The murder suspect appears to be an African immigrant who was baptized into the Mormon church.
Nearly ten years before Ayoola Ajayi was accused of killing a University of Utah student, Logan Dill says he was baptized into The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Dill, then a missionary on the campus of Utah State University, says Ajayi was new to the country and showed great enthusiasm for the teachings of the church.
Ezekiel was almost 15 when he witnessed a gruesome murder. An angry mob burned his neighbor alive in the street and the man died at his feet. Sadly, it was not the last time he witnessed such horror. With his well respected father as guide and mentor, Ezekiel saw this death, then a death much closer to home when a loved one was killed in the same brutal, terrifying way 50 feet from him, and he could do nothing to stop it. Staggering to recover from these severe traumas, he finds relief and joy in meeting his first love, becomes embroiled in grand theft, and experiences heartbreaking betrayal. Ezekiel must decide if he will join the ranks of a criminal mastermind, or fight to escape the tyranny that has surrounded his young life. Or even beat them at their own game.
A reader of this book commented:
The sheer number of inconsistencies, spelling, and grammar mistakes made this book impossible to read, because they are such a huge distraction. It was just too frustrating and aggravating to try and look beyond the dismal editing, that I couldn't even get a quarter way into the book before I stopped reading.