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The Guilty Plea
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The Guilty Plea
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The Guilty Plea
Ebook422 pages6 hours

The Guilty Plea

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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About this ebook

Bestselling author Robert Rotenberg is back with his next razor-sharp legal thriller. Rotenberg’s insider knowledge of the behind-the-scenes courtroom machinations and his mesmerizing trial scenes make this another scorching page-turner.

On the morning that his headline-grabbing divorce trial is set to begin, Terrance Wyler, youngest son of the Wyler Food dynasty, is found stabbed to death in the kitchen of his million-dollar home. Detective Ari Greene arrives minutes before the press and finds Wyler’s four-year-old son asleep upstairs. When Wyler’s ex-wife, a strange beauty named Samantha, shows up at her lawyer’s office with a bloody knife, it looks as if the case is over.

But Greene soon discovers the Wyler family has secrets they’d like to keep hidden, and they’re not the only ones. If there’s one thing Greene knows, it’s that the truth is never simple.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherScribner
Release dateMay 3, 2011
ISBN9781439190470
Author

Robert Rotenberg

Robert Rotenberg is the author of several bestselling novels, including Old City Hall, The Guilty Plea, Stray Bullets, Stranglehold, Heart of the City, and Downfall. He is a criminal lawyer in Toronto with his firm Rotenberg Shidlowski Jesin. He is also a television screenwriter and a writing teacher. Visit him at RobertRotenberg.com or follow him on Twitter @RobertRotenberg.

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Reviews for The Guilty Plea

Rating: 3.75 out of 5 stars
4/5

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Standard mystery/courtroom drama type fare. It takes place in Canada, which is interesting because of some of the different laws there than in the U.S. It's the sequel to Old City Hall, but you don't need to have read the first to enjoy the second. Unless you are a huge fan of this genre, it is not a must-read.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Very good legal thriller. I have to say I enjoyed this one more than many of Grisham's later ones. Set in Toronto a young mother is accused of killing her husband, says she is innocent and the case goes to trial. Many revelations. twists and though I had an idea of who the real killer was I have to say I wasn't sure. Very well written and learning about the legal system in Canada was a bonus.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    On a hot August morning, Arceli Ocaya, the nanny of four year-old Simon Wyler, arrives at her usual time, 7:30 AM, to find that nothing is as usual. The front door is open, there is no sign of Terrance Wyler who always has the stereo playing loudly as he chops fresh fruit in the kitchen, and Billy, the family dog, who always greats Arceli with loud exhuberance, approaches her with his head down. Arceli heads to the kitchen and knows from the smell that there is a great deal of blood in that room. Then she sees Terrance Wyler on the floor, his body torn with multiple stab wounds. Arceli races to the stairs, desperate to find Simon. The little boy is still sleeping.Detective Ari Greene gets the call to lead the investigation. Greene is number four on the list of four detectives to be assigned to a murder; it is his bad luck that the death of Terrance Wyler is the fourth in the city. Because the homicide squad isn’t at full strength, Daniel Kennicott, a patrol officer, is assigned to assist Greene. Daniel and Ari have a good working relationship built on a previous case.Shortly after arriving at his law office, Ted DiPaulo receives a phone call from another attorney, Winston Feindel, a family lawyer who referred criminal problems to DiPaulo. Feindel has been representing Samantha Wyler in what the tabloids refer to as the “divorce from hell.” The trial is scheduled to start this day. Feindel had referred Samantha Wyler to Ted so that he could prepare her for what would be a brutal cross-examination. Now Feindel tells Ted his job is done; there is no divorce when one of the parties is dead. And, by the way, when he arrived at his office Sam was sitting on the stairs waiting for him.When Ari is talking to Simon, getting him ready to go to Arceli’s apartment until his relatives have been informed, the little boy drops a bomb shell. ” ‘She cried last night,’ ” Simon said…..’Silly Simon,’ Ocaya said. ‘Last night you were not at your mother’s house, you slept here.’ ‘My mom came into my room here at my dad’s house. She kissed me and she was crying.’….’She said she wouldn’t see me for a long time. How come?’ “At Feindel’s office, Ted gets his own surprise from a member of the Wyler family. “She opened her arms and held out a red-and-white dish towel. He was about to take it. Then his lawyer’s instincts kicked in and he pulled back. ‘Sam, listen to me. Put that on the carpet and open it. Slowly.’ Fixing him with her eyes, she placed the towel down and unfolded the corners one at a time….’It’s from our kitchen’…. She exposed a black-handled knife, stained from top to bottom with blood.”The Wyler family is ubiquitous in the Toronto area. Wyler Fresh billboards are all over the city and environs and the fruit and vegetable business has made the family very wealthy. Nathan, the oldest, is the hands on member of the family, the hard-worker who bears the responsibility of choosing each day’s batches of food, as perfect as possible to maintain the family reputation. Jason, the second son, is disabled. He has a motor neuron disease that is slowly killing him. Terrance, the youngest, is the golden child. Strong, good-looking, and charming, he benefits from the family’s success without having to contribute to it. Terrance met Samantha when she came to work as an accountant for Wyler Fresh. As an accountant, she was a plus for the family. She was not what they wanted for a daughter-in-law. When the marriage ended five years after it began, the Wylers wanted her to leave with what she came, nothing, including her son.It is bad enough that Sam took the murder weapon from the scene but when the police learn that Sam had received a message from Terrance just before he died, the noose tightens. She had gone to the house and she claims that Terrence was already dead. Why did she live Simon there and why didn’t she call the police?THE GUILTY PLEA is a police procedural/ legal mystery and it is a definite plus that the characters from OLD CITY HALL are back. Ari Greene, Ted DiPaulo, and Daniel Kennicott are characters that are fully formed, interesting, and compelling. The murder in THE GUILTY PLEA is the place from which the story moves forward and backward. The secrets of two families could destroy both if revealed. Affairs inform two stories, and the guilty plea has two meanings.It has been five years since Rotenberg’s first book, OLD CITY HALL, was published. THE GUILTY PLEA is an excellent book, one I read in an afternoon. It doesn’t pack quite the punch of OLD CITY HALL but I do hope Rotenberg’s third book makes it to the shelves much faster.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I enjoy a number of genres - legal thrillers being one of them. But when mentally going over my list of favourite authors, I realized that none of the legal list were Canadian. So I was excited to read Robert Rotenberg's new novel The Guilty Plea. Rotenberg is a practicing lawyer who lives in Toronto and has based his series in the same city. I love reading a book with Canadian references - Timmies, the Globe and place names as well - Eglinton/Bloor, Jane and Finch. Knowing the settings are real and having seen some of them make the novel all that more authentic.But what makes Rotenberg's novels really pop is his knowledge of the Canadian legal system, his trial expertise and the number of years he's been at it. His plots, characters and dialogue all have the ring of authenticity and that 'insider's' point of view. It just makes his novel all the more believable.The Guilty Plea brings back characters from Rotenberg's first novel 'Old City Hall'. Homicide Detective Ari Greene, Officer Daniel Kennicott, lawyers, Crowns and others. I found all of the characters believable and connected with them. Their personal lives are just as engrossing as the primary plot line.In the Guilty Plea, Terrance Wyler, the youngest son of a Canadian food conglomerate is found stabbed to death in his kitchen while his young son sleeps upstairs. His estranged wife shows up at her lawyers - with the bloody knife from Wyler's kitchen. Open and shut case. But she swears she's innocent. As Greene investigates, he finds more questions than answers. I very much enjoyed The Guilty Plea, although I found the end a bit rushed. I will definitely be adding Rotenberg to my 'must read' list.