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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Characters Lift a Courtroom Drama Above the Pack
Call this genre fiction if you like, but Jay Brandon elevates the familiar cops and courtrooms drama with mature insight into the lives of a Black lawyer, the first of his family out of poverty, and a White cop whose affection for the old neighborhood is expressed in terms only a vigilante would understand. Raymond Boudro is the Black lawyer with a client list packed...
Published on July 24, 2000 by James W. Christian

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3.0 out of 5 stars Just OK
Having worked in both law enforcement and a district attorney's office, I have pretty high standards when it comes to books involving cops and lawyers. This book didn't make a big impression on me. However, the characters were interesting and depicted well. I was hoping for a blockbuster ending, but I didn't get one.
Published 5 months ago by Donna J. Runnels


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Characters Lift a Courtroom Drama Above the Pack, July 24, 2000
This review is from: Rules of Evidence (Mass Market Paperback)
Call this genre fiction if you like, but Jay Brandon elevates the familiar cops and courtrooms drama with mature insight into the lives of a Black lawyer, the first of his family out of poverty, and a White cop whose affection for the old neighborhood is expressed in terms only a vigilante would understand. Raymond Boudro is the Black lawyer with a client list packed with drug pushers and convenience store robbers. Mike Stennett is the White narcotics cop who doesn't shy from bashing heads and breaking ribs when he can't make a case stick in court. When Stennett is accused of beating a Black man to death, he comes to Boudro to defend him. Boudro deplores this renegade cop's methods but wants to know the truth; taking the case is the only way he'll ever know. The crucible in which these two characters are locked creates all the tension you expect from the genre, but there's much more to savor--authentic lawyer talk to be sure, but it's the finely wrought human side of the two characters that sets this book apart.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Just OK, August 17, 2011
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This review is from: Rules of Evidence (Mass Market Paperback)
Having worked in both law enforcement and a district attorney's office, I have pretty high standards when it comes to books involving cops and lawyers. This book didn't make a big impression on me. However, the characters were interesting and depicted well. I was hoping for a blockbuster ending, but I didn't get one.
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Rules of Evidence
Rules of Evidence by Jay Brandon (Mass Market Paperback - December 1, 1992)
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