1. In the criminal justice system
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2. the people are represented by two
separate yet equally important groups,
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3. the police who investigate crime
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4. and the district attorneys
who prosecute the offenders.
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5. These are their stories.
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6. She wants a pool. Now,
who in Queens has a pool?
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7. My nephews would love it.
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8. Yeah. Well, let
them chip in then.
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9. You know what one
of those things cost?
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10. Hey, Celia works. Two
incomes, it shouldn't be a problem.
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11. Celia? Her money's
hers. My money's hers.
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12. I got to cut back on bowling
to buy a T-bone for dinner.
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13. Don't get married, man.
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14. Hey, man, you okay?
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15. Subway. Fire.
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16. Police. Coming through.
Police. Coming through.
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17. Police. Coming through, please.
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18. Good morning, America.
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19. We were on the graveyard.
Just headed back to the precinct.
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20. I never seen
anything like it before.
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21. You didn't see
anybody running away?
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22. Everybody was
running, except for Henry.
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23. He went in the car. I
carried him back myself.
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24. He's got a wife
and kid, you know.
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25. Thanks. Who else
was on the train?
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26. - Here. Over here!
- Me. I was.
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27. I work for the city, too.
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28. Paralegal in the
Corporation Counsel's office.
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29. You ride the train every day?
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30. When I stay over at my
girlfriend's. She's up in the Heights.
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31. All right, just tell me what
you remember, Mr. Davies.
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32. Well, I was at the other
end of the car, you know.
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33. I thought I heard like
a pop or something,
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34. and I didn't really pay attention,
figured it was just the brakes.
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35. And when did you
realize it wasn't?
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36. When I heard some screaming.
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37. A kid, he called out "Mommy."
Then a lot of expletives.
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38. Then, the other end of the
car was filled with smoke.
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39. Thank God we were
near the next station.
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40. I almost got crushed
in the stampede.
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41. Okay. Thank you.
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42. And it smelled
funny. Like old garlic.
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43. Well, here, take my card.
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44. You give me a call you
remember anything else, all right?
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45. You notice anything
they all have in common?
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46. Yeah. They're all alive.
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47. Hell of a mess.
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48. What was it, a firebomb?
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49. That's what I thought first,
but no damage to the train.
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50. Just some charring,
some residue on the floor.
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51. A smoke bomb wouldn't
have killed these people.
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52. That depends on
what kind of smoke.
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53. There was something definitely
toxic floating through that car.
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54. We found this shattered
glass. Could be part of the bomb.
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55. It's kind of thin. You think it
could do that much damage?
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56. Twenty dead. You tell me.
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57. All right, you get the glass and
the residue down to the lab ASAP.
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58. All right.
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59. This is gonna be fun.
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60. Whoa, fellas.
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61. Detectives Curtis and
Briscoe, from the 27.
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62. Damn, and I left my
autograph book at home.
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63. Hey, we don't need this crap.
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64. We don't need anybody screwing
with the integrity of the scene.
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65. Fifteen years in Homicide, I think
I know what I'm doing, all right?
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66. How many arsons you
work? That's what I thought.
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67. Protocol is hands
off till we're done.
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68. Twenty dead. MTA gonna
sure enough raise the fare.
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69. You talk to all the
survivors in the car?
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70. The ones that weren't loaded into an
ambulance. Nobody saw anything unusual.
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71. The train was up near Columbia.
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72. Maybe some budding
chemist dropped his homework.
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73. You're kidding, right?
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74. So call me a cock-eyed optimist.
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75. Let me ask you this.
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76. Which way was this train headed?
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77. It was a number nine, downtown.
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78. Downtown from Harlem?
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79. Let's hope Lennie's right
about this chemistry student.
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80. When you finish eating,
get over to Forensics.
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81. Cacodyl. Definitely cacodyl.
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82. Sounds like some
kind of cough medicine.
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83. If your allergist
is Dr. Mengele.
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84. Simply replace the oxygen in
butanol with metallic arsenic and voila.
