I thought you might be interested to see a review of Tim Burke's book that was posted in 2008, shortly after the book was released. I am not the only one who understood Burke's allegations were bogus. The reviewer made reference at the end of someone who posted and suggested you should only focus on the book and not the cases. That contributor seemed to miss the fact that these were real cases, they impacted real people, and publishing false assertions in an open murder case obstructs justice. It is also noteworthy that Burke published his book with the support of the Websters. For Joan's parents to encourage publishing a false account of their daughter's murder is really distressing. I have learned even more damning evidence against Burke and his allegations since this review.

Kevin O'Mahoney
1.0 out of 5 stars No Charges/Only a Book
Reviewed in the United States on May 7, 2008
The Paradiso Files is a compelling read. The writing isn't as bad as some have claimed. It does get a little nauseating having Burke describe himself in such glowing terms. Burke is not the white knight he claims to be. Let me first say that I know many of the people in this book (many of the defense lawyers, judges, etc.) and I've been a criminal defense lawyer in Cambridge/Boston for almost two decades. Burke prosecuted Paradiso for the murder of Marie Ianuzzi, claims that Paradiso is a serial killer and that he murdered Joan Webster. I have read the police reports, transcripts and other documents in the Ianuzzi case. The evidence pointed almost exclusively at Ianuzzi's boyfriend (he had previously strangled her, they had fought the night she was murdered, he had scratches on his arms the following day for which he gave three inconsistent explanations, he confessed to a friend that he killed her, and Ianuzzi's blood was found on the stairway leading to the boyfriend's apartment -- yet Burke prosecuted Paradiso. There was no physical evidence linking Paradiso to Ianuzzi's murder. It was a sham prosecution.
And, on the surface, the case against Paradiso for the murder of Joan Webster seems plausible, particularly if you believe Paradiso murdered Ianuzzi. Unfortunately, if you think about it, Burke's contention that Paradiso murdered Webster is all theory and no substance. There's no physical evidence linking Paradiso to the murder, no witness sees Paradiso with Webster, and none of Webster's belongings are found in Paradiso's possession (Burke claims a book seen at Paradiso's home seemed like something Webster would have owned, but that's pretty thin). Burke's case against Paradiso for the Webster murder hinges almost exclusively on Robert Bond's claim that Paradiso confessed to him. Bond was headed for a life sentence on a murder rap and wanted to plea to manslaughter. Since Bond had already murdered another woman, no prosecutor was going to allow him to plead guilty to a lesser offense unless he had something valuable to trade. Sounds a little suspicious. If the evidence against Paradiso was so compelling (and a competent prosecutor can secure an indictment against anyone with almost no evidence), why was Paradiso never charged with the Webster murder? In a trial, theories, "facts" and allegations are tested. If you release a book, you can trot out a theory unchallenged, leave out inconvenient facts, and blacken an individual's reputation who has no means to defend himself. If Paradiso, a north end guy, murdered Webster, why did he bury her body in the wealthy town of Hamilton (20 miles north of Boston), when he could have taken her out to sea on his boat? In fact, Burke claims Paradiso murdered Webster on that boat. Why then would Paradiso risk carrying her body to a car, driving the body 20 miles north to Hamilton, digging a grave, and burying her -- all without being seen? Why would Paradiso store Webster's luggage in a bus terminal in Boston? If Bond was so credible, why did Burke renege, after Bond testified against Paradiso at the Ianuzzi trial, on his plea agreement with Bond?
One reviewer has commented that a reviewer should limit himself to critiquing the book, rather than the case against Paradiso for the murders of Ianuzzi and Webster. The book is about these murders, and it's always good to raise questions about a theory and to call a writer on his shannigans. With regard to the jury verdict against Paradiso for the murder of Ianuzzi, let's remember that innocent men and women are convicted every day in this country for crimes they did not commit. Overzealous prosecutors are the least credible people working in the criminal justice system and should be challenged.
Again, it's a good read, but it belongs listed under fiction.