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Killing Dan Ott: Corruption and Murder in Small Town America

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The long-awaited sequel to “Saving Stacy: The Untold Story of the Moody Massacre,” St. Clair’s new thriller is “Killing Dan Ott: Corruption and Murder in Small Town America.” It’s the tragic true-crime story of a case of mistaken identity that took detectives from Geauga County, Ohio, ten long years to solve. Why so long? Logan County corruption.

334 pages, Kindle Edition

Published January 5, 2022

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About the author

Rob St. Clair

3 books34 followers
Rob St. Clair practiced law in Columbus, Ohio, for more than thirty-five years, limiting his practice to probate litigation. St. Clair is a Vietnam veteran and a retired colonel in the Marine Corps Reserves. He currently lives in Columbus, Georgia, where he teaches military history. He also enjoys traveling overseas to foreign battlefields, photographing today's landscape, and writing articles about his trips for military publications. As a travelogue photographer, his photographs have won numerous awards and have appeared in various publications.

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
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Author 3 books34 followers
December 9, 2021
The long-awaited sequel to “Saving Stacy: The Untold Story of the Moody Massacre,” St. Clair’s new thriller is “Killing Dan Ott: Corruption and Murder in Small Town America.” It’s the tragic true-crime story of a case of mistaken identity that took detectives from Geauga County, Ohio, ten long years to solve. Why so long? Logan County corruption. Well-written, suspenseful, this one's a page-turner. The ending is shocking.
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March 23, 2022
I find the topic interesting. The writing is a bit dull but it is a lot of court documents and investigation notes. It is odd how the author basically relays facts yet every now and then throws in thoughts or quotes which seemed fabricated. Regardless, it is plenty to keep one turning pages. Unfortunately, it seems our justice system is quite corrupt in general and this book provided evidence to support that statement.
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24 reviews
January 22, 2025
The story itself is interesting but it was written like a list of bulleted notes that someone would use to write a novel. The novel got bogged down in menial facts that just got distracting, a lot of this could have been paired down to make the story more straightforward. It got kind of hard to keep everything straight.
One thing I enjoyed about Saving Stacy that this novel lacked was a little more… flourish/ creative license/ emotion with the writing? To make it feel more like a novel and less like a case file.
I still plan to read St. Claire’s next novel, Hatchet Man Road.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews