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Novel gives inside perspective on police procedures | DON NOBLE

Don Noble

Once again we have a crime book by a deeply experienced, retired law enforcement officer.

Doug Lamplugh was a police officer in Pennsylvania then, for 23 years, an agent with the Drug Enforcement Agency and then a teacher in the criminal justice department at the University of South Alabama.

He has set his debut novel, "Murder at Mardi Gras," in Mobile, in 2006.

More:Novel paints a picture of the future and it's not pretty | DON NOBLE

His hero, 36-year-old Detective William Robert Boyett, known as “Three B” since William Robert became Billy Bob Boyett, is called to a crime scene at St. Louis and D’Iberville streets where a girl’s body has been found rolled up in a piece of carpeting.

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Investigation begins. The Forensic Sciences Team arrives. Blood and semen samples are taken.

Lamplugh describes all this to the reader in detail.

He had in fact begun the book by giving the history of Mardi Gras in Christianity and how the celebration came to America.

It is clear he knows how law enforcement works and wants to get it all in, but in his future books, he needs to trust the reader more, and explain less.

He spends too much time giving us dialog like “Good morning” and “how’s it going?” He need not be as terse as Mickey Spillane or Robert Parker, but less would be better. When one cop is bringing another up to speed, the reader does not need to hear it.

Nevertheless, my advice to the reader is to have patience and stay with it. Lamplugh does have a story here to tell and some of what he has to tell us is in its way new.

For example, on TV shows we see local police, if they are so inclined, calling in the FBI for help, perhaps requesting a profiler.

In this story the locals know: “it might be weeks before the FBI actually came through if they ever did.” Up to 12 weeks. They decide to hire a freelance profiler.

But speed is not always the top priority. Even on a gruesome murder case, the police don’t work on weekends.