Great news for California lawyer Paul Madriani: His nemesis, Judge
Armando ("the Coconut") Acosta, has been charged first with
solicitation and then with murder. Madriani's only problem is that,
against all odds, the judge has become his client. It happens like
this: Acosta's vendetta against Madriani's client Sgt. Tony
Arguilio, alleged to have cooked the Police Association's books,
collapses when Acosta is picked up for offering to pay reserve
police deputy Brittany Hall for the kinds of favors Madriani has
always assumed he enjoys. But the audiotape Hall made of their
encounter turns up silent (some technical glitch) and then so does
Hall herself, bludgeoned to death. Arguillo's cousin Lenore Goya -
the prosecutor whose preparation of the solicitation case is ended
when D.A. Coleman Klein, a political comer who doesn't like
subordinates who stand up to him, cuts her loose - agrees to take
on the Coconut's defense. But her attempt to join the solicitation
charge with the homicide backfires when her status as Acosta's
former prosecutor forces her to step aside, and Madriani's left
holding the bag. The case against Acosta - no alibi, a highly
improper appointment on Hall's calendar for the afternoon of the
murder, forensic evidence that places her body inside his car, his
broken eyeglasses left at Hall's place, except for a sliver lodged
in her foot - lacks only an eyewitness. No, the only eyewitness,
Hall's five-year-old daughter Klmberly, can place both Goya and
Madriani himself on the scene. Meantime, the Police Association has
been working overtime to discredit Madriani in order to burn the
judge. The resulting legal/extralegal slugfest (marred only by
Madriani's endless glosses on every action and every speech, as if
he were a color commentator on a baseball broadcast) has something
for everybody, even readers who think they can see every twist
coming. Not as dense with surprises as Undue Influence (1994), but
right up there with the rest of Martini's dependable output: a
guaranteed rush for fans of courtroom drama. (Kirkus Reviews)
When Judge Armando 'The Coconut' Acosta is caught with a
prostitute, few are sympathetic. Lawyer Paul Madriani has a long
history of enmity with the judge and considers Acosta's arrest to
be the consequence of a lifetime of corruption. Even when the call
girl is found to be a beautiful police academy recruit and the
entire case appears to be a set-up, Paul is still reluctant to step
in and save the judge's career from impending doom. Then the police
recruit is brutally killed and Acosta is charged with murder.
Lenore Goya, an ambitious defence lawyer, takes on Acosta's case
and reluctantly Madriani is persuaded to come on board - they both
know he owes her one. Together they uncover the shocking evidence,
the ugly lies, the deceit and the corruption that are at the bottom
of the most complex and terrifying murder trial of Madriani's
career.
General
Imprint: |
Headline Feature
|
Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Release date: |
October 1996 |
Authors: |
Steve Martini
|
Dimensions: |
177 x 117 x 37mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback - Mass Market
|
Pages: |
536 |
Edition: |
Reissue |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-7472-4842-2 |
Categories: |
Books >
Fiction >
Genre fiction >
Crime & mystery >
General
Promotions
|
LSN: |
0-7472-4842-7 |
Barcode: |
9780747248422 |
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