Topic > The Pelican Brief - 1453

The Pelican Brief, an irresistible story that begins with the simultaneous assassination of two Supreme Court justices. One night in October one of the liberal judges, A. Rosenberg, is shot in the head while sleeping at his home in Georgetown. Two hours later G. Jensen, the Court's youngest and most conservative judge, is strangled, perhaps by the same murderer. America is in shock, the FBI has no clue. Darby Shaw was a bright law student at Tulane University in New Orleans when she learned of the two murders. One of the victims, Rosenberg, is the legal scholar most admired and often cited by Thomas Callahan, his constitutional law professor and also his lover. The hypothesis is that conservatives will be appointed to replace the two judges. Darby isolated herself for four days in a law library, digging through memoirs, dissents, books, newspapers, essays and legal opinions, trying to find out what was wrong with the two murdered judges. in common. By chance he comes across a topic that the two murdered judges had in common: the environment. He has a theory about who is responsible for the murders, so he develops what is later called "The Pelican Brief". He gave the brief to his law professor who shared the hunches with a lawyer friend from his law school days, Gavin Verheek, who now works for the FBI. The FBI chief discovered that the suspect had donated money to the the president's last reelection campaign, which was deemed legal. The charges against the suspect were dismissed as further speculation by the White House. Darby's suspect has powerful friends. One evening, outside a restaurant in New Orleans, he manages to escape an assassin's car bomb. Someone read your brief. Someone who wants her dead. Alone and scared, Darby disappears. After reading an alarming story in the Washington Post about the murders, including that of Thomas, he contacts investigative journalist Gray Grantham and convinces him that the FBI, the president and the entire country are trying to deal with these deaths. of two powerful men. One day Grantham receives a call from a boy nicknamed Garcia who apparently has heard something important about the judges' murders. Grantham didn't pay much attention to the calls because this guy didn't say anything of note. Then, without much information given by Garcia, Grantham met with a security guard who works at the White House, this guard named Sarge gave Grantham a copy of a document that contains information about Khamel, an assassin who has many faces, names, costumes and it was one of the most important objectives of the F.