The Runaway Jury by John Grisham
Across
- 2. The "locked box" where the 12 characters debate the verdict
- 6. The way Easter can seemingly recall trial testimony to others
- 7. The method Fitch uses to spy on every juror's private life
- 8. The last name of the lead defense attorney for the tobacco company
- 9. The last name used by the protagonist while serving on the jury
- 12. The first name of the lead plaintiff attorney Mr. Rohr
- 13. The French city where the protagonists end up in the epilogue
- 14. A deceptive operation like the one used against Lonnie Coleman
- 15. The specific tobacco company being sued in the landmark case
- 16. The real first name of the mysterious Juror Number Two
- 21. The massive war chest used by Big Tobacco to buy verdicts
- 22. The chemical the jury learns was manipulated to hook smokers
- 23. The Mississippi city where the high-stakes trial takes place
- 26. What Fitch desperately hopes for once he loses control
- 27. The type of damages intended to punish the defendant corporation
- 29. The legal process of isolating a jury from the public
Down
- 1. The brand of vacuum Easter uses to "sweep" for bugs in the hotel
- 3. The first name of the blind jury foreman Mr. Grimes
- 4. The first name of the widow and plaintiff Mrs. Wood
- 5. The tactic Marlee uses to keep Fitch from reporting her
- 10. The amount of money Marlee extorts from the defense fund
- 11. The true motive behind Marlee and Easter's elaborate plot
- 12. The financial district that crashes after the $400 million verdict
- 15. A person who acts on behalf of another like the jury observers
- 17. The central medical theme the plaintiffs use to prove liability
- 18. The first name of the ruthless tobacco "fixer" Mr. Fitch
- 19. The type of expert witness who showed photos of diseased lungs
- 20. The juror who was targeted by a "honey trap" sting operation
- 24. The primary product at the center of the Wood v. Pynex trial
- 25. The woman outside the jury who manipulates Rankin Fitch
- 28. The last name of the overworked judge presiding over the case