
Rusty hires Alejandro "Sandy" Stern, an Argentinean defense lawyer who has been a frequent opponent over the years, to represent him. Horgan loses the election and, within days of Della Guardia taking office, he charges Rusty with Carolyn's murder, encouraged by his overzealous deputy, Tommy Molto. Throughout the novel he discusses various relationships in his life: with his late father, a closed-off, angry man with Della Guardia, a friendship that soured due to uncontrollable circumstances with Barbara, a volatile mixture of devotion and disdain and of course with Carolyn, which he has struggled to define since its end. The only person who knows of Rusty's own affair is his wife, Barbara, and the subsequent strain on their marriage led him to seek psychiatric help. During the investigation, Rusty learns Horgan also had a brief relationship with Carolyn. Dan "Lip" Lipranzer, whom Rusty replaces the originally assigned officer with. She dumped him when he showed little interest in taking Horgan's job for himself, causing him to realize her ambitious, conniving nature.ĭespite his obvious conflict of interest, Rusty takes charge of the investigation, but makes clumsy attempts to divert its areas of inquiry away from the DA's office, and by extension himself.

This is further complicated by the fact that, unknown to everyone else, Rusty had a brief affair with Carolyn that ended months before her murder.

Horgan is currently losing his re-election campaign against Nico Della Guardia, an old protege turned rival, and informs Rusty that his continued employment is entwined with Horgan's victory, which he believes hinges on finding and convicting Carolyn's killer. Rožat "Rusty" Sabich, a Kindle County prosecutor and co-worker of Carolyn, is assigned her case by his boss, district attorney Raymond Horgan. She is the victim of what appears to be a sexual bondage encounter gone wrong, killed by a single blow to the skull with an unknown object while tied up. The novel begins with the discovery of the body of Carolyn Polhemus, an assistant prosecuting attorney in fictional Kindle County. A motion picture adaptation starring Harrison Ford was released in 1990. It is told in the first person by the accused, Rožat "Rusty" Sabich. It is about a prosecutor charged with the murder of his colleague, an attractive and intelligent prosecutor named Carolyn Polhemus. Presumed Innocent, published in August 1987, is Scott Turow's first novel.
