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Includes decisions of the Supreme Court and various intermediate and lower courts of record; May/Aug. 1888-Sept../Dec. 1895, Superior Court of New York City; Mar./Apr. 1926-Dec. 1937/Jan. 1938, Court of Appeals.
Five authors are invited to take part in a TV show featuring real-life crimes. The authors are tasked with solving a ‘crime’. Supplied with statements, crime scene photos and everything that the shows presenter, Jeremy Webster, thinks they need, the authors have six weeks to solve the ‘crime.’ One by one the authors are murdered, yet the individual murders do not appear to be linked. The authors live in different locations across the country and are killed by different means. Required to keep their participation in the show confidential until after Jeremy Webster makes the announcement, not even the families of the authors make the connection between the show and the murders. Everyon...
Wrought by a childhood replete with trying circumstances and telling experiences (conveyed in Frances Smith's earlier book), and in tandem with resultant beliefs and attitudes she held toward herself and the world she was about to enter, the commencement of legal adulthood also removed any buttressing protection minority provided. Too many confused and self-critical assessments would ill-serve this demoiselle. In time, those same assessments would transform into extremely harmful and life-threatening situations. Surviving would become a lifestyle for the author, which would shape not only her world but that of those whom she held most dear. Ms. Smith's adulthood was remarkable because of the...