Kód: 51381279
What if the most dangerous man in the courtroom wasn't hiding anything? What if a confessed killer walked into a police station, sat down at the front desk, and handed investigators not just his guilt but a three-year legal master ... celý popis
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Anotácia knihy
What if the most dangerous man in the courtroom wasn't hiding anything? What if a confessed killer walked into a police station, sat down at the front desk, and handed investigators not just his guilt but a three-year legal masterwork so precisely constructed that prosecuting him could cost two hundred and eleven innocent people years of their lives? What if the only path to conviction was also the path to catastrophe - and there was genuinely no third option?
Set against the cold winter streets of Edinburgh and the suffocating tension of a Scottish High Court murder trial unlike any in British criminal history, The Precedent is a legal thriller of breathtaking ambition. This is not a story about finding the killer. Everyone knows exactly who the killer is. This is a story about whether a justice system has the courage to face what its own errors have truly cost - and whether one prosecutor, working through the long nights of a Scottish winter, can find an argument the law was never supposed to need.
Callum Drewe is calm, methodical, and entirely without remorse. He killed a retired Scottish Appeal Court judge, confessed immediately and completely, and waived his right to legal counsel - not because he failed to understand his rights, but because he had spent three years preparing exactly what he intended to say. The judge he killed was the architect of a sentencing doctrine applied in over two hundred serious criminal cases across Scotland and England. That doctrine contained a fundamental legal error - a misapplication of precedent that produced sentences twenty to forty percent longer than the law properly permitted. Two hundred and eleven people are currently serving time under sentences shaped by it. Some are still inside. Others have already been released, having served every day of a sentence unlawful from the moment it was handed down. For eleven years, Drewe pursued every legitimate channel available: formal appeals, letters to Members of Parliament, engagement with law faculties, submissions to legal reform bodies. Nothing moved. So he did the one thing the system could not ignore. He committed premeditated murder - not to escape justice, but to weaponise it. Convict him, and two hundred and eleven sentences become immediately challengeable. Acquit him, and a confessed killer walks free. He designed the case so there was no third option, then sat quietly in the interview room and waited for the Crown to understand what it was looking at.
Facing him across the courtroom is Advocate Depute Fiona Chalmers - Scotland's most technically gifted criminal prosecutor, a former defence advocate who understands, from the inside, exactly how a brilliant legal mind constructs a trap. What she discovers as she maps every corner of Drewe's architecture is that the trap is airtight, the wrong it exposes is genuine, and somewhere inside the list of two hundred and eleven names she must now read is a man she prosecuted herself eight years ago - still inside, serving fourteen years under a guideline that may have had no legal right to exist.
Alongside them, an extraordinary cast carries the novel's full moral weight: a defence advocate with an undisclosed personal stake in the outcome; a legal scholar who identified a devastating wrong eleven years ago and did nothing further with the knowledge; a High Court judge of rare intellectual honesty presiding over a case the adversarial system was never designed to handle; a woman counting days in a prison cell; a man quietly rebuilding a life brick by brick in the Scottish Highlands; and a dead judge's private letter.
Morally unresolved, psychologically gripping, and impossible to put down, The Precedent is the British legal thriller for readers who believe the most dangerous question a courtroom can ask is not who committed the crime, but what the law is willing to do when the truth it uncovers turns out to be its own worst mistake.
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