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85. We found traces of it on the glass you
found on the train as well as on the floor.
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86. And it's toxic?
Oh, it's a honey.
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87. As soon as it's exposed to the
air, boom, it bursts into flames.
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88. The flames are followed
by a dense white cloud.
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89. And that's what kills you?
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90. One, two, three.
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91. This guy was definitely looking
to pile up a stack of corpses.
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92. So, unless he was a kamikaze,
there had to be some kind of time delay.
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93. Well, so to speak.
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94. CSU also found traces of a
brown paper bag near the glass.
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95. Easily breakable glass.
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96. So he puts the bomb in a bag
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97. and leaves it on the floor of a
rush-hour train just before he exits.
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98. Then some unsuspecting
commuter steps on a time bomb.
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99. So, where would you
find this metallic arsenic?
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100. Check the Yellow Pages
under "chemical company."
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101. Metallic arsenic. That's right.
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102. Well, what's the
difference what it's for?
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103. Well, how much?
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104. An ounce.
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105. You're kidding.
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106. No. I'll wait. I'll wait.
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107. It's for my son's
science project, all right?
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108. Forget about it.
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109. Well, if I ever need to make a
semiconductor or do some electroplating,
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110. now I know where to start.
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111. Recently.
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112. No, no. Never mind.
Forget it. Thanks.
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113. It's a regulated carcinogen.
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114. You need an OSHA ID
number to even buy it.
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115. Any luck? Better
odds at jai alai.
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116. Well, get over to the hospital.
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117. Maybe the rest of the
survivors are ready to talk now.
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118. Are you all right?
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119. I'm in a hospital, aren't I?
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120. I mean, should I call for
a doctor or something?
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121. Hey, I'm recovering.
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122. I've been coughing
my guts out all day.
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123. If I could help you,
believe me, I would.
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124. Okay.
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125. Dr. Ruiz, call ER, stat.
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126. Nothing. You?
Dr. Ruiz, call ER, stat.
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127. I don't know how much
more of this I can take.
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128. Excuse me, sir. Sir, may I
ask you a question, please?
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129. Were you a passenger
on the subway?
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130. Yes. Can I have
your name, please?
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131. George Bell. George.
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132. I have a Susan
Bell and a Thomas.
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133. I didn't really see anything. I
got off before the bomb exploded.
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134. Mr. Bell, why'd you get off
the train before your wife?
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135. I have a job, you know.
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136. Look, my wife's in
there, fighting for her life.
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137. My son's dead. He's only
15 years old, and he's dead.
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138. We think whoever did this may
have been carrying a brown paper bag.
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139. My God.
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140. What? You saw someone?
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141. He was sitting next to my son. He
had a bag on his lap, holding it tight.
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142. I got off at 125th. When I
got up to the street, I saw him.
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143. Only he didn't have
the bag anymore.
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144. Of all the people in that
car, you remember him?
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145. He was the only white guy. He
was sitting right in front of me.
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146. You think you can
describe him to our artist?
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147. Okay. And a little balder.
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148. How's that? A little
more on the left.
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149. And he had, you know, a stubble.
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150. A little bit more.
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151. I guess that's close.
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152. What about clothes, Mr. Bell? Do
you remember what he was wearing?
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153. He had an army jacket,
kind of worn, you know.
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154. A red scarf and boots.
Those high boots that tie.
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155. You got all that, Howard? Yeah.
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156. All right. Every
precinct gets it.
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157. Put it on the NCIC. Could
be the guy wasn't local.
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158. Oh, come on, John,
she was 78 years old,
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159. and you were looking for
a new song on the radio.
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160. That's not central to the
issue, Frank. Look around you.
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161. It took four full days for
Clint Eastwood to get a verdict
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162. against the National
Enquirer, for God's sakes.
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163. The jury is the big
toe of democracy.
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164. You stub it, eventually
you get a cramp in the calf.
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165. Then you start limping.
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166. Before you know it, the
whole damn body, everything,
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167. we, as citizens of the good old red
and white and blue, start gimping around.
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168. You know what happens then?
