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Authors: David Ellis

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BOOK: Jury of One
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“Who? Oh.” The trial had been assigned to Judge Pietro Dominici, a former assistant county attorney. Most of the criminal court judges were former prosecutors, because the presiding county judge would only assign judges with experience in criminal law to the criminal courts. It made sense, and yes, occasionally a criminal defense attorney would win a judicial election, but it seemed rather daunting that most of the jurists presiding over criminal cases used to be prosecutors themselves.

“Good draw for you,” she said.

“Yep. He’s tough.” He laughed. “Guy’s family comes over on the boat sixty years ago, from Sicily. They’ve got this real Italian name, right? So they change it. His dad’s got the same name—Pietro Dominici. He moves here, he changes his name to ‘Peter Dominic.’ You know, just drops a coupla vowels.” He jabbed a finger at the bench. “Petey here, he’s in our office, Peter Dominic, Jr., right? Real gunner. He runs for judge and loses. Peter Dominic loses. So he moves over to Brighton Village—you know, where all the Italians live?—and he goes back to his father’s original name. Yeah, now he’s ‘Pietro Dominici’ and he’s running in a subcircuit that’s at least forty percent Italian. He took it easily.”

Shelly looked at her watch as if she were unimpressed with Morphew’s familiarity with this judge. It was one minute to ten. “I better get over there, Dan. I don’t want the judge seeing me consorting with the enemy.”

“Aw, Petey’s never on time. We got at least five minutes.” He said it with the confidence of a man with power. This guy was her father without the polish or ego.

She wanted to ask him whether he ever worked with Dominici at the county attorney’s office, but the answer was probably yes. No matter how large the office was, Morphew was a lifer, a career prosecutor, and he supervised hundreds of prosecutors over the years. He slipped Shelly one of his business cards. “I’ll get discovery over to you today,” he said. “If you have any problems, you call me. Okay? Any problems at all.” He waved at the bench. “Make a motion to preserve your record but I’ll have it to you today.”

She thanked him and considered the unusually generous nature of the prosecutor. Could be he recognized the profile of the case and didn’t want any missteps. Prosecutors, to preserve their convictions, often had to do the defense attorneys’ preliminary work for them. But she assumed otherwise. The county attorney, Elliot Raycroft, was the political protégé of Governor Langdon Trotter, and Morphew was probably under orders to treat the governor’s daughter right.

“Who’d you use in the grand jury?” she asked Morphew.

“The partner. Sanchez. Did everything through him.” In
probable-cause hearings, hearsay was permitted, so often the prosecutor would simply put on the investigating police officer—or in this case, the dead cop’s, Miroballi’s, partner, Officer Julio Sanchez—and ask him what his investigation turned up. It obviated the need to bring laypeople before the grand jury, who were less practiced witnesses and who could be more easily tripped up at trial if they contradicted their previous testimony.

Shelly leaned back, looked behind herself at a sea of blue. There were approximately twenty uniformed police officers in the spectators’ seats. They had come out in force to show the judge that they were behind their fallen comrade. “Alex doesn’t deserve this,” she said.

“He shot a cop, Counselor. You had to expect this. But I’ll tell you what.” He leaned into her. “We might consider life. Just to get it done.”

“Won’t happen,” she answered as the door in the back of the courtroom opened. The bailiff, sitting in the corner, got to his feet.

“Don’t say I never offered,” Morphew whispered as Shelly walked away.

“The court will come to order,” said the bailiff. “The Honorable Pietro Dominici presiding.”

Judge Dominici walked with a purpose to the bench. He was a short man who filled out his robe. He had the face of a boxer, squarish, a pug nose, small but fiery eyes behind wire-rimmed bifocals, thick graying hair.

The court clerk, sitting to the right of and below the judge, a young heavyset man, called out the case—
People v. Baniewicz.

“Good morning,” said the judge. His voice was softer than Shelly expected, free of emotion and almost difficult to hear.

“Good morning, Judge
Dominici.
Daniel Morphew for the People.”

The judge cast a furtive glance at the prosecutor, suppressed a smile. “Good morning, Mr. Morphew.”

“Good morning, your Honor. Michelle Trotter, for the defendant.”

