The Gods of Guilt by Michael Connelly



Michael Connelly, The Gods of Guilt (New York: Little, Brown and Company; 2013), 400 pages.
  
Gods of Guilt is a Michael Connelly crime novel. The story is based around a Los Angeles based criminal defense attorney called Michael Haller, a recurring character in Connelly’s Lincoln Lawyer series. This book is about Haller defending a man accused of killing one of his former clients, a prostitute that Haller tried to reform or help leave the business. Haller’s defense investigation reveals that his new client was set up, and that the victim may have been killed because of her role as a witness in another case, an appeal against a conviction by an incarcerated drug cartel member. The deceased prostitute was a witness in a case that could free the cartel member if she acknowledged her role as an informant to the Federal Government’s Drug Enforcement Agency (“D.E.A.”). Her testimony could reveal criminal activity by a corrupt D.E.A. agent, including planting evidence that led to the conviction of the cartel member. For Haller to free his new client, he has to show in court the part played by his deceased former prostitute client in assisting the corrupt D.E.A agent commit a crime. This act would introduce to his defense the element of reasonable doubt through the identification of an alternate killer with both opportunity and motive.

This book is a typical Connelly book. It is a fast moving story that maintains the reader’s interest with generous doses of court room drama, suspense, official corruption and troubled relationships. As seems to be the case with most Connelly books, the principal characters are less than perfect and have paid a high price for their success, namely, marriage failures and alienation from their children. Gods of Guilt is an interesting book that would be enjoyed by Connelly’s regular readers, or persons that enjoy realistic crime fiction that accurately portrays the prosecution of crimes in Los Angeles. If the story is truly realistic, Connelly seems to be warning the reader, though his main character Haller, to never talk to police when they are investigating a murder without having a lawyer present because the police will most likely try to pin it on you.

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