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169. You get a prosthetic device.
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170. You get anarchy.
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171. Frank, see if this
jogs your memory.
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172. Even your mother
couldn't love that face.
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173. Read what he did. Gasses
a subway in New York City.
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174. Probably improved the smell.
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175. Metallic arsenic, 20 people
dead, all African American.
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176. White male, mid-30s,
approximately six foot,
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177. around 180 to 200 pounds,
wearing army jacket and boots.
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178. You guys wanna
share with the class?
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179. Yeah. About five years ago,
a church in Madison East End
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180. was gassed using
metallic arsenic. Six dead.
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181. Never closed?
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182. Son of a bitch.
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183. Lieutenant Van Buren, these are
Detectives Bayliss and Pembleton.
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184. They're from Baltimore.
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185. A hundred-and-eighty-five miles,
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186. you must have more than a
passing interest in our subway mishap.
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187. Mishap? I don't think so.
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188. Five years ago, a
gas bomb went off
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189. in a church in the Madison
East End district in Baltimore.
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190. Six people died from toxic
fumes. Frank was the primary.
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191. Let me guess. Madison's
not in the best part of town.
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192. Do you have a name? No.
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193. A woman saw a Caucasian
man, 5'10" or 11, 190 pounds,
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194. maybe late-30s, running
away from the building.
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195. He was wearing an
army jacket and boots.
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196. Same as our guy.
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197. Thank you, Detective. I'll be
in touch with your lieutenant.
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198. Begging your pardon, but
I didn't spend three hours
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199. drinking coffee on Amtrak
for a "We'll get back to you."
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200. If he is from your fair city,
maybe he's already gone home.
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201. Well, what if he hasn't?
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202. Like I said before, we'll let
you know when we catch him.
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203. It's been nice.
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204. Well, it's a good guess
our guy's from Baltimore.
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205. Or he's from New York,
and he likes to take day-trips
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206. to go eat crabs
and bomb churches.
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207. Let's hope it's the
former. What, civic pride?
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208. Put an APB out on anything with
Maryland plates, and say a prayer he drove.
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209. So you're gonna call every
chemical company in Baltimore?
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210. Every one that sells
metallic arsenic, yes.
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211. And you didn't do
this five years ago?
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212. Well, five years ago,
I didn't have a face.
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213. Well, how do we
know it's the same guy?
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214. It's the same guy!
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215. I mean, how do we know the guy who planted
the bombs is the same guy who made them?
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216. Hello? Yes. Is this Mr. Spivack?
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217. I see. But you do
work in personnel?
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218. This is Detective Pembleton from
the Baltimore City Police Department.
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219. We believe that someone in your
company witnessed a criminal act.
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220. No. No, no, I don't know his name,
but I can fax you a likeness of his face.
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221. Indeed, I have spoken
with your supervisor.
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222. That would be
about one half hour.
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223. Okay. Thank you.
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224. Okay, that's the
last of the six biggies.
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225. Now all we have to do is
find ourselves a fax machine.
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226. Back to the precinct?
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227. No, no, no! Bad idea, Tim.
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228. Wait a minute here.
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229. This mean you're gonna
keep them out of the loop?
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230. I saw an 8-year-old girl
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231. as they loaded her daddy
onto the meat wagon.
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232. So that means you
get to pull the switch?
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233. Well, his first felony was
committed in our town.
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234. First come, first served.
Come on. Let's go!
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235. Well, it's started. Eight different
groups staking their claims.
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236. Anything serious?
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237. No, but I got Profaci,
Sweeney and Dworkin on it.
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238. So far, 42 cars with
Maryland plates.
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239. Good. I can use the overtime.
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240. Well, if we're lucky, we can
save the city some bucks.
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241. One of the cars was parked
illegally and towed. I ran the plates.
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242. A Mr. and Mrs. Maskowitz reported
it stolen in Baltimore three days ago.
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243. You get to the docks.
I'll call for a warrant.
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244. We picked it up three days
ago. Nobody's claimed it yet.
