cover image Color of Law

Color of Law

David Milofsky. University Press of Colorado, $24.95 (336pp) ISBN 978-0-87081-581-2

""This case is full of losers,"" observes Milwaukee attorney Charlie Simon in Milofsky's (Playing from Memory) meaty novel of racial injustice. Simon's comment is directed at Tommy Paley, a former motorcycle patrolman who witnessed the sport shooting of an unarmed young black man, Jimmy Norman, by a fellow bike man, John Grogan, a racist cop with a penchant for violence, one winter's night in 1959. Both Grogan and Paley were summarily dismissed from the force, and Paley (an accomplished loser to begin with) has narrowly survived a 20-year downward spiral and come clean to a local reporter, Bob Joseph. In 1959, no one questioned the verdict of justifiable homicide--no one except Jimmy Norman's family. But in 1979, the white population is forced to pay attention when Joseph's story reopens the case, and Jimmy's sister, Olivia, hires Simon to represent her in a $100-million civil rights suit against the city. Tensions flare as the Rev. Marcus Jackson, a black civic leader, galvanizes black support for the Norman case, and protesters clash with police. Local politicians Emil Mueller, who's the town mayor, and liberal Andy Hedig use the case to advance their own interests. A disturbing revelation about Olivia threatens the integrity of her civil case. Why did she disappear so quietly after the original verdict? Milofsky's writing is compelling, and his knowledge of law, journalism and politics is thorough. His characters, black or white, are never one-dimensional, and though he packs in more action and more subplots than the novel's structure can support, his ambitious book succeeds in coming to terms with complex racial issues. The novel's Midwest setting should give it a solid start in bookstores there. (Oct.)