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A daylight killing, an acquittal, and a public record that never fully closed.
Half Light is a restrained historical true crime investigation of Mary Pinchot Meyer's 1964 death on the C&O Canal towpath, the arrest, indictment, prosecution, and acquittal of Raymond Crump Jr., and the courtroom defense led by Dovey Johnson Roundtree. It follows an unresolved Washington case through witness accounts, police theory, disputed identification, trial pressure, and the questions that remained after the verdict.
Meyer was an artist, a mother, and a former journalist whose life has often been overshadowed by the mystery of her death and by the powerful names later attached to her story. This narrative nonfiction account begins with her life and work before moving into the noon-hour killing, the search below Canal Road, the missing firearm, and the evidentiary gaps that shaped the government's case.
The book examines how suspicion formed quickly around Crump, how an indictment followed within days, and how the prosecution's account depended on contested sightings, clothing descriptions, geography, timing, and inference. It also follows Roundtree's defense as the case moved toward the central legal question: whether the government could prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
After the acquittal, the public story did not end. Half Light turns to the private diary accounts, the reported involvement of James Jesus Angleton and others, the documented public history around Meyer and President John F. Kennedy, and the theories that later grew around the case. These subjects are handled as disputed, partial, or reported material where the record requires restraint.
Written in an evidence-aware narrative style, this book is for readers of historical true crime, unsolved murder cases, courtroom nonfiction, Washington history, and public-record mysteries. It does not promise a solution the surviving evidence cannot sustain. It follows the record, marks its limits, and keeps the uncertainty visible.
For readers drawn to careful true crime that separates fact, allegation, interpretation, and speculation, Half Light revisits a case where daylight did not produce certainty-and where an acquittal left the public record unresolved.
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