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245. A Lincoln? You didn't
think that was odd?
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246. You kidding? Once we had
a Ferrari here for six months.
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247. Here you go.
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248. It's locked. Not to worry.
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249. This isn't exactly kosher.
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250. The warrant's on
its way, don't worry.
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251. So how come it
got towed, anyway?
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252. Out-of-towners, they don't believe
in alternate-side-of-the-street parking.
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253. Four tickets.
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254. Where was it parked?
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255. 21st, between 3rd and Lex.
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256. Land of the one-night stands.
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257. Nothing, Lennie.
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258. All right. There's a forensics team
on its way down to check it out.
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259. What'd this guy do anyway?
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260. Guy steals a Lincoln, then
checks into a dump like this?
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261. Come on, you don't
wanna give up now, do you?
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262. Besides, compared to the
last two places, this is the Ritz.
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263. Hey, we don't know
he checked into a hotel.
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264. Hey, if he did spend the night,
he'd want to stay anonymous, right?
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265. Believe me, these people
here are anonymous.
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266. Come on.
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267. Sorry. Angela was either
gonna sleep with Pablo or kill him.
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268. I had to wait for
the commercial.
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269. All right, I have
Room 319. I have 404.
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270. That's a little extra.
Has a larger bed.
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271. How many hours you
gentlemen gonna want?
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272. We're detectives, Mr...
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273. Belcher. And whatever goes on in
those rooms is really none of my business.
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274. You ever see this face?
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275. Whatever he did, I don't
know anything about it.
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276. Yeah. I'm sure
you're a model citizen.
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277. Now, did he sign in or anything?
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278. Everyone signs in.
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279. Security reasons,
you understand.
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280. Here we are. It's Room 515.
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281. Looks like R. Reagan.
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282. Real secure.
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283. Paid for five days
in advance. In cash.
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284. He's got two days left.
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285. Housekeeping!
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286. Looks like our
friend travels light.
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287. Most of our guests do.
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288. Nothing.
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289. This is today's.
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290. Let's hope he comes
back to finish the puzzle.
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291. We're gonna wait here, Mr. Belcher.
You lock the door on your way out.
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292. Okay. But if you guys break
anything, you pay like everybody else.
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293. Remember. Nothing to nobody,
or you're liable to break, too.
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294. Yeah. Yeah.
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295. His name is Egan. Brian Egan.
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296. He works as a part-time truck
driver for Berkman Chemical.
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297. Well, what difference
does it make?
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298. He lives at... Hang on.
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299. He lives at 8910 Boston Avenue.
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300. Yeah. If he's there, arrest him.
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301. Then find out when
he's coming home.
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302. We're gonna be down
at the Gramercy Hotel.
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303. That's 212-555-7211.
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304. No, I don't know what's
playing at the opera.
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305. Hey, there's a minimum, fella.
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306. What? For using a phone?
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307. My place. My rules.
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308. Well, I got an apple truck
double-parked outside.
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309. We gotta get back to Hokeyville.
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310. What? We got a wiseass here?
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311. Where'd you get that badge?
Out of a Cracker Jack box?
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312. Listen, two bucks,
or I call a real cop.
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313. Now I remember
why I left this dump.
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314. I don't know,
Frank. This is great.
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315. It's pedestrian.
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316. Well, what do I know?
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317. I'm not a connoisseur.
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318. Hotdogs, you go to Nathan's.
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319. Deli, you go to the
Carnegie. Chinese, Shun Lee.
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320. Northern Italian, Primavera.
Southern Italian, it's Luna.
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321. There's a difference?
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322. Olive oil.
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323. Come on, come on,
come on, come on!
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324. Munch is gonna call
us back at the Gramercy.
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325. Yeah? Yeah, I'm
looking for Brian Egan.
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326. Well, he's not here. Hey,
man. Who the hell are you?
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327. Friend of the family,
son. Is your mom home?
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328. No. She's not here, either.
Look, I think you should leave.
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329. I know you.
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330. You're the kid who shoves
Santa back up the chimney.
