Answer:
Darrow argues that the boys should not be executed for their crime. He claims they were too young to know what they were doing and were filled with illusions and daydreams because they read “bad” books.
Step-by-step explanation:
The evidence for this argument is that both Leopold and Loeb are, in Darrow's words, "two minors, two children, who have no right to sign a note or make a deed." Darrow argues this because Leopold and Loeb were eighteen and nineteen years old at the time of the homicide.