You get the impression, reading this book, that you wouldn't want to have Vincent Bugliosi round for dinner. He is arrogant and constantly berates his client, which I found particularly egregious considering taking a plea deal--one of the things they clashed over--seemed quite sensible. Not to mention it was suggested by his long suffering co counsel, who is clearly the voice of reason in the duo and often has to work behind Bugliosi's back.
That said, it's hard to imagine a truly effective defense attorney in particular with a different personality. If anything can be said for good old Vince, it is that he is passionate and prepared down to the last detail. If I'm ever falsely accused of something, I'm dialing his number first.
And the proof is in the pudding; he gets his client acquitted. Personally I think Jennifer is either a sociopath or unforgivably stupid and naive. At the very least her emotional responses are often stunted and inappropriate, a fact noted by Bugliosi himself. For example, after her brilliant hardworking attorney has just given the performance of a life time and won her her freedom, she spends the celebratory dinner afterwards criticizing such minutia as the color of his tie and how his hair is combed,
Personally, I doubt very much that she's completely innocent. But that's not the standard we hold defendants to in the U.S. For that reason I feel that Bugliosi championed the proper result: acquittal. Without anything definitive to show that she knew about the murders, she has a right to her freedom.
I am sorry for Mac and Muff, because they sound like interesting people, if a bit judgemental towards people who don't live their highly privileged lifestyle. Muff's feelings about the trip (a deep sense of foreboding) only drive home the point that many true crime books do, that people should in general trust their instincts. How many lives would be spared if those people had just given weight to their instincts?
I also found the trial details and the workings of a defense case fascinating.. Knowing how and why certain arguments are made was illuminating and riveting. I especially appreciated that each argument was laid out in the back of the book. However, I felt that Bugliosi made several huge missteps. Keep in mind I am not a lawyer, and hell, he won so he obviously did something right. However, he spends a long time asserting that Jennifer may not have heard gunshots thanks to the noise of the fauna on the island and the rushing of the wind and water. But after making this perfectly serviceable argument, he speculates that Mac and Muff's bodies may have been cut up with a chainsaw! Well shit, it's likely she would have heard a chainsaw, right? Luckily for him nobody seems to have picked up on this. He also invokes Hitler and Eva Braun to make a point, which I thought would automatically lose people.
That aside, it's a good book. If you have any interest in crime or the law, give it a whirl.