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331. Who kicks the gift horse out of the
barn. Hangs up on Ed McMahon, right?
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332. What the hell are
you talking about?
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333. I'm talking about
a windfall, son.
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334. Look, you know, whatever you're
selling, we don't want any, okay?
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335. You already got it. You see, your
dad won a bet on the Caps-Flyers game.
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336. My dad bet on a hockey game?
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337. He's been in and out of work
lately, it's weird, him betting like that.
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338. This thing actually flies?
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339. Oh, yeah. That's my
uncle Alex right there.
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340. He hasn't taken me
up in it yet, though.
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341. When's your dad coming home?
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342. He called about a half hour ago.
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343. He's on the next train
down from New York.
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344. Look, if you want me to
hold that money for him, I will.
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345. Hey, I give you the money,
you say you never got it.
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346. Now, where does
that leave me, huh?
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347. We don't even know how
accurate this sketch is.
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348. I wish we had a name.
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349. I wish I'd have bet Soda
Pop in the third at Aqueduct.
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350. It's okay.
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351. Okay, I'm gonna
take my hand away,
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352. and you're not gonna
scream or say anything, right?
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353. Right?
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354. Okay, it's all right.
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355. Okay. What the hell?
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356. Hey, I ain't gonna
steal nothing.
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357. I swear. We're homicide, ma'am.
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358. Marcy.
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359. Marcy, where's your friend?
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360. Gwendolyn? She's riding the E train,
but she wouldn't kill nobody neither.
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361. Look, Marcy, what made
you come to this room?
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362. Oh, that nice man...
Did he kill somebody?
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363. That's what we're
trying to figure out.
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364. He stopped me on the
street and asked directions.
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365. Then he plops this key in my hand,
and he says the room is paid for.
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366. I thought he was Santa.
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367. Where did he wanna
go? Penn Station.
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368. Lennie. What do you think?
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369. Wardrobe looks right.
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370. Okay.
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371. Ronald Reagan. That's cute.
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372. You're not going any
place, Mr. President.
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373. Whoever you are, you're
under arrest for murder.
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374. You have the right
to remain silent.
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375. Anything you say can and will be
used against you in a court of law.
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376. Oh, look at this. Sorry,
fellas. Finders, keepers.
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377. A guy moving interstate with no ID
whatsoever. It makes you wonder.
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378. Somebody picked my
pocket. This is New York.
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379. Oh, so you are from Baltimore.
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380. No, Rey. He's from Harlem. He's
the kind of guy who blends right in.
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381. I don't even know
where Harlem is.
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382. It's the place where you left 20 dead
bodies sprawled out in a subway car.
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383. This is going nowhere.
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384. Give them time.
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385. - Your guys are running on empty.
- My partner here, he's young,
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386. he still has great expectations.
And you've got a full tank?
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387. He figures, if he closes
on this 20 homicides here,
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388. he gets a little closer
to his gold shield.
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389. Well, I'm rooting for him.
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390. Twenty people on their way to
work, and they never got there.
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391. Somebody did it.
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392. You got the wrong somebody.
Copy !req
393. We got a witness who ID'd you.
Copy !req
394. Twenty bodies, scuzzball. In case
you haven't been reading the papers,
Copy !req
395. we got something called the
death penalty here in New York.
Copy !req
396. You think about it.
Copy !req
397. Give him 15 minutes.
Copy !req
398. He knows you
don't have anything.
Copy !req
399. So you think we
should let him go?
Copy !req
400. Well, why don't you give us a
stab on the Baltimore church.
Copy !req
401. You got even less than we do.
Copy !req
402. Well, you loosened the cap,
perhaps I can open the bottle.
Copy !req
403. Be my guest.
Copy !req
404. Wait a minute. Wait a minute.
Copy !req
405. Hey, there!
Copy !req
406. What are you guys, the cavalry?
Copy !req
407. That's funny, Frank.
Copy !req
408. It sure is.
Copy !req
409. Your wife didn't tell
us you were that funny.
