If the charge is murder in the first, bail will be too high to manage for all but the heirs and heiresses. And sometimes a judge won’t even set bail, just to make sure you stay inside. The state believes you thought about it, maybe even planned it out, meant to do it, and to the state, that makes you a seriously dangerous dawg.
If you’re innocently enjoying Panda Express with your grandma and a mall rat won’t stop disrespecting sweet Nana until you toss that mouthy punk off the food court balcony and right into a pretzel fryer, that doesn’t mean you can skip off to the gumball machine with your quarters; you’re gonna need every penny. For a second-degree murder—usually thought to be an unplanned, spontaneous homicide—there will still be a pretty high bail. Same for a felony murder. Say you’re a simple, humble car thief, but you run someone over as you make your getaway? That’s felony murder, and you might as well be driving that pimped-out Porsche straight to Sing Sing.
I think you get the picture now. It does change a bit if the charge is manslaughter, where the level of perceived negligence becomes a factor. A drunk driver killing a pedestrian certainly had no intention of killing anyone, but being drunk at the wheel was one crime, and it involved seriously negligent behavior. Chances are the bail will be high, but possibly doable if, again, you’ve got even semi-deep pockets. And this isn’t like the, “Oh, oopsie daisy,” of breaking Pop-Pop’s antique cookie jar—you’d better be ready to prove to the court with words and tears (and more) that your drunk ass is legitimately sorry.
I’ve got my biggest, widest brush out now, since until you’re actually faced with a murder case, specifics might be meaningless.
Let’s start with obtaining your lawyer. You might start with a legal aid attorney if you are financially challenged or even middle class. While these guys and gals might be pure gold when arguing to get you out of a solicitation charge, murder is a big level up, and in many jurisdictions, the pay for either case is going to be the same. So legal aid is a gamble.
Assuming you’ve hired a lawyer, I’ll address a practical aspect: money. You don’t need the Oracle to tell you that with a murder charge of any kind—malice, manslaughter, felony, whatever—getting a good attorney suddenly becomes a more crucial investment than that IRA you’ve been working on since undergrad.
The good counselors aren’t necessarily affordable. Then again, if they think the case is winnable, and, double bonus, if the case is also notable, they may work with you at least in how they’ll accept payment. Most firms bill for hours, but it’s not unreasonable to ask for a ballpark figure, a lump-sum fee. A case with simple elements that seems like a pretty sure win may not cause a financial apocalypse for the accused. Complicated cases full of tricky forensic evidence are something else again.
We fight murder charges like our hair’s on fire, man. Like our hair is on fire but it hasn’t melted our brains. No weaklings here. If you are asking for brass tacks, okay—here are typical defenses we may select from our quiver of legal arrows.
I know you’re thinking this chapter will never apply to you, but you may find yourself like many of your fellow churchgoing, baseball-loving, apple-pie-eating, red-white-and-blue-blooded American citizens: surprised to find yourself at the bum end of a murder charge. Or close, like an attempted murder charge.
Let me tell you about Claus. You’ve probably heard of Claus. Claus von Bülow. Or maybe not, this was a while back.
Claus was a wealthy man, married to Sunny, an heiress. One day in 1982, our pal Claus found himself on the hook for what police said was an attempt to end Sunny’s life via insulin overdose. The diabetic socialite didn’t die, but remained in a coma the rest of her life.
Claus had money out the gazoo. It oozed from the man. That the couple were named Claus and Sunny and lived in a historic home in the opulent hamlet of Newport, Rhode Island, should be enough to emphasize the level of swanktown involved here.
So Claus could, admittedly, throw one hell of a healthy legal defense team at the attempted murder charge against him. He did, and he lost. He was sentenced to thirty years in prison.
Appeals followed, handled by legendary defense attorneys who tracked down every expert in every field relevant to the defense’s case and threw them at the court. It took a few years but Claus’s conviction was finally reversed; at a second trial, he was found not guilty. Sunny, it seemed, had succumbed to misadventures with various chemical cocktails that never should have been found in her bloodstream. But the von Bülow trials took up a lot of room in the news in the mid-eighties, and in spite of being cleared, Claus’s name became almost synonymous with creepy, potentially murderous rich guys, in a pop culture sort of way.
What I’m getting at here is the odds are good you don’t have the screw-you level of fat stacks to throw around that Claus did. And he was, after all, found guilty the first time around. So if Claus jumped off a bridge, maybe you should just wave and bid him farewell… then get the hell out of there before anyone shows up asking questions.
We’re safe in our attorney-client cocoon now, and I’ll present some possible defenses to use against any murder charge—defenses other than “not guilty.” Contingency plans have to include preparing for the worst. Or in the case of being put on trial for murder, the worst possible worst.
• The crazies. I know “crazy” is an insensitive term. Murder is an insensitive act, to say the least. If the prosecution has something like a slam dunk, though, we’ve got to consider the possibility you were dealing with “diminished capacity” when everything went down. An attorney will ask if you’ve ever seen a psychiatrist or psychologist; if you’ve ever been on psychiatric meds for depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia. Hell, for ADHD. If we hang our hat on a mental disorder defense, we’ll have to put it in writing. We’ll have to offer proof your cabeza’s a broken bell tower and the bats are flying circles. Drawbacks to this line of fire are many. There’s the M’Naghten Rule, which I mentioned earlier, and its cousin, the newer Irresistible Impulse Test. These damned things are so narrow, so nineteenth century, that they don’t really allow for all that psych folks know these days about the way mental illness works on the brain. The worst part of this defense, depending on your perspective, is that you will end up confined anyway. Not guilty by reason of insanity is no “get out of jail free” card. It’s a “don’t go to jail, go to a mental hospital where there are potentially many more volatile and dangerous people freely roaming the halls with you” card.
• A related defense, again one to be used when the prosecution’s got what looks like all the goods: substance-related impairment. Or just impairment with some physical basis, like a head injury. If an attorney can prove a murder was committed because the killer had injury-related brain damage in the part of your gray matter that prevents you from homicidal behavior, this can lead to acquittals or at the very least, a lower-level charge with less severe penalties.
• There’s also “heat of passion.” It’s the defense of choice for wronged husbands and wives everywhere—folks whose semi-rational response to finding a loved one bumping uglies with an unapproved partner is white-hot, murderous rage. Do not pass go; this one is going to end in jail time anyway.