Polly Jean Nelson (born 1952) is an American attorney and author. She is best known as a member of serial killer Ted Bundy's last defense team from 1986 until his execution in 1989.
Nelson grew up in central Minnesota, the eldest of five children. After receiving her undergraduate degree from the University of Minnesota in 1975, she spent two years as a social worker in Warren, Minnesota, followed by three years licensing day care facilities at the Minnesota Department of Public Welfare in St. Paul. In 1981 she enrolled at the University of Minnesota Law School, where she became president of the school's Law Review, and received her Juris Doctor degree in 1984. In 1985 she worked as a law clerk in the U.S. Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
In 1986 Nelson joined the Washington, D.C. law firm of Wilmer Cutler and Pickering as a junior associate. A few months later she accepted a pro bono assignment from the Florida Office of the Capital Collateral Representative (CCR) to assist in efforts to stay Ted Bundy's imminent execution on multiple murder convictions. Although she had no previous first-hand experience in criminal law or the appeals process, she and co-counsel James Earl Coleman, Jr. were able to secure three stays before Bundy was finally executed on January 24, 1989.
Nelson was terminated by Wilmer Cutler a few months after Bundy's execution. Bundy's defense had cost the firm, it claimed, in excess of $1.5 million. According to this source, the $1.5 million figure was based not on actual dollar expenditures, but on the estimated amount Nelson and Coleman would have earned for the firm had they been representing paying clients. In 1989 she was appointed to the District of Columbia Board of Parole, and later served as general counsel at Adcom Worldwide and legal counsel/privacy officer at Computer Network Technology.