Copy !req
410. What are you talking about?
Copy !req
411. Stephanie.
Copy !req
412. She told us all about you.
Copy !req
413. Yeah, right.
Copy !req
414. Lucky guess?
That son of a bitch.
Copy !req
415. Now your boy, Kenny,
Copy !req
416. he thinks you're
a real crack-up.
Copy !req
417. How'd you talk to my kid?
Copy !req
418. We know all about you, Mr. Egan.
Copy !req
419. Oh, he's a good guy, Frank.
Copy !req
420. I think that he'll let
us call him Brian.
Copy !req
421. Can you believe these bastards?
Copy !req
422. We've been to your house, Brian.
Copy !req
423. It really could use a
paint job, you know.
Copy !req
424. Yeah, Presto Paint on Lombard, I
think that'd be the one for you, Bri.
Copy !req
425. Who the hell are you guys?
Copy !req
426. Do you miss Charm
City, Bri? I sure as hell do.
Copy !req
427. I got lots of good
memories there.
Copy !req
428. Like, you know what I remember?
Copy !req
429. I remember a gas bomb going
off about five years ago in a church.
Copy !req
430. Six people died. You
remember that, Bri?
Copy !req
431. Of course he does, Frank. You
don't forget something like that.
Copy !req
432. Why don't you tell us
what you remember?
Copy !req
433. You want your kid
to know what you did?
Copy !req
434. 'Cause we're gonna
have to tell Kenny.
Copy !req
435. Twenty-six dead
bodies, women, children.
Copy !req
436. Hell, you're up there
in Ted Bundy territory.
Copy !req
437. That should make him real proud.
Copy !req
438. I can't talk about it.
Copy !req
439. You don't want to talk about it,
or you're not able to talk about it?
Copy !req
440. 'Cause if you're not able to
talk about it, that's one thing,
Copy !req
441. but if you don't
want to talk about it,
Copy !req
442. well, that's a whole
another ball game.
Copy !req
443. Which is it, Brian?
Copy !req
444. Okay, okay. Have it your way.
Copy !req
445. All I'm saying is, it would be a lot easier
on your wife and kid if you talked now.
Copy !req
446. 'Cause you gotta know, our
next stop is home sweet home.
Copy !req
447. What the hell's he doing?
Copy !req
448. That thing in Baltimore,
Copy !req
449. I didn't know that there
were kids in that church.
Copy !req
450. You mind?
Copy !req
451. You'll excuse us, Mr. Egan.
Copy !req
452. What's the matter with you? He
told you he didn't want to talk to you!
Copy !req
453. Oh, I didn't hear that.
Tim, did you hear that?
Copy !req
454. You know what it is, Detective,
Copy !req
455. judges up here, they tend to
pay attention to the Constitution.
Copy !req
456. The guy says he doesn't wanna
talk, we gotta stop talking to him.
Copy !req
457. In Baltimore, we don't... You're
not in Baltimore, Detective.
Copy !req
458. I thought we were
on the same side here.
Copy !req
459. Well, like I said, you
loosened the cap.
Copy !req
460. If you kept us up to date, we
could've closed it ourselves.
Copy !req
461. Yeah. Whatever. Now if you'll
prepare the prisoner for departure.
Copy !req
462. You guys can start packing,
but he's not going anyplace.
Copy !req
463. Hey, he as much as
confessed to our bombing.
Copy !req
464. First, the statement is garbage,
second, we've got an eyewitness here.
Copy !req
465. And third, the SOB's in
our cage. Get him arraigned.
Copy !req
466. That's a long way for a
client like that, Mr. Le Clair.
Copy !req
467. Well, we're both from Baltimore.
Copy !req
468. We speak the same language.
Copy !req
469. Now, you wouldn't consider...
Copy !req
470. Twenty dead bodies.
Copy !req
471. I plan on going the full nine
yards. Murder one. Death penalty.
Copy !req
472. I guess it doesn't matter
that he says he's innocent.
Copy !req
473. We'll see you in court.
Copy !req
474. Yes.
Copy !req
475. But, now, the issue
becomes which court.
