply. Learn more about our ticketing model here.

Venue

The Wyncote NW Forum
1119 8th Ave (Entrance off Seneca St.)
Seattle, 98101 United States
+ Google Map

Event Format

In-Person

EVENT NOTES
Doors for this event will open at 6:30 PM. Town Hall events are approximately 75 minutes long.

Book cover titled "The Price of Mercy" by Emily Galvin Almanza, featuring a jagged tear running vertically down the middle of a pale background. The bottom of the cover shows a small black-and-white silhouette of a person walking next to the tear. The title is in large, bold, orange letters. The subtitle is written in a smaller blue font: “Unfair Trials, a Violent System, and a Public Defender’s Search for Justice in America.”
Buy the Book

The Price of Mercy: Unfair Trials, a Violent System, and a Public Defender's Search for Justice in America

Elliott Bay Book Company

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Headshots of Emily Galvin Almanza (with fair skin, long blonde hair) and Michele Storms (with brown skin, glasses, and black hair twists in a bun)
Civics

Have you ever wondered what really goes on in our country’s criminal courts? Many want to believe in the hallowed halls of justice, with ethical and equitable legal processes that pursue truth and enforce the law fairly. But one author argues that this perception hides the reality that the system is broken.

Emily Galvin Almanza, also a former public defender, presents her latest work The Price of Mercy; Unfair Trials, a Violent System, and a Public Defender’s Search for Justice in America. The text takes us behind closed doors of America’s criminal courts, arguing that the institutions that claim to protect us are doing the exact opposite. Examples include data showing that jails actually increase future crime, police corruption in overtime pay, an example of a man incarcerated for decades because scientists mistook dog hair for his own, incentives that push prosecutors to seek convictions, and even how judges may decide cases differently after lunch.

Almanza presents examples and offers a blueprint for fixing these issues at their core, and by engaging the general public in helping to shape our collective future.

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Emily Galvin Almanza is the co-founder and executive director of Partners for Justice, a nonprofit creating a new collaborative model of public defense designed to empower defenders nationwide. Prior to founding PFJ, Emily fought for clients inside the L.A. County Public Defender’s Office, the Santa Clara County Public Defender’s Office, and the Bronx Defenders, and with the Stanford Three Strikes Project. Her writing has appeared in The Atlantic, The Washington PostNewsweekTeen Vogue, and Time, among other publications.

Michele E. Storms is the Executive Director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Washington (ACLU of Washington), former Deputy Director of the ACLU of Washington, and previous Assistant Dean for Public Service and executive director of the William H. Gates Public Service Law program at the University of Washington School of Law.  Preceding those roles, she served as a statewide advocacy coordinator first at Columbia Legal Services and later at the Northwest Justice Project. She was also previously on faculty at the University of Washington School of Law where she founded what is now the Child and Youth Advocacy Clinic and taught several other courses.


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