Perjury | 
| Author: Stan Latreille Publisher: Crown Category: Book
List Price: $24.00 Buy Used: $0.01 You Save: $23.99 (100%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 18 reviews Sales Rank: 2506552
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1st ed Pages: 337 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6 x 1.1
ISBN: 0609601385 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780609601389 ASIN: 0609601385
Publication Date: June 23, 1998 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: With pride from Motor City. All books guaranteed. Best Service, best prices.
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Jack Brenner thinks he can improve the quality of his life by moving from Chicago and his increasingly thankless job as a public defender to the small Michigan town of Kirtley and the relative calm of a civil practice. Think again, Jack. From this decidedly overused premise, Michigan Circuit Court Judge Stan Latreille has produced a surprisingly fresh debut legal thriller--albeit one with echoes of ancestors such as To Kill A Mockingbird and Anatomy of a Murder. At the heart of the story is an attractive, mercurial woman named Davey Alden, who may or may not have been lying when she accused her ex- husband of child abuse, and who then recanted after being charged with perjury. Davey plays Jack like an expert angler as he tries to avoid her charms while acting as her court-appointed lawyer, and it's safe to say that nothing we think going into this sharply written story turns out to be true. --Dick Adler
Book Description From a writer and trial judge poised to join the ranks of Scott Turow and Lisa Scottoline, Perjury is a fast-paced courtroom drama about lies, sexual abuse, and the conflict between law and justice. Jack Brenner, a burned-out public de-fender from Chicago, has left lying clients and political maneuvering behind to take on the more lucrative, predictable routine of a civil lawyer in a small Michigan town. But when the court assigns him to defend a woman accused of perjury, he is swept back into the labyrinth of the criminal justice system--and into a nest of small-town politics, greed, and revenge. His client, Davey Alden, has admitted she lied on the stand, fabricating the incidents when she claimed her husband Joel Alden sexually abused their young daughter. Outraged by Davey's deceit, the town and the legal system have shifted their sympathies to her husband, one of the most powerful men in the county. A quick, open-and-shut trial is expected. Brenner faces a vengeful prosecutor, a political judge, hostility from the press, and overwhelming evidence and public opinion against Davey. Fueled by his growing attraction to his seductive client, Jack Brenner has a case he cannot win and must not lose--for if Davey is convicted, not only will she face time in jail, but her daughter will be surrendered to Joel's custody. And Brenner has reason to believe that even if Davey is guilty of perjury, Joel is far from innocent. Stan Latreille tells a riveting tale of the law as it is practiced behind the closed doors of a judge's chambers and in the public eye--how guilt and innocence, means and ends, morality and justice are served, and failed, by the law.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 13 more reviews...
Who is the real criminal here? September 5, 2004 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
This book was recommended to me by an acquaintance for a quick read, and a little research.
Latreille said he got his information from people and friends in the legal field. His court must be pretty steamy, at the least. For the reader of this book, here are a few facts, and a lesson: the world of writers, press, and the law needs an over haul, when this type of nightmare unfolds in our halls of justice.
Stumbled accross this interesting bit of information,and passed it on, in a brief from the Judicial Tenure Commission against an Livingston County Judge, which Latreille's name is mention.
Judge Del Vero, of the county court, had a complaint filed for sexual harassment, settled out of court and the Judicial Tenure Commission filed a complaint against Del Vero. Below is a portion of the complaint filed.
12. "In approximately the later 1990"s, Respondent stated or speculated that 44th Circuit Court Administrator Bucilla Carroll obtained her position because she slept with the Hon. Stanley Laterille of that court. He did so on more than one occasion."
13. Prior to 1999, Respondent stated or speculated the 44th Circuit Court Friend of the Court Melissa Scharrer got her job by sleeping with the Hon. Stanley Laterille of that court.
After reading through the complaint filed by the Michigan Judicial Tenure Commission Formal Complaint no.75, and Latreille's book, I am wondering why a Grand Jury for corruption is not looking into the county of Livingston, seems too much is going on in that small town, and legal system. The Judical Tenure complaint is far more interesting than Laterille's book.
The commission complaint is on public record.
