Disclaimer

Disclaimer: I am providing the content on this blog solely for the reader's general information. This blog contains my personal commentary on issues that interest me. Unless otherwise stated, the views expressed on this blog are mine alone, and not the views of any law firm with which I am in any way associated or any other member of any such law firm. Nothing on this blog is intended to be a solicitation of, or the provision of, legal advice, nor to create an attorney-client relationship with me or any law firm. Please view my "Full Disclaimer" statement at the bottom of the page for additonal information..

Sunday, May 20, 2018

Ghosts of the Mid-Country – New Book About to Drop, Pre-Order It


This blog post is a call to action made directly to you, loyal readers.  This is not tangential, though funny, information placed in your general direction, so you can snark at Taco-Drunk Florida-Man, make appropriate plans to hide your beer from rampaging feral hogs, and know to avoid bootleg butt-injections with fix-a-flat (seriously, don’t do that). 

No, this is a direct, though possibly delayed depending on how you choose to order, call to action.
Proof copy above  - your book will be available for resale


My new novel, Ghosts of the Mid-Country is coming out in about a week and a half.  On June 1, it will drop.  It will not drop on Memorial Day weekend because you will be eating far too much barbecue to read a thrilling murder mystery, drug and human-trafficking caper, with a side of serious (un)requited love story thrown in, just to even things out and push the story along.

Some of you know – though not enough based on the Amazon statistics of books sold recently – that my first novel, Devils Walk Through Galveston, is a page-turning crime-law novel that follows schizophrenic murderer from Mississippi, down to the Texas coast where the city of Houston is in an uproar over unsolved murders being linked to one man. It’s the story of the cops who hunt the killer in an atmosphere where ends justify means, until it gets in front of a jury and the means are examined under a microscope by attorneys with their own motives and side-deals that break down in the heat of battle.  It’s a page turner. Everyone who reads it loves it – all five-star reviews.  Buy it here on Amazon.

And turn some pages because Ghosts of the Mid-Country is the sequel. It stands on its own. But it stands even better, Rocky II style, on the shoulders of the first novel.  In Ghosts of the Mid-Country, an overworked attorney wakes up in jail with amnesia brought on by job stress and his marriage falling apart. At the same time, there is a quadruple murder in Southwest Houston with one witness that no one believes.  The police, searching for the murderer or murderers uncover links in an international drug and human trafficking ring operating on both sides of the border and up into the heart of the country, circling around the fulcrum of Houston.  It is the story of an unlikely hero, pushed to the brink and set up as bait to draw the evil closer to those trying to stop it.  It answers the questions of Devils Walk Through Galveston.  You’ll love it. A teaser is below.

You have less than two weeks to read Devils Walk Through Galveston to get ready.  If mass amounts of barbecue and beer are not in your immediate future, you have time.  If you are going to get bloated on sweet, salty brisket and Bud Light next weekend, then pre-order Ghosts of the Mid-Country from the publisher, SNR Publishing, division of SNR Creative: http://www.snr-creative.com/snr-publishing/. Or put it on your calendar to order from Amazon June 1.  Anyone who orders from SNR Publishing, and wants it, will get a signed copy, just ask when you email them.  Anyone who orders from Amazon and gets me the physical book (by sending it to SNR Creative), I’ll sign and send back at my cost.

Here’s your teaser: Ghosts of the Mid-Country, Ch 3.

Houston, two weeks before, seven a.m.

A warm morning in Southwest Houston. Early fall and the temperature was in the sixties, summer finally calming down. Windows down on Fondren Street. A few mothers in yards idly glancing over at children playing in the grass in the early morning, watching to make sure they didn’t get near the sidewalk. The street a mix of businesses and homes. Massage parlor brothels and transmission shops. The neighborhood a mix of Latin and Southeast Asian. Tricked out Hondas and low- riding Impalas sleeping off the night before.
The metal roll-top door to Taitz Body Shop was down. The business was set to open in half an hour. Four cars in the parking spots to the side, the chain across the driveway still closed. Music played inside. The muffled beats crept out through the one open window of the office. Traffic picking up at Laredo Taqueria down the street. People were walking and stumbling into the line that stretched outside. Four uniformed policemen waited patiently for their turn. They ignored the stink of last night’s weed on the plaid cotton shirts and torn jeans of the laborers getting breakfast before walking down to the empty lot to wait for a day’s work.
Four muffled shots came from the garage. Deafened by the distance. High pitched, low caliber. They sounded like a hammer hitting metal. Hammers hit metal at the body shop all the time. No one on the street stirred. No one in the taco line moved.
The garage door raised up a foot and slammed down. Two more shots. A little fat man rolled out bleeding from a shot to the back of his shoulder. He got up and ran, staggering, off balance, to the taqueria, collapsing in front of a pick-up screeching its brakes an inch from his leg. The police ran to him, turned him on his back. One asked, “Where?” He pointed at the garage down the street. Three ran toward it. One stayed behind, radioed in an ambulance. The laborers in line moved away slowly. Walked down the street. Trying to disappear from the onrush that would come.

Sunday, May 13, 2018

Right to Remain Silent, But Not the Ability


It is a hallmark of Anglo/American Law that a person accused of a crime has the right to remain silent.  It is a hallmark of Anglo/American criminal law that very few of the accused have the ability to remain silent. 

In England, all you have to do is shut your mouth.  In America, you can go with option A, shutting your mouth, or you can choose option B and go all Dave Chapelle and say any of fifty ways, “I plead the fifth.”  

It sounds awesome for the common man.  It is awesome for the common man.  Why, do you think that The Man would allow this to happen, to make it difficult on himself to convict criminals? There was the nasty history of torturing suspects to get supposed confessions, and other overzealous police practices. 
Potentially overzealous police


I don’t think that’s why The Man allowed the right to remain silent.  It’s because the vast majority of people have no ability to remain silent.  It damn near never happens. Accused criminals find all kinds of ways to vomit up the truth to the police within about ten seconds of the police pulling up and asking why they pulled you over.  

Think I made that up? I didn’t. It happens time and again, with a couple of recent examples. The Sun, world’s greatest news source, reports on Barry Hodge, who was driving his work van when he was pulled over by officers. Could Barry keep it together like Jay Z?  No, he couldn’t he was sweating and shaking and vomited out the truth, that he had a £700 stash of cocaine in a Kinder Egg shell before telling police he had more in his house.  Hodge told the stunned officers: “I just want to be honest I’ve got another two ounce of prop in the house and loads of benzo. You can just go round and get it.”

This kid is not gangster, not at all.