You mean the charges against McCandless? Kraukauer is the author.
This chapter seems to be a digression from the McCandless story, as Krakauer pads his novel with filler material, tangential stories of others who have died in the wild: Gene Rossellini, a "wayward genius...interested in knowing if it was possible to be independent of modern technology"; John Mellon Waterman, whose "life's work", became an "accumulation of notes, poetry, and personal journals"; Everett Ruess, an artist and writer who died in the Sierras; and the Papar, Irish monks, whose "remarkable voyages were... undertaken chiefly from the...
its the bottom one so click it and choose it yea aight bop
<span>Focus on sound while editing and polishing a poem</span>
Answer: Atticus feels that the mob that can to the jail is still human in spite of all the threats that they posed.
Explanation: In Chapter 16, Atticus explains to his children that "every mob in every little Southern town is made up of people you know---doesn't say much for them, does it?" (Lee 97). Atticus believes that a mob is only a group of individuals that share similar views.
Remembering how the mob tried to lynch Tom Robinson, Mr. Finch also refers to them as a "gang of wild animals" who are still human, as Scout brought them to their senses when she came out of hiding and talked about Mr. Cunningham's son.