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Death Penalty by William J. Coughlin β€” book cover

Death Penalty

by William J. Coughlin
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Overview


Detroit lawyer Charley Sloan has been around the block once or twice. Down for the count, drinking heavily, a three-time loser in the marriage wars, Charley repairs his tattered career and gets back in the game. Heading his rogues' gallery of clients is the infamous, twisted angel of mercy, Doctor Death, whose patients have a strange habit of dying under very peculiar circumstances.

But now Charley steps into a case with the opportunity to do some good. The high stakes include a literal matter of life and death. And, as he quickly discovers, they also include the sinister stench of corruption that reaches to the highest levels of jurisprudence-including Charley Sloan's respected mentor. Suddenly, a rock and a hard place never looked so good.

Though drinking nearly caused his disbarment, former hot-shot Detroit attorney Charley Sloan gets a chance to rescue his career with two headline-making cases--one involving a physician labeled "Dr. Death" and one complete with an extortion scam that seems to incriminate a much-respected judge.

About the Author, William J. Coughlin


William J. Coughlin, a former defense attorney and judge in Detroit for twenty years, was the author of sixteen novels. He lived in Grosse Point Woods, Michigan, with his wife, Ruth, an author and book critic.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Coughlin ( Shadow of a Doubt ) delivers another thoughtful, brisk-paced and fully satisfying legal mystery. Though his drinking caused his near-disbarment, former hot-shot Detroit attorney Charlie Sloan, now practicing from Pickeral Point, a small town outside the Motor City, gets a chance to rescue his career. The recovering, thrice-divorced criminal lawyer hits the headlines when his client, a physician labeled Dr. Death, is convicted of murder for helping a wealthy, terminally ill patient speed his demise. While appealing that conviction and advising a waitress who has accused a Pickeral Point bigwig of rape, Sloan is asked by an old drinking buddy and fellow lawyer to take charge of the appeal of a $5-million personal injury suit brought against Ford by a man paralyzed in an auto accident. Sloan soon finds himself being lured into a extortion scam that seems to incriminate his mentor, a much-respected judge. As the rape case evolves into homicide, Dr. Death is jailed again on another murder charge, and the personal injury appeal confirms Sloan's suspicions of high-court corruption. In Coughlin's deft handling, Sloan triumphs in each case with his credibility and self-respect intact--and without taking a drink. Readers will regret that Coughlin (Shadow of a Doubt) died earlier this year. Literary Guild and Doubleday Book Club alternates; R e ader's Digest Condensed Books selection. (Oct.)

Library Journal

Detroit trial lawyer Charley Sloan ( Shadow of a Doubt , LJ 7/91) is defending a doctor accused of helping his patients die--for a fee. At the same time he is asked to handle the appeal in a $5 million lawsuit involving Ford and a man injured in an accident. Sloan, whose reputation for alcohol consumption and legal shenanigans far outweighs his current nondrinking, now-honorable life style, is approached by a former appellate judge who offers him a way to win the appeal. Juggling both cases, Sloan demonstrates a high level of heroism and professional ethics and the courage to implement both. Coughlin, an attorney and judge himself, brilliantly captures the corruption of the legal system by human error and greed. This 14th in a long line of well-written novels is thought-provoking and timely. Bravo! Literary Guild alternate; previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 6/15/92.--Jo Ann Vi carel, Cleveland Heights-University Heights P.L., Ohio

From the Publisher

"A superb book, rich in the elements that make for a wonderful read. Death Penalty is the best of [Coughlin's] novels...a remarkable legacy...the most enjoyable book I've read all year."-The Detroit News

"Bravo! Coughlin brilliantly captures the corruption of the legal system by human error and greed. Thought-provoking and timely."-Library Journal

"A wily, likeable tale."-Time

"Coughlin delivers another thoughtful, brisk-paced and fully satisfying legal mystery."-Publishers Weekly

"Readers who enjoyed Scott Turow's Presumed Innocent are likely to enjoy this fast-paced novel. Will not fail to please connoisseurs of legal fiction."-American Bar Association Journal

Book Details

Published
November 2, 2004
Publisher
St. Martin's Press
Pages
432
ISBN
9781429903240

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