“Good morning, Ms. Trotter.” The judge opened a file before him, adjusted his glasses.

“We’ll waive reading, your Honor,” she said, allowing the clerk to forgo an official reading of the indictment handed down against her client.

She’d been waiting for this moment ever since those two intruders left her house, left her wondering about the safety of her client as well as herself. Four nights now, sitting upright on her bed, watching the clock, listening for sounds. She had moved her couch in front of the front door. She had broken glass and sprinkled it on the patio next to the sliding glass door in back. She had placed a small glass full of marbles on the handle of the sliding glass door, where it loomed precariously and would fall with a rambunctious sound at the first hint of jarring. And as the hours of fitful sleep and meditation had passed, she found that she was angry with herself. She hadn’t given in right away. She had taken the first intruder and sent him headlong to the floor. She didn’t back away from the second one, she just couldn’t reach him, and he had a weapon trained on her. Yes yes yes, she could tell herself all of that. But she had been overtaken. Shelly Trotter, who had coached hundreds of pupils on the art of self-defense, had thought she was invincible herself. The moment had come and she had failed.

“Are you prepared to enter a plea at this time, Counsel?” the judge asked.

“Your Honor,” she said, “the defense pleads not guilty by reason of self-defense.”

A stirring behind her, mostly from the city’s finest sitting behind Dan Morphew. Morphew himself did not react, simply wrote something on a pad of paper.

This might, or might not, be Alex’s defense at trial. She could withdraw it, or ignore it—the state would have to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, anyway. Based on what she knew so far, this was the best bet. But she could have waited to make this announcement. She wanted to do it in open court, which was not technically required, and she wanted to do it now. The intruders had wanted to push her in a closet, to keep her quiet about Officer Ray Miroballi’s off-duty work as a drug dealer, and now she was telling them, as much as she could, anyway, that she would not be quiet. Here it is, everyone. A cop wanted my client dead. It would make the papers. It would ruffle
feathers. Should anything happen to Shelly or Alex now, the scrutiny would be unbearable. A little sunlight was just what Shelly and Alex needed right now.

The judge adjusted his glasses again, not, it seemed, out of surprise but by habit. Shelly’s words had an impact, no doubt, but he went a long way to show disinterest. “Very well. Mr. Morphew, you acknowledge notice.”

Morphew had been watching Shelly. Did he know any of this already? She assumed he might have. “We do, Judge,” he said. “And if we could handle the 311 notice now.”

Shelly nodded solemnly, sneaked a look in Alex’s direction. She wished that this could be handled in writing, but so many things these days had to be acknowledged on the record in open court. Several years ago, there had been a bit of a scandal when a defense attorney showed up for trial claiming to be entirely unaware that the state was seeking the death penalty against his client. If it had been something else, maybe it would have been chalked up to a snafu, but the anti–capital-punishment establishment had a field day with it.
Will they at least tell them first before they try to execute them?
So now such things had to be done in front of the judge. This had worked to her advantage today, allowing her to announce her self-defense plea to the entire city media.

“That’s fine,” said Shelly.

“Your Honor, pursuant to Section 311 of the criminal code, the People hereby give notice to the defendant of our intent to seek the punishment of death.”

“We acknowledge notice,” said Shelly, with another glance to Alex. He had fallen into a now-familiar look, his eyes set in a hard, unemotional stare. The thought hit her again—she might lose him before they got to trial.

“Very good,” said the judge. “Have you two discussed a trial date?”

“We haven’t had that chance, your Honor.”

The judge worked his lips while he read his calendar. “Ms. Trotter?”

“Yes, your Honor.”

“Is the defense waiving a speedy trial?”

“Yes, your Honor. We would seek leave to take the depositions
of a number of individuals.” In criminal cases in the state, depositions—the questioning of witnesses under oath prior to trial—were rare. In civil cases, lawyers took depositions for months, if not years, to prepare for trial, and this typically came after written discovery, where each side answered questions in writing from the other side. The civil litigator’s creed was to know everything before a trial started, to know the answer to every question asked of a witness at trial, because the witness was already asked the question under oath at the deposition. The civil litigator’s other creed was to bill as much time as possible on a case, which made depositions still more desirable. In criminal cases, on the other hand, depositions were almost never used, despite the fact that the stakes were higher—a person’s liberty as opposed to money. It had always been a bitter pill for Shelly to swallow. How could it be that lawyers fighting over a contract dispute could employ endless resources to uncover information before trial, but a lawyer defending a boy accused of capital murder was not allowed to question witnesses under oath?

