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1Mickey Haller is the main character of a series of mystery novels by Creator/MichaelConnelly. He is a lawyer with a reputation for defending the obviously guilty.
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3The novels share a setting with those featuring LAPD detective (and half-brother) Literature/HarryBosch, protagonist of about two-thirds of Connelly's novels, who also appears in this series as a supporting character.
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5Novels featuring Mickey Haller:
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7* ''Literature/TheLincolnLawyer'' (2005) -- adapted into a film starring Creator/MatthewMcConaughey as Haller.
8* ''Literature/TheBrassVerdict'' (2008)
9* ''Literature/TheReversal'' (2010)
10* ''Literature/TheFifthWitness'' (2011)
11* ''Literature/TheGodsOfGuilt'' (2013)
12* ''Literature/TheLawOfInnocence'' (2020)
13* ''Literature/ResurrectionWalk'' (2023)
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15Short stories featuring Mickey Haller: "Burnt Matches", "The Perfect Triangle".
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17Mickey Haller also appears as a character in several Harry Bosch novels, such as ''Literature/NineDragons'', ''Literature/{{The Crossing|2015}}'', ''Literature/TheWrongSideOfGoodbye'', ''Literature/TwoKindsOfTruth'', ''Literature/TheNightFire'', and ''Literature/DesertStar''.
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19Haller is also the protagonist of an ongoing [[{{Series/TheLincolnLawyer}} series adaptation on Netflix]], where he is played by Creator/ManuelGarciaRulfo.
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22!!Other novels in this series contain examples of:
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24* AdaptationNameChange: shortened from "Mickey" to "Mick" in the film version of ''Literature/TheLincolnLawyer''.
25* AlliterativeName: Upon learning Mickey Haller's daughter's name, a cop commented that "Hayley Haller" was a nice alliteration.
26* AmicablyDivorced: Mickey Haller can't seem to quit dating his first ex-wife, and his second ex-wife works for him.
27* AmoralAttorney: Mickey Haller skirts the edge of this, and feels bad about it. He often deals with more unambiguously Amoral Attorneys.
28* BadassBiker: Mickey Haller's investigator Dennis "Cisco" Wojciechowski, introduced in ''The Brass Verdict''. He has connections and an informal affiliation with the fictional Road Saints biker gang, but is not a full member of the club.
29* BelligerentSexualTension: Mickey has this with his ex-wife, Maggie.
30* BrokenAce: Despite being a crack defense attorney with a well-known reputation for his veracity in defending his clients (especially in later books), he is full of self-loathing for defending the guilty and the strain his work puts on his relationship between his first ex-wife and their daughter. Doesn't help that his personal life is somewhat of a trainwreck - something always seems to knock him down when things start to go well.
31* ClearMyName: Mickey Haller gets this from his clients in every novel, which makes it a bummer when they turn out to be guilty.
32* ContinuityNod: Fictional film company Archway Studios pops up in ''The Brass Verdict'' and ''The Fifth Witness'', as well as the Harry Bosch novels ''Trunk Music'', ''A Darkness More Than Night'', ''Lost Light'', and ''The Drop''.
33* CrusadingLawyer: Maggie [=McPherson=], Haller's fiercely idealistic ex-wife and prosecuting attorney, who disapproves of his work as a criminal defense lawyer.
34* {{Defictionalization}}: Zig-zagged in-universe; in the Literature/HarryBosch novel ''Literature/TheWrongSideOfGoodbye'' it's revealed that ''Film/TheLincolnLawyer'' was a nonfiction docudrama and Creator/MatthewMcConaughey had not approached Haller about a sequel just yet.
35* HiddenDepths: If you only read the Harry Bosch novels, Mickey Haller would come off as brash, gregarious, and confident to the point of cockiness. You have to read the novels where he's the protagonist to find out about his addictions, his ethical dilemmas and crises of conscience, and his anxieties about the failure of his marriage and his relationship with his daughter.
36* IWontSayImGuilty: EVERY one of Mickey's defense clients in the books. All of them refuse plea deals, and all firmly state that they will never say they're guilty, even though they risk a huge sentence if their trial is lost.
