PRIOR BAD ACTS [2006] By Tami Hoag
My Review Three Stars***
This third installment of the author’s Sam Novak and Nikki Liska book series was just okay. It starts off with a bang, the horrifying torture and slaughter of three victims of the Haas family. The Prologue recounts the discovery of a shocking crime scene in the moments before a tornado touches down. The mutilated corpse of a woman is found in the house, and then the ravaged bodies of her two foster daughters found hanged in the storm cellar. The husband Wayne Haas and 17-year-old foster son Booby are left to pick up the pieces of their lives.
The story fast forwards to 15 months down the road when the DA and Public Defender are going toe-to-toe with Judge Carey Moore about the admissibility of “prior bad acts” of the deranged derelict Karl Dahl who had been arrested and indicted by a Grand Jury to stand trial for the triple homicides. It is an almost universally lamented fact of law that juries are not made privy to a defendant’s prior history of bad behavior and his/her arrests, convictions. There is an “exception to the rule” but it only applies when the DA can convincingly argue that the past actions of the accused can go to establish a “pattern of behavior”. In this fictional tale of murder and mayhem, Dahl’s past history with the criminal justice system failed to serve up any violent crimes against persons. The judge ruled accordingly that all information about Dahl’s perverse actions in the past were inadmissible. The plot of the novel is triggered by this point of law that serves to prevent juries from hearing what a sleazeball the defendant happens to be which would naturally bias most honest law-abiding citizens. I would add that the very horror of the multiple homicides also fuels the flames of the plot. The rape, torture, mutilation and degradation of the mother and her two daughters adversely affected even the most seasoned detectives. Specifically, one suffered a fatal heart attack and a second veteran homicide detective suffered a psychotic break. The latter character Stan Dempsey plays a significant role in the unfolding drama.
Judge Carey Moore becomes an instant pariah in the eyes of the police department, the citizens of the community, and certainly Wayne and his teenaged son Bobby, the surviving members of the Haas family. An aborted murder attempt on the Judge follows her decision from the bench. Activating her car alarm in an isolated parking garage saves her from being bludgeoned to death by an unknown assailant. Sam and Nikki are assigned to protect the battered judge from any further attacks. Then Karl Dahl the suspect in custody for the triple homicide somehow gets away following a prison riot. He mysteriously disappears like Houdini amidst the chaos of shackled prisoners getting treated at the hospital. Subsequently the story contains a few more perfunctory murders and then the shocking abduction of Carey Moore while her home is being guarded by the police.
There are many suspects to choose from to include Carey’s philandering husband who is into more than the family’s funds and another woman’s bed, such as torture-porn and an unexplained expenditure of $25,000. Did the alibied low life scumbag of a husband hire a hit man in the person of the book’s iteration of legendary porn king Johnny Wadd? Then there is the veteran detective Stan Dempsey whose psyche has fragmented and unleashed a detached cold-blooded vigilante. Sam and Nikki are even looking at the grieving father and son for the attack on Carey. No one is thinking that the missing nut case Karl Dahl is behind the attempted murder of the judge, but he is crazy after all. So, who knows?
I had high expectations for this third installment of the series, and I was generally very disappointed. It was interesting enough to read and to finish it, but it felt like a “mish-mash” or a pot of stew that the author just cobbled together using unrelated ingredients she found in the cupboard. Yes, it started out with a nauseating multiple homicide. But from that point on there was no cohesive, believable plot in my opinion. It didn’t help that for the second time Sam Novak saw a “damsel in distress” and went off the deep end. This “romantic note” as the critic’s phrase it was just a “redo” of Kovac and Amanda Savard in the prior installment DUST TO DUST. It worked for me the first time, but not this time around with Judge Carey Moore.
It wasn’t difficult to figure out the killer, speaking of the original triple torture-murder of Marlene Haas and the two foster daughters. I was fairly sure that the same character was responsible for the murder attempt on Carey in the parking structure, which turned out to be correct. To be fair, the author provides the necessary bread crumbs to be able to solve the puzzle. The plot twist at the end of the book could not be predicted and perhaps more importantly it was unsatisfactory because it was so implausible. I thought to myself, “Really?”
The snappy dialogue I enjoy with Kovac, Nikki, and their fellow detectives was there but was insufficient to break the overall lack of interest in the “all over the place” story line. I would opine that this was the weakest of the three installments thus far. I have purchased the next couple of installments already. This book was published 15 years ago, thus perhaps the remarkable talent of Hoag today will begin to shine through on the final chapters featuring Kovac and Liska.