Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Legal ace turns defendant in Connelly’s ‘Innocence’

- By Bruce DeSilva

After celebratin­g his latest trial victory at a local pub, Los Angeles criminal lawyer Mickey Haller gets behind the wheel of his Lincoln, drives a hundred yards or so down the street, and gets pulled over by the LAPD.

At first, Mickey thinks it’s just a DUI check, but the officer spots what appears to be blood dripping from the back of the car and asks Mickey to open the trunk. Not without a warrant, Mickey says, but he’s just bluffing.

“Exigent circumstan­ces,” the officer says. After all, there could be someone still alive in there.

So begins “The Law of Innocence,” the sixth novel in Michael Connelly’s Mickey Haller series. Inside the trunk, the cop finds the corpse of a con man who was once Mickey’s client, so the character introduced in 2005’s “The Lincoln Lawyer” is promptly charged with first degree murder.

Fans who know Mickey will immediatel­y recognize that he’s being set up, but the frame is exquisite. Forensic evidence proves that the victim was shot after being placed in the trunk and that the crime occurred inside Mickey’s garage. Worse, police soon uncover a motive: The victim had stiffed Mickey on a big legal bill.

When a crusading prosecutor persuades a judge to set bail at $5 million, Mickey finds himself trying to formulate a defense strategy from behind prison walls. Although he is determined to represent himself, reinforcem­ents arrive in the form of his ex-wife, a lawyer affectiona­tely known as Maggie McFierce, and his half-brother, retired LAPD detective Harry Bosch, who is also the main character in another series of crime novels by the author.

With the trial date looming, the defense team gradually discovers that the conspiracy to frame Mickey runs deep. The byzantine plot includes corruption in the L.A. Sheriff’s Department, an undercover FBI investigat­ion, and an organized crime scheme to defraud the U.S. government.

Connelly’s novels have long been distinguis­hed by his mastery of the complexiti­es of the justice system, including an ability to get police and courtroom procedures exactly right. Combine this with a cast of welldrawn characters, writing as precise as a Swiss watch, and a propulsive plot, and the result is one of the finest legal thrillers of the last decade.

 ??  ?? “The Law of Innocence” by Michael Connelly (Little, Brown & Co., $29)
“The Law of Innocence” by Michael Connelly (Little, Brown & Co., $29)

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