Ron Rock
Livingston County- just sued February 16, 2004 1 out of 4 found this review helpful
I heard a rumor of a computer hacking and brake in the county of Livingston where Stan's from, I think it would be wise before rave reviews are given on this book, to check out two sites on AOL, Bostondame1225, journal entries Some Memories Last, and Footsteps. Stan seems to borrow a bit of information. Not surprising this county is being sued, just settled out of court a law suit the ACLU filed. Seems corruption happens here. Brake ins, Obstruction of Justice, wow!!, just a start for this county.How many more get hurt and abused, before this is stopped in the county of Livingston. This Bostondame Mom's been put through enough and exploited enough. Sorry, on this your wrong Texas. Maybe these county people should read William J. Bennett's Book on Virtue, since they seem to lack that quality. George Bean
LAUDABLE FIRST NOVEL February 8, 2004 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
While the question of guilt or innocence is always a quotient in courtroom thrillers Perjury, a debut novel by Michigan trial judge, Stan Latreille, puts an original spin on the norm. Once his fictional case has been set forth, Mr. Latreille generates and sustains a rapid paced narrative with injections of suspense, while also tossing out eye-opening, often disconcerting, observations about judges, juries, lawyers and our legal system.Responding to the invitation of Scott Sherman, an old college buddy, Jack Brenner, "a jaded lawyer on the wrong side of forty," joins Sherman's legal firm in one of the tonier suburbs of Detroit, Michigan A divorce and years as a justice-will-prevail believing public defender have left Jack cynical and disgruntled. Being appointed to handle the pro bono defense of an admitted perjurer does nothing to improve his state of mind. However, when Jack meets his client, Davey Alden, a young mother with the requistie tangle of red hair, blue eyes and luscious figure, he puts on his tarnished suit of armor and becomes her avid champion. It comes as no surprise that a romance blossoms between the two, but that predictable occurrence aside, the author offers some intriguing discoveries as Jack researches his case. Davey is to stand trial for perjury after claiming that her husband, Joel, had sexually abused their daughter, and then admitting in court that she had fabricated the charge. It seems there's no hope for Davey as she's an admitted liar, which has incurred the wrath of the entire community, many of whom are reliant upon the bounty of powerful and wealthy Joel. The fact that Davey was abused by her father as a child may win her some jury sympathy but, Jack thinks, not an acquittal. Any chance of winning his case becomes an even longer shot when Jack learns that Davey is promiscuous, and a handsome, too-smooth dentist is at the ready to testify that not only did he bed Davey the first time he met her but she wanted him to help her in a scheme to frame her husband for child abuse. Well, things always look darkest before the last fifty pages and such is the case with Perjury. In true Perry Mason style a surprise piece of evidence leaves a courtroom in shocked silence, and waiting for Jack's closing argument. Standing before the box of solid citizens, he cautions that the law is not some cold formula, but demands a human heart: "If you apply the law coldly, you will not render justice. You must apply it humanly." The verdict reached by the jury and the ensuing revelations remind us that in some lawsuits there are no victors. While the courtroom scenes sizzle with authenticity, dialogue, at times, seems tired, such as, `'The road to hell is paved with good intentions, my dear,' I said." Nonetheless, Perjury is a laudable first novel, indicating that the author's inventive mind may hold future surprises. - Gail Cooke
Abuse of the Justice System August 31, 2003 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
Living in the Brighton - Howell area, were Stan Latreille resides. I find it difficut to see where creative imagination was used in this attempt at a fiction novel. Golf Club Road as well as other visual areas described are an attempt to regurgitate a description of the city of Howell, Michigan. However, his description of the area being a group of inbred, ruthless, body of people which exploits then abuses women and children is not fiction, but reality, showing in them not the best, but the worse humans offer in egocentric, greedy, individuals who are not only in law, but feel they are above the law. 92 cents is far more than anyone should ever pay for this sickening story written to exploit.
The Parsons Egg October 27, 2002 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
A very readable and enjoyable book , the plot is a bit cliched and the characters underdeveloped however the prose and legal jousting are enjoyable . The elucidation of davy's childhood is very disturbing , not for the squeamish . The ending is pretty much unbelievable in the context of the actual charges davy faced
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