All I had to go on was a description of the murder weapon, the project he'd been working on all the time we'd spoken, and the possibility he'd put Joey Ballista in a frame all those years ago based on information he'd gotten from Joey's teenage mistress that might not hold up if she were brought in and questioned now that the case was under review. It would mean the loss of his pension and probable jail time, but it was all guesswork on my part. I hadn't liked him. Most of the people I didn't like didn't turn out to be murderers.
- Loren D. Estleman, The Left-Handed Dollar, pp.120
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