The FBI thrillers The Target and The Edge, together for the first time in one volume. The Target—Coulter “keeps readers guessing” (Booklist) as a little girl is pursued by men who prove as relentless as their motives are baffling. And FBI agents Savich and Sherlock must unravel the clues. The Edge—In this “fast-paced thriller” (People), an FBI agent’s sister disappears after an attempted suicide. When Savich and Sherlock join the search, they discover a startling connection to a puzzling murder—and put their lives on the line to uncover the truth.
It had been more than three years since Brenda Schaefer had disappeared, her car found abandoned along an interstate highway in Louisville, Kentucky. From that rainy night forward, attention had...
In Double Jeopardy, Daniel Poneman argues that the world needs an “all-of-the-above” energy policy, one that advances the goal of decarbonizing the environment through all available means—including nuclear power.
Handed a rotten case, a lawyer will risk his life to uncover the truth A young woman is abducted by six men, beaten, raped, and left for dead.
C himsamy made a show of turning his head to look back at his platoon. then back at Neave. “How many men do you have here. Sergeant Neave?” “What?” Neave said. startled by the question. “Two. three dozen. Why do you want to know?
This volume provides an up-to-date, in-depth analysis of the Double Jeopardy Clause.
Mr. Feinstein looked embarrassed for him. "Sorry," Harry added and closed his briefcase. "Let's return to the office and I'll show you some other — " "Let's just go," Mrs. Feinstein remarked. She started toward the door, ...
The true story of Brenda Sue Schaefer describes attempts by prosecutors to overturn the double jeopardy clause when photos of her being murdered by her boyfriend are discovered a year after he had already been tried and found not guilty of ...
THE RACE IS ON—BUT DANGER IS TAKING THE LEAD Frank and Joe Hardy can’t believe their good luck: The Bayport Herald has given them press passes to cover the Formula One championship in Indianapolis.
In the first book-length book on the subject in over a quarter century, George C. Thomas III advances an integrated theory of double jeopardy law, a theory anchored in historical, doctrinal, and philosophical method.
Double Jeopardy considers the newest data on the nature of youths' mental disorders—their relationships to delinquency, the values and limits of methods to treat them, and the common patterns of adolescent offending.