“You’re seeking leave to take depositions?”

“We are, your Honor.”

“Have you filed a motion?”

“No, your Honor.” Shelly had been kicked out of the law school before she could put it together. She had just moved into her temporary office. “We will be happy to do so.”

“Your Honor,” said Morphew. “If counsel will let us know whom she wants to depose, perhaps we could dispose of this now.”

“That would be fine.” Judge Dominici focused his small eyes on Shelly.

“Your Honor, we would like to depose Officer Julio Sanchez, the partner of the decedent. Officer Sanchez was present the night of the shooting. We would like to depose other police officers as well. We would like to depose the decedent’s wife. We would—”

“His wife?” said the judge. “Why do you want to depose his wife?”

Shelly had anticipated the question but had never come up with a good answer. “Judge, it is our theory that my client was defending himself from an attack on his life.”

“I understand that, Counsel,” which was the judge’s way of saying she hadn’t answered his question.

“We’re trying to build a case for why the deceased officer wanted to kill my client.”

The judge was not pleased. Shelly imagined that a former career prosecutor, now on the bench, did not enjoy hearing such allegations, to say nothing of the fact that Shelly’s comments would shine the spotlight still brighter on this case.

“Judge,” said Dan Morphew. “If I could respond.”

The judge ignored the prosecutor. “Serious allegations,” he said to Shelly.

“Yes, your Honor. But they are true. We are entitled to explore them.”

Judge Dominici settled his hands before him. “The requests for deposition are denied.”

“Your Honor—”

“You have full subpoena power for documents,” said the judge. “And you can bring anyone into trial. The rules for criminal procedure do not contemplate free-wheeling discovery like the civil code. Mr. Morphew, other than telling me that these allegations are outrageous, do you have anything to add?”

Morphew paused a beat. He knew to shut up when he was ahead. “No, Judge.”

“Your Honor—”

“Ms. Trotter, I’ve made my ruling. Do you have anything new to say?”

“Yes, Your Honor.”

“Very well.”

“We withdraw our waiver of a speedy trial.”

The judge stared at her. He showed no indication of surprise, but he seemed to take the response as a rebuke. Shelly had settled on the decision last night. Clearly, option one was to depose witnesses before trial to build her case. But if she was not entitled to do so, she felt the advantage of surprise favored her. She had no control over when the federal undercover operation might come to an end—she assumed later than sooner, but she simply didn’t know. The best plan, then, was to go to trial, having pleaded self-defense without any elaboration, without any specificity to Dan Morphew. The F.B.I., of course, would have
its hand forced by then, and would be announcing a major arrest of city police officers at precisely the time that jurors were being empaneled in the case of
People v. Baniewicz.

“The defense demands a speedy trial,” she said.

The judge held his look on her a moment longer than necessary, before looking at his calendar. “Very well,” he said evenly. He chose a date in mid-May and did not ask either side if it was workable. “Anything else?” he asked.

“One more thing, Judge,” said Shelly. “I request protective custody for my client.” She couldn’t come out and discuss the real reason that police officers might want to harm her client, due to her promise to the federal government, so she focused simply on the fact that Alex was accused of killing a cop. The judge was not receptive. If anything, Dan Morphew noted in response, being a cop killer would elevate Alex to some level of acclaim. In the end, the judge denied the request but left the matter open for reconsideration if circumstances warranted it.

Shelly heard the voices of the lawyers for the next case, issuing their “good mornings,” as she moved to the table where they kept the orders, to be filled out by the lawyers and handed to the judge for his signature. Dan Morphew shot her a glance, something subtle yet hostile, and over his shoulder Shelly could see a number of reporters gathering and heading outside, where they would await her for more tidbits into this case. She inhaled deeply and looked at the press gathering at the door. For the first time, she would have some choice words for them today.

BOOK: Jury of One
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