Copy !req
476. My motion for a change of venue.
Copy !req
477. The crime was committed
Copy !req
478. solely within the boundaries of
New York County, Your Honor.
Copy !req
479. Which is exactly why the
venue should be changed.
Copy !req
480. Manhattan subway was bombed,
killing Manhattan commuters.
Copy !req
481. How could we possibly
find an unbiased jury?
Copy !req
482. That's what voire dire is for.
Copy !req
483. For the record, which court
do you propose gets the case?
Copy !req
484. Well, now, I'm not
familiar with the city,
Copy !req
485. but Staten Island
sounds like a lovely place.
Copy !req
486. Why don't we just
move it to Simi Valley?
Copy !req
487. Like I said, I'm from Baltimore.
Copy !req
488. I'm not familiar with the city.
Copy !req
489. Up here, Counselor,
we call a motion like this
Copy !req
490. chutzpah in the first degree.
Copy !req
491. Look at the statistics, Judge. In an
urban environment, like the Bronx,
Copy !req
492. when the jury is 80% black,
Copy !req
493. there is almost a 50% acquittal
rate of black defendants.
Copy !req
494. First of all, this
is not the Bronx.
Copy !req
495. Well, look at the
jury pool here,
Copy !req
496. you can't tell me it's not
primarily made up of minorities.
Copy !req
497. Are you forgetting that
your defendant is white?
Copy !req
498. What's good for the goose, Your
Honor. The victims were all black.
Copy !req
499. A largely minority jury may tend to
overlook the State's lack of evidence.
Copy !req
500. My client's life
is at stake here.
Copy !req
501. You want me to go
federal with this, I will.
Copy !req
502. How about we meet half-way.
Copy !req
503. I'd agree to Westchester County.
Copy !req
504. Sounds fine to me.
Copy !req
505. Westchester. You
gotta be kidding.
Copy !req
506. I was just playing
the percentages.
Copy !req
507. Well, you lost.
Copy !req
508. Le Clair obviously wanted a
white jury. Now he's got one.
Copy !req
509. Look, the last thing
Scarletti wanted
Copy !req
510. was a federal judge examining
our jury selection process.
Copy !req
511. There's no question he was
gonna transfer the case somewhere.
Copy !req
512. We're better off in Westchester.
Copy !req
513. Oh, I see. Twelve Jewish golfers
don't have a biased bone in their bodies,
Copy !req
514. but Irish and Italian
working class,
Copy !req
515. they'll lynch you as
soon as they look at you.
Copy !req
516. I'm sorry. I must
have missed the day
Copy !req
517. they taught ethnic
stereotypes at law school.
Copy !req
518. We didn't make the system.
We just try to survive within it.
Copy !req
519. I spoke to Dillon in Westchester,
he's all for you trying the case.
Copy !req
520. Just came by hand for you, Jack.
Copy !req
521. Le Clair's been
staying up nights.
Copy !req
522. A motion to exclude Egan's
statement about the Baltimore gassing.
Copy !req
523. You lose that, you
lose motive evidence.
Copy !req
524. I questioned him as I
would any other witness.
Copy !req
525. He says he invoked his
Fifth Amendment rights.
Copy !req
526. I did not hear
words to that effect.
Copy !req
527. How long have you been
on the job, Detective?
Copy !req
528. Long enough to know
when to stop an interrogation.
Copy !req
529. Long enough to get a confession
Copy !req
530. when your cops walked out of that
room with nothing but their good looks.
Copy !req
531. Did the suspect ever invoke
his right to remain silent?
Copy !req
532. Not to my mind.
Copy !req
533. Well, Frank has a way.
Copy !req
534. He gets inside the suspect's head and
bangs around till something comes out.
Copy !req
535. Even if his way violates
constitutional guarantees?
Copy !req
536. Well, the envelope sometimes
gets pushed, but no lines are crossed.
Copy !req
537. Did Egan invoke his
right to remain silent?
