Flake - The Trial of a Cop

A True Crime Story Told By The Prosecutor

by Hugh Anthony Levine


Formats

E-Book
$9.99
Softcover
$20.99
Hardcover
$30.99
E-Book
$9.99

Book Details

Language :
Publication Date : 12/8/2006

Format : E-Book
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 124
ISBN : 9781450098076
Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 124
ISBN : 9781425730192
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 124
ISBN : 9781425730208

About the Book

A New York City police lieutenant is facing trial for attempted murder of a prostitute he shot while off duty. The Police Department has proclaimed him a hero who justly defended himself when he was attacked by two hookers with a knife. He is being prosecuted by a young Manhattan assistant D.A. newly assigned the case for trial. The shooting happened four years earlier, when the prosecutor was still in law school, and no one in the D.A.´s Office has brought it to trial in all that time. It falls to him to try to penetrate the cover-up and prove that the police framed the two hookers with phony robbery charges and planted a knife at the scene to protect the lieutenant.

This would present a daunting challenge for even a veteran trial advocate, much less a lawyer of limited experience.

Reminiscent of prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi´s account of the Charlie Manson case in Helter Skelter, Flake is as real as a true-crime story can get. You the reader sit at the prosecutor´s table in the Manhattan courthouse as the young but resourceful prosecutor takes on the challenge of going up against the police, usually a prosecutor´s ally in battling crime. You are in on his stratagems - indeed his very thoughts - as he engages in courtroom combat against the cop and his highly experienced defense lawyer.

Woven throughout are connections to the Watergate scandal, the N.Y.C. Knapp Commission investigation into police corruption, the shameful Kitty Genovese episode which led to New York being labeled a city of people who didn´t care.

With a mid-1970s Manhattan backdrop, Flake grapples with the centuries-old quandary which continues to challenge our criminal justice system and our society as a whole: Who polices the police?


About the Author

HUGH ANTHONY LEVINE joined the Manhattan DA’s Office in 1971, right out of Columbia Law School. He later also served as an Assistant DA in San Francisco, where he prosecuted the notorious 1977 Golden Dragon Massacre cases. A criminal defense attorney since 1984, he practices law and lives in San Francisco but finds time for another passion—saltwater fly-fishing.