Popular Posts

Search This Blog

Showing posts with label Jeff Ashton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeff Ashton. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Jeff Ashton's Book Cover

Looks like publisher HarperCollins scrambled through the weekend to get a cover together for the Jeff Ashton book.  Here it is.



I knew it would have photos of the two of them, fascinating antagonists that they are: the scholarly, science-boy jurist at the end of his highly accomplished career and the confabulating high school dropout club-maven just embarking on life.  Their images are famous enough to carry the book cover through (although I wouldn't be surprised to see the design change again before publication. See "crashing a book" post below) though the design is simple and I know he will get great sales.

Authors do obsess about their book covers and this is a moment for me to say I confess the team at Penguin did a better job on mine. She* is famous (see 48 Hours: Diary of a Showgirl, and ID Deadly Women) but my cover, in my humble opinion, is more artistic, more intriguing.

*"She" = Marjorie Orbin, convicted dismemberment killer

FAQ: Is that really Marjorie Orbin on the cover? (scroll down half a tic to see)
Answer: Certainly! That photo was taken at the Maricopa County Jail while Marjorie talked to me. I am sitting just inches from her, on the freedom side of the steel grid. You can see both of us at the same grid here and compare to cover. Many more pics related to Marjorie Orbin on this site. Just click the tag below.

Camille Kimball's books:

Saturday, August 27, 2011

Jeff Ashton Book Deal ("crashing" a book)


The Orlando Sentinel is reporting that Casey Anthony prosecutor Jeff Ashton has confirmed he has a book in the works and it is due on shelves in November of this year. In the world of professional publishing, that is putting out a book virtually instantaneously. The Casey Anthony trial came to its conclusion over the 4th of July weekend...the book to appear in stores just 5 months later? I believe the technical term the publishing pros use to describe that is "crashing" a book. See, most books do not appear on shelves until at least a year, sometimes two, after the deal is made. And that is when the book is already written, such as a novel. 

For Mr. Ashton to write the book from scratch; an editor to read it and outline revisions; copy editors look up obscure trade names and other meticulous details; typesetters to lay out the font and page numbers and the art department to design a cover all in five months is going to cause a lot people to work non-stop for those months. I'm sure migraines will be had, teeth will be ground, and hair will fall out and what's left will turn white on many heads.

That is, 5 short months from the verdict itself! You have to shave off some time for business and administration, such as Mr. Ashton a) deciding to do it b) picking an agent (I'm sure he had his pick of the litter) c) putting together the deal with the publisher. So let's take at least 2 weeks off for all of that and now we have Mr. Ashton and his team getting the book together in no more than 4 months. Wow. Tip o' the hat to you, my friend.
(screen shot below from Barnes and Noble. No kidding the "image is not available"--there's an army of artists scrambling to come up with a cover design and Irene ain't helpin'!)


Imperfect Justice: Prosecuting Casey Anthony

by Jeff Ashton

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
People often ask me if the murderers make money off a true crime book. That is never, ever true unless the suspect himself writes the book. In this case, it is the prosecutor who is writing it. He will control the funds. Either they go to him or possibly to a charity he designates as some one-shot authors in this type of case do.  So, please, feel free to buy Ashton's book.

I've been asked about "rights" to Casey's life story or some such. No. He does not need her permission nor need to pay her any kind of royalty or fee. That only happens when the story is told from Casey's point of view AND with her participation. It usually happens with movies or TV deals. It doesn't happen that much. You can clearly tell the difference by the author's name on the cover: in this case, clearly "Ashton," not "Anthony."

jeffashtonMost "authorized" movies/books will be screaming at high decibels the fact that the perpetrator is in bed with the producers/publishers. Remember the OJ book as it was originally announced?  Have you seen that happen again? No. I haven't either.

Let me repeat: Ashton's book will NOT BENEFIT CASEY.



In my opinion, Ashton worked very hard and did an excellent job in this trial and I will be fascinated to see what he thinks went so wrong. I'm anxious to hear him talk about the "CSI Effect."   I believe it had a lot to do with the CA verdict, does he? I'm sure he has a lot of thoughts and observations that may even have an impact on how I view the trials I sit in on. At the same time the Casey Anthony case was going on, the sweat lodge trial (James Ray) was proceeding in a courtroom in which I sat, taking notes and listening intently. Yet the sweat lodge verdict, in an arguably more complex and less sure case, came in "guilty." What was the difference? I will love to hear Ashton's opinions.

See you at the bookstore!


Camille Kimball's books:




Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Ricky Bible, the Clock is Ticking

Many people visiting this site are looking for information on the upcoming execution of child-killer Ricky Bible. That is currently scheduled for today, June 30, at 11 am Arizona time. 11 am Arizona is 2 pm New York. The execution takes place in Florence, a town full of prisons just east of Phoenix.

Ricky Bible did horrible things to a little girl in Flagstaff in 1988. The case took place just months after Casey Anthony prosecutor Jeff Ashton became the first American prosecutor to use the then new-fangled technology of DNA profiling to convict someone.

Ricky Bible became the first DNA case in Arizona. I remember at the time, I was a radio reporter at KOY in Phoenix, how controversial the technology was. We were all wondering what in the heck they were talking about. Well, Ricky Bible was convicted. While he's been sitting on death row trying to get out of it, DNA profiling has been busy becoming the forensic equivalent of a rock star.
http://dna-image.co.tv/images/xc/dna-double-helix-image.jpg

At the time, in Flagstaff, a logging town on the old Route 66, a lawyer was drafted from the civil division into the prosecution because of her special knowledge of zoology. Her uncommon last name, in a bizarre twist, was virtually identical to the defendant's.

I would like to refer you to this excellent, excellent article in the Flagstaff Daily Sun. If you are interested in the Ricky Bible case, this is a must read. I would also like to give a big high five to Daily Sun reporter Hillary Davis for such fine work.

By the way, the Coconino County Courthouse is about a 45 minute drive from the Yavapai County Couthouse, where I've been sitting in on the James Ray sweat lodge trial. Scroll through some of these photos in the last two weeks on the blog, you'll get a feel for the country. However! there's a big change of scenery in the 45 minute ride. Flagstaff has a lot more trees. Lumber is a huge industry there.

p.s. Here is Ricky Bible's Arizona Dept of Corrections page.



Camille Kimball's books are:
The Mammoth Book of Tough Guys




Tuesday, June 14, 2011

DNA, Executions and Casey Anthony's Prosecutor

If you are following the Casey Anthony trial, the tragic affair that ends in the discarded remains of two year old cherub Caylee Anthony, you have seen prosecutor Jeff Ashton at work.



Did you know he is credited with being the first prosecutor in the United States to use forensic DNA profiling in a criminal trial? It was 1988 and DNA was far from being the solid science we know and love today. It was still considered mumbo-jumbo by many, many people. Here is an archival New York Times article about new-fangled DNA, "young Jeff Ashton," and the beginning of a criminal court revolution.

Are you a fan of novelist Linda Fairstein? She is in this NYT article, too, still a NY prosecutor and hot on the trail of the incipient DNA juggernaut.


A few months later, in 1988, Ricky Bible snatched a little girl on her bike in Flagstaff, Arizona, a mountain town where her family was vacationing. She did not survive his attack. Ricky Bible became the first Arizona conviction based on DNA profiling. I remember the controversy at the time. This week Richard Bible has finally received an execution date. The little girl would have been 32 this year, but remains forever a third grader in the hearts of her loved ones.