Miroballi’s face explodes, a shower of blood. Alex stands in disbelief, holding the gun in his hand but not sure of how long he can keep holding it. Not sure of anything, really. Time passes, but he could not possibly estimate seconds. It feels like a lifetime.
A hand on his back. A hand removing the gun. A force, pulling him back. And he is running, with some help from Ronnie. An alternating limp and run.
Out of the alley now, onto the next street over. Ronnie’s car is running. He moves to the passenger door but Ronnie is behind him, stripping him forcefully of his gloves, then his coat, then his sweatshirt. Then the car door opens and Ronnie shoves him in.
Ronnie squeals the tires forward, moving three, four blocks away in what seems like an instant. He pulls around a corner and quickly sheds his own leather jacket. As he pulls off his sweatshirt, Alex is suddenly aware of Ronnie.
Ronnie.
Alex opens the car door.
“What the hell are you doing?” Ronnie asks as Alex fumbles out of the car.
Alex leans in and takes the sweatshirt and the jacket from Ronnie. “They know me,” he says. “If I run, they’ll come to the house. They already got me.”
“Get the fuck back in the car, Alex.”
“You get out of here,” Alex answers, turning his back on his brother. He walks a few steps, onto the curb, staggering forward. It seems like an eternity before he hears the squeal of tires behind him. Alex collapses to the pavement as the sirens grow louder.
SHELLY TOOK a step closer to the jury box, looked at each juror individually before continuing. “This is the truth, ladies and gentlemen. It is the truth as told to you by Ronnie Masters and by my client, Alex Baniewicz. And it is not only the truth, because let’s remember who has the burden of proof here.” She pointed at Dan Morphew. “The state has the burden of proving that this shooting was not committed in self-defense. Who has refuted this testimony? Who? Certainly not Monica Stoddard, the woman who came in here and testified that, from her office on the nineteenth floor, she saw only Ray Miroballi, that the rest of her view of the alley was obscured, that she saw Miroballi make movements that were consistent with him turning to his right, then coming back forward. That is perfectly consistent with Ronnie’s and Alex’s testimony.”
Ray Miroballi, not Officer. He was no longer a cop, at least not for the purposes of her closing argument. He was acting outside his role as a peace officer, and she would cut him no slack.
“And all this stuff Mr. Morphew told you in the opening statement? About Alex dropping one gun, duping Miroballi into believing he had surrendered, and then pulling out another one? Remember how bad all of that sounded? I sure do. But guess what, folks? This case is over now, and we never heard a lick about that. That is a promise to you that was broken. There is no evidence about those kinds of games or tricks whatsoever. Nothing.”
Shelly felt a bit bad laying it on Morphew like that. The truth was, as he had told her, he was not unsympathetic to her position. Shake him awake in the middle of the night, and Morphew would probably say that Alex didn’t deserve to go to prison. And in that spirit, Dan Morphew had reinterviewed the homeless man, Joseph Slattery, who had been the one who gave that version of events to the state. Morphew had conducted the interview himself this time-as opposed to the police officers who originally took his statement-and he had come away not believing in his witness. So he had done the right thing. He had refused to call him. Shelly firmly believed that Morphew was inclined to drop the charges altogether, but the politics of the situation would not permit it, and maybe this was the best Morphew could do. Surely, he had to know that she would crucify him for this in closing argument. One of the cardinal rules of opening statements was, don’t make a promise to the jury you can’t keep. And by not calling Slattery, Morphew was breaking a promise. He knew she would do this.
“The version of events as told to you by Ronnie and by Alex stands uncontroverted. There is absolutely no evidence whatsoever to disprove the notion that Alex acted in self-defense.”
Shelly paused. She was running on empty, and she had been arguing for over an hour, nearing the end of her argument with her second recount of Alex’s and Ronnie’s testimony. She had covered almost everything she could think of. She was just about done but wanted to discuss Ray Miroballi’s partner in more detail.
“This isn’t about a cop,” she said. “This is about a man who happened to be wearing that uniform. He directed the events that night. He went to find Alex for no legitimate reason. No reason pertaining to law enforcement. Alex wasn’t Miroballi’s snitch. We all know why Alex had met with Miroballi in the park on those occasions-it was a question of paternity. It was a question of criminal sexual assault years ago. It was a man being confronted with his past.”
She took a step to the side. “This whole ‘snitch’ thing was made up by Miroballi, and willingly accepted by his partner, who frankly didn’t want to know what was going on. I can’t sit here and tell you that Julio Sanchez is a bad man. I honestly don’t know. But I do know this, and so do you. He was being a cop’s cop that night. He was letting his partner do his thing and not asking questions. He may not have known precisely who Alex was, and he may not have known why, but as sure as we’re all sitting here, he absolutely knew that Ray Miroballi was going to eliminate Alex that night. How do we know that?”
Shelly went to the defense table and handed out copies of the police dispatch, which had been entered into evidence. Then she walked over to the tape recorder, which had been queued up.
“This was the call from Miroballi’s radio at 7:47 P.M.,” she said. She hit the “Play” button and the voice echoed throughout the room:
RADIO 27: Dispatch, advise all units that suspect is armed. I repeat, suspect is armed.
DISPATCH: Copy that, Twenty-seven. Vehicles are responding. Where is he running? Twenty-seven? Twenty-seven, do you copy?
“The next transcript, from Sanchez in the patrol car-Squad 13-came at 7:48 P.M.”
SQUAD 13: Dispatch, this is Radio Twenty-six. I’m in the squad car.
DISPATCH: Give us your location, Thirteen. Thirteen, advise of your location. Two hundred block of South Gentry? Thirteen?
“This final transcript, from ‘Radio 26,’ was Officer Sanchez’s handheld. This call came two minutes later-7:50 P.M.”
RADIO 26: Dispatch, we have an officer down. Officer down. Officer-we have an-oh, God, Ray.
DISPATCH: Twenty-six, paramedics and ambulance are responding. Keep your man alive, Twenty-six.
Shelly pointed at the recorder. “According to my client and Ronnie, the shooting happened just after Miroballi called in that the suspect was armed. Not two minutes later. But even if you don’t believe Alex-let’s think about this. Sanchez must have heard the gunshot when he was in the car, right? But he didn’t report shots being fired. He didn’t say a word to dispatch. He didn’t say a thing until he saw who had been shot. That’s not only contrary to department policy, but it tells us that Sanchez was leaving the show to his partner. He assumed that Miroballi had fired the shot, so he wasn’t going to call in ‘shots fired.’ He was going to let his partner do it.”
She looked at the jury. “When he heard the shot, he assumed it was his partner who had done the shooting. He sat there and did nothing. Then, as even Monica Stoddard told you, Sanchez ‘jogged’ down to the scene. He wasn’t in a hurry. Why not? Your partner is involved in a shoot-out, and you don’t call it in? You don’t sprint to the scene? Not if you know that your partner is planning to rub someone out. No, in that case, you hang back, like Sanchez did. You wait for your partner to call in that he shot a suspect. You let your partner take care of everything. He doesn’t want your help, and you don’t want to know. You just stay out of his way.”