The Fall by John Lescroart
Monday, May 4, 2015 at 9:43AM Published by Atria Books on May 5, 2015
The Fall isn't my favorite Dismas Hardy novel, in part because it lacks the  emotional heft of John Lescroart's best work, but it nevertheless tells a  good story. While courtroom scenes are strong, they are not as dramatic  as those in some earlier novels, perhaps because they focus on Dismas'  daughter while Dismas paces around like a worried old dog. It is,  however, interesting to see Dismas play the role of father-mentor-coach  as he dissects the trial and gives his daughter pointers.
A  17-year-old girl falls to her death from a bridge. Did she jump or was  she pushed? A murder investigation ensues and the police, under fire for  their failure to solve homicides with African American victims, feel pressured to make an arrest. The District Attorney, criticized for  failing to get convictions in homicides against black victims, is under  the gun to convict someone. Too often, when the need to secure a conviction has political consequences, the government doesn't care much about whether the right  person is being arrested or prosecuted. In this case, the suspect is a  volunteer advocate for troubled kids who may or may not have been having  an affair with the dead girl.
Having recently met Dismas Hardy's  daughter, Rebecca ("the Beck"), the suspect knows where to go for legal  help. The Beck is a bit unseasoned to be handling a murder case, but  since Dismas is backing her up I didn't view that as a huge stretch. The  trial begins only about a third of the way into the novel.  Inexplicably, the Beck waits until the trial begins before she sends an  investigator out to look for evidence of her client's innocence.  Granted, that always worked for Perry Mason, but one might have expected  the Beck to give the case more thought before the trial started.
The  Fall deftly explores the ugly intersection between race and the  criminal justice system. It is spot on in its condemnation of the "rush  to justice" (which is too often a rush to injustice) that leads to  inadequate investigations, sloppy police work, and questionable  accusations, all based on the unstated understanding that quieting the  public requires someone to be arrested, even if it might not be the  guilty party. Of course, as is common in a Dismas Hardy novel, whether  the client is or isn't guilty is ambiguous throughout much of the novel.
The  plot turns on an improbable coincidence, but that's true of most modern  crime novels. Since life is full of improbable coincidences, they only  bother me when they are outlandish, and Lescroart sold me on the  possibility that this one could have happened. A bit of drama at the end  is too predictable but, on the whole, The Fall is a solid entry in the  Dismas Hardy series.
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