“Sergeant, I would ask you to look at the box entitled ‘Cash in Possession’ and tell me what it says.”
Frost picks up the paper and looks, and suddenly it settles on him. He is a stone in the witness box, not responding to her question.
“Tell me, Sergeant, did your decoy take credit cards? Or maybe she was in the habit of taking personal checks from johns? What does it say in that box, Sergeant?”
He looks at Kline, who cannot help him.
“Tell us, Sergeant, how is it possible that the defendant could have offered your decoy a two-hundred-dollar fee for services, when he had only forty-two dollars and twenty-seven cents in his possession that night? Was she offering discount coupons? Tell me, Sergeant.”
“I don’t know,” says Frost. “I only know what I heard.”
“Isn’t it common practice, Sergeant, in such an undercover arrest, to wait until after the suspect pays his money before effecting an arrest?” This is a problem for them, since the police report makes it clear that Hall had never been paid.
By now Frost is a face filled with concessions. “In some cases,” he says.
“In virtually all cases, isn’t that what you are told? To wait until you see the color of their money? Isn’t that, the payment of money, usually the overt act required to make an arrest?”
“Sometimes,” he says.
“Not sometimes, Sergeant. Isn’t that what you are told? Isn’t that standard operating procedure in such an arrest?”
“Objection, counsel is arguing with the witness,” says Kline.
“Sounds like a good argument to me,” says Radovich. “Overruled.” The judge is waiting for an answer.
“Tell us, Sergeant, why did you enter the room that night before the defendant paid any money to your decoy?”
“I don’t know,” he says. “The wire failed. I guess I panicked.”
“But you heard everything that was going on. That’s what you told us. Isn’t that right?”
“Yeah.”
“Isn’t it a fact, Sergeant, that no money was paid over, because no offer of any money was ever made by the defendant that night? That their conversation had nothing to do with prostitution?”
Pencils scratching in the background. Dense looks from the press row, wondering what they could have been talking about.
“That’s not true,” he says.
“Then how do you explain a two-hundred-dollar offer when the defendant didn’t have two hundred dollars?”
“Maybe he was gonna have her put it on the tab,” says Frost.
“Move to strike. Nonresponsive,” says Lenore.
“Granted,” says the judge. “Answer the question,” he says.
“I can’t,” says Frost. “I don’t know.”
It is always the problem with a lie.
CHAPTER 12
“It’s what I told you about Radovich,” says Harry. “He may not know the law, but he has a sixth sense for what is right.” Harry likes the cow-county judge.
“Probably a Democrat,” he says. Hinds would take a bleeding heart every time. When I look at Harry’s clients I can understand why. This morning, however, I will say that Radovich ranks right up there, next to the Almighty, on most of our lists, Lenore’s and mine included. He has granted our motion for a stay. There will be no separate trial on the solicitation charge.
“I thought the argument on joinder went right over his head,” says Lenore.
“Probably did,” says Harry. “But he needed some cerebral hook to hang his hat.” Harry’s looking at the court’s minute order, the single-page document announcing Radovich’s decision. Then he hands it to me. Harry’s take is that the judge was not going to allow Frost to poison a jury pool with obvious lies. Since the question of credibility belongs to the jury, Radovich decided the matter on the issue of joinder.
Though she won, this seems to irritate Lenore. She calls the judge “result oriented.” “The right decision for all the wrong reasons,” she says.
“Don’t knock it,” says Harry. “We won.”
“Winning is not everything,” she says.
“No. It’s just the only thing that counts,” says Harry.
“Forget it. You wouldn’t understand,” says Lenore.
I think she wanted to take Kline down, but only on her own terms; a conquest dictated by intellect, not function. For her, the fact that the judge didn’t catch the legal nuance of her argument cheapens the victory.
While they squabble, I read the court’s order. It informs Kline that if he wants to join the two cases, Acosta’s earlier arrest for soliciting with the later murder, the court will entertain a motion at the appropriate time. Kline was last seen storming out of the courtroom, sputtering something about Lenore’s lack of ethics, her pike sticking out of his ass. What we have here is not the beginning of a trial, but the first skirmish in a brooding vendetta.
This morning we are gathered in my office to talk about recent revelations, the continuing torrent of discovery from the state.
“Does it look like they’re producing from their side?” I ask Harry. I want to know if the state is hiding the ball, or coming clean with their evidence.
Harry has become the custodian of records, and is now swimming in reams of paper, some of them stacked halfway up the walls of his office. It is the thing lawyers do. Hide the trees in the forest.
He is seated in one of the client chairs at a corner of my desk, piles of forms and reports in front of him. Lenore is drifting, a free spirit pacing behind him in the room, one arm across her middle supporting the other elbow, which props up her chin, Lenore’s classic pose of meditation.
“Who knows?” says Harry. “We all play games,” he says.
Harry is a master of this. The fudge factor.
“What would a trial be,” he says, “without some surprises.” If Harry had his way every witness would be delivered to the stand in a package like a jack-in-the-box.
He starts to brief us on what he has. “Prints from the girl’s apartment apparently came up negative. They had trouble even finding her own. Either she had a fastidious housekeeper, or the place had been wiped clean by the killer-except for one smudged thumbprint on the front door.”
This catches Lenore and me looking at each other wide-eyed. She’s giving me a shrug with palms up, like it can’t be hers. This is all behind Harry’s back, out of his view.
“Have they been able to match it to anybody?” I ask.
“They excluded the girl. Other than that, the report’s vague,” says Harry. “But they can do magic with that big computer at Justice,” he says.
This sends a needlelike shiver up my spine.
“Should I send over a tidbit or two, to keep them happy?” says Harry. He’s talking about some of the information from our own investigation, the law of reciprocal discovery.
I give him a vacant stare. My mind is on other things at the moment, the microscopic swirls and ridges on the dead girl’s front door.
“What do you want to do?” he says. “We’re holding the information from the optometrist on the glasses. Should I hold up, or give it over to Kline?”
“I don’t know.” I ask Lenore what she thinks.
“What? I’m sorry. I wasn’t listening.” Minds on a parallel course-at this moment, initial panic.
We do a quick inventory of the materials we would be turning over.
“Go ahead,” I finally tell him.
Lenore agrees. “Give it to them, but hold up on our witness list. No sense being too generous,” she says.
Harry nods. He is probably still adding names from the phone book to our own list of witnesses to keep the D.A. guessing and the cops wasting time checking them out, though the salient experts will float to the surface with the first viewing, as soon as we disclose.
He tells me that the state has not turned over its own witness list. This is a major concern for our side, not only because of the experts, but because we do not yet know whether Oscar Nichols, the judge to whom Acosta unburdened his soul to the tune of death threats against Hall, has told the cops about this.