Reviewed by Mystereity Reviews on
The first quarter of the book was taken up by the Kennedys, from JFK's assassination to the killing of Bobby Kennedy to Ted Kennedy and Chappaquiddick. I confess that I've never bought into all the hype surrounding the assassinations of JFK and Bobby, but the questions raised in the book about the findings certainly makes it difficult to deny a government cover up. As for Teddy, he deserved all he got, in my opinion.
The rest of the book was high profile cases, such as Elvis Presley's death and whether it was suicide, an overdose or a heart attack, to the case of Jean Harris, who was convicted of murdering Scarsdale Diet doctor Herman Tarnower, to Claus Von Buelow who was accused of trying to kill his wife by injecting her with insulin. Again, Wecht's findings were neatly laid out, rational and fascinating. I had little knowledge of the cases before I read the book, so I don't know how it stacks up against other sources, but his arguments were certainly believable.
Overall, a great book that looked behind the scenes of forensics at some of the most sensational crimes of the late 20th century.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 13 September, 2015: Finished reading
- 13 September, 2015: Reviewed