37* ItsAllMyFault: Mickey feels this way [[spoiler: every time someone is killed in a case he's involved in. It happens multiple times.]]
38* JusticeByOtherLegalMeans: Mickey Haller novels tend to end with the bad guy getting killed before there's a verdict. One time he gets a client acquitted, only for the client to be guilty and to get Justice By Other Means; another time he gets an innocent client off but the bad guy still gets Justice By Other Means.
39* KnuckleTattoos: The murder suspect in ''The Reversal'' has tattoos that read FUCK THIS.
40* LoopholeAbuse: One of Mickey Haller's many UnconventionalCourtroomTactics. He always ensures that he is acting within the letter of the law, but definitely ignores the spirit of it when he's trying to get something done. For example, in order to influence witnesses he has:
41** Used a former client of his to plant some testimony with a witness that was in the same drug program.
42** Brought in a former associate of a current witness into the court room. This causes the lying witness to stop answering questions as he thought his former associate could impeach him and his testimony (though this was not the case).
43** Managed to subpoena a witness to the stand, only to force him to take the fifth in front of the jury in order to bolster his case.
44** Faked a fight in a courtroom, forcing a mistrial and ensuring that the witness who was there would be too scared to come to a retrail.
45* ManipulativeBastard: Mickey is one to some degree, praying up on witnesses', juries' and opposing council's emotional weaknesses in order to influence them and catch them off guard. He gathers as much information as possible and uses it to manipulate witnesses and prosecutors to bend his way. However, it is implied InUniverse that any lawyer worth their salt uses these techniques to some degree, on both sides of the courtroom, though prosecutors tend to think they are above these kind of underhanded tactics.
46** While Mickey uses all of this, he will never do something that could give the Bar a reason to kick him out. He's meticulous with his finances, will refuse client suggestions to do something outright illegal or objectively immoral (such as pay someone in exchange for evidence), or do anything else that could have him kicked out of the profession.
47** Some of Mickey's clients are even MORE of a ManipulativeBastard than he is, and sometimes he's outmanuevered by them.
48* NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished: In ''The Reversal'', Jason Jessup's [[AmoralAttorney defense attorney]] complained to the judge about the prosecution only releasing part of the data they intend to use against Jessup. Prosecutor Margaret [=McPherson=] (nicknamed Maggie [=McFierce=]) replied they were still within the deadline and suggested the defender believed no good deed should go unpunished.
49* PragmaticHero: Mickey will whip out some UnconventionalCourtroomTactics or ManipulativeBastard moves, or anything else within the scope of the law to give his client the best defense possible. His personal view is that the law is malleable, and his job is to beat the hell out of it. He also believes that the system is rigged in favor of the prosecution, and that, if they get to cheat, so does he. It's seldom shown in the book that the prosecution outright breaks the rules, but it's heavily implied that they do so, and part of Mickey's strategy is pointing out every case of withheld evidence, "sudden discoveries" that were actually found months before and should have been turned over, and the like, even while he does this himself.
50* PantsPositiveSafety: ''The Brass Verdict''.
51* RealPersonCameo: Dennis "Cisco" Wojciechowski, a recurring character who works as Mickey Haller's private investigator, is based on a real-life person of that name who works as a researcher for Michael Connelly.
52* TitleDrop: Every single novel mentions the title at some point in the narrative.
53* UnconventionalCourtroomTactics: Mickey sometimes stoops unorthodox methods in order to get the outcome he wants. His favorite variation, which he whips out about a dozen times per book, is asking a witness something that forces the judge to tell the jury to DisregardThatStatement.
54* TheUnreveal: In ''The Reversal'', Bosch develops a theory that murder suspect Jason Jessup is actually a SerialKiller, but we never find out if Bosch is right.
55* YourApprovalFillsMeWithShame: Mickey basically says this to clients he finds out to be guilty after he gets them off.
56* VanityLicensePlate: Mickey Haller has several on the Lincoln Town Cars that are his trademark: "IWALKEM" and "NTGUILTY" are prominent.
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