The fourth book in the Vincent Cardozo series, Jury
Double, originally published by Headline Books in 1996, is an interesting
mixture of a legal thriller and a police procedural. The complicated plot
centers around Corey Lyle, a cult leader similar to Charles Manson and Jim
Jones, who is believed to convince his followers to commit murder and other
crimes while staying far removed himself. The New York City prosecutor thinks
they have established a case against Lyle in the deaths of an elderly wealthy
couple who left their considerable estate to Lyle. Called to jury duty is Kyra
Talbot, who is enmeshed in a custody battle with her ex-husband. Her mother
left a significant trust to her only grandchild, Kyra’s son, and whoever has
the son has control of the money. Both Kyra and her ex-husband outspend their
earnings, so the outcome of the upcoming custody hearing is crucial to them
both.
Kyra doesn’t want to miss the custody hearing
so she pressures her twin sister Anne Bingham to take her place on the jury,
just for a day, she says, but it turns out for the duration of the trial.
Because of the extreme publicity, the judge decides to sequester the jury: no
contact at all with the outside world. Even though the hotel telephones are supposed
to be blocked to external calls, Anne gets an outside call in her room telling
her that her nephew has been kidnapped and if she wants to see him again, she
must secure an acquittal for Corey Lyle. There are no phone records showing
that the call took place and the judge thinks she’s trying to get out of jury
duty. The judge is looking for a promotion so she has no intention of calling a
mistrial.
In the meantime, a former supporter of Lyle’s
turns state’s evidence in return for immunity for his own misdeeds, which is
sending the police around the bend, as the supporter is far too interested in
children for anyone to reasonably overlook it. One of Cardozo’s detectives
disappears after following him and is later found murdered.
Multiple interwoven plot lines, all of which
are resolved, perhaps not completely realistically, by the end of the book. Fast-moving,
good escapist reading.
This review was based on the Kindle version of
the book released a few years ago.
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File Size: 1508 KB
·
Print Length: 384 pages
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Publisher: Open Road
Media (February 18, 2014)
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Publication Date: February 18,
2014
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Sold by: Amazon
Digital Services LLC
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ASIN: B00I3TJIGM
Aubrey Hamilton ©2019
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on
Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
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