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Recounts the true story of the murder of a woman by her husband, and his acquittal due to the jury's empathy for his claim to being overwhelmed by her supposedly typical behavior as a "Jewish-American Princess."
Check nearby libraries
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Previews available in: English
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Death of Jewish American Princesses
September 11, 1990, Random House Value Publishing
Hardcover
in English
0517056208 9780517056202
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Death of a "Jewish American princess": the true story of a victim on trial
1988, Villard Books
in English
0394568540 9780394568546
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Death of a "Jewish American Princess" the True Story of a Victim on Trial
Publish date unknown, Villard Books
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In 1982, a sensational murder trial in Phoenix, Arizona, reverberated throughout the legal community. Restaurateur Steven Steinberg, who killed his wife by stabbing her 26 times, was acquitted; his legal defense portrayed the victim as an overpowering Jewish American Princess whose excesses may have provoked her violent end. Examining the structure of the defense's case, Frondorf, an attorney who was previously a psychiatric social worker, follows the theme that made Elana Steinberg the villain, instead of the victim, of the piece. The defense's forensic presentation, bolstered by testimony from psychiatrists, maintained that Steinberg committed the crime while sleepwalking, an abnormality allegedly brought on by the intemperate spending of his wife. Frondorf recreates the trial whose outcome scarred the tightly knit Jewish community of Phoenix.