Copy !req
538. Well,
Copy !req
539. I didn't hear him.
Copy !req
540. So this affidavit's a lie.
Copy !req
541. That's right. He said
he couldn't talk about it.
Copy !req
542. Then I asked if that meant
Copy !req
543. that he wasn't able to talk about
it, or he didn't want to talk about it.
Copy !req
544. And what did he say?
Copy !req
545. He just stared at us.
Copy !req
546. You wanted to see
us? Yeah. Have a seat.
Copy !req
547. And then what happened,
Detective Bayliss?
Copy !req
548. Tim.
Copy !req
549. Frank repeated the question.
Copy !req
550. And then what? He shrugged.
Copy !req
551. He shrugged.
Copy !req
552. He shrugged. And then what?
Copy !req
553. Frank said it'd be
better for everybody
Copy !req
554. if he spoke up now. Oh, damn.
Copy !req
555. I alluded to the well-being of his
family, and he made a statement.
Copy !req
556. I've done it a million times.
Copy !req
557. You did it once too often.
Copy !req
558. Frank asked him if he wanted to
keep quiet, and he shrugged. So what?
Copy !req
559. So that's not an explicit
waiver of his rights.
Copy !req
560. It's the law. Not in
Maryland, it's not.
Copy !req
561. Too bad you're in New York.
Copy !req
562. It's gonna be excluded.
Copy !req
563. We're out of here.
Copy !req
564. A little testy today, huh?
Copy !req
565. Shove it, okay.
Copy !req
566. Shove it where?
Copy !req
567. Hey, you know what? I
don't like you, Pembleton.
Copy !req
568. Well, that brings
tears to my eyes.
Copy !req
569. You're a self-congratulatory ass and
you screw up and blame everybody else.
Copy !req
570. So you don't oppose any of the
factual allegations in the affidavit?
Copy !req
571. No, Your Honor.
Copy !req
572. Then I don't see
what the problem is.
Copy !req
573. A shrug can be interpreted
in many ways, Your Honor.
Copy !req
574. The interrogator took
it as an explicit waiver
Copy !req
575. of the defendant's
right to remain silent.
Copy !req
576. If it can be interpreted in many
ways, how explicit can it be?
Copy !req
577. Your Honor, the State's asking
for the death penalty here.
Copy !req
578. It's well settled that when
dealing with a capital crime,
Copy !req
579. any potential abuse of a constitutional
safeguard must be strictly scrutinized.
Copy !req
580. When the abuse
is by a police officer.
Copy !req
581. Frank Pembleton had no
authority in New York State.
Copy !req
582. He's a member of the
Baltimore City Police.
Copy !req
583. At a minimum, he was an
agent of the New York cops.
Copy !req
584. Do they really let you get away with
this crap in Manhattan, Mr. McCoy?
Copy !req
585. The confession is excluded.
Copy !req
586. This job would be easier
if it weren't for the cops.
Copy !req
587. I didn't know the law was
different down here. I'm sorry.
Copy !req
588. Why don't I take Egan
back to Baltimore?
Copy !req
589. And be laughed
out of the courtroom?
Copy !req
590. Let me give you the short course
on full faith and credit, Detective.
Copy !req
591. A court of
competent jurisdiction
Copy !req
592. has just ruled that you violated a
defendant's constitutional rights.
Copy !req
593. That means every court, including
every court in your hometown,
Copy !req
594. has to abide by the ruling.
Copy !req
595. Look, Bayliss...
No, call me Tim.
Copy !req
596. You said you could
help us with this trial.
Copy !req
597. Are we talking smokescreen here?
Copy !req
598. Me?
Copy !req
599. Yeah, you.
Copy !req
600. I should be getting
back to the office.
Copy !req
601. What if I handed you a
woman who saw a white man
Copy !req
602. running from the all-black church
right before the bomb went off?
Copy !req
603. Can she ID him? No.
Copy !req
604. But it is the same MO.
It could help with motive.
Copy !req
605. Only she'd be
destroyed on cross.
Copy !req
606. It's a circumstantial
case, it can't hurt.
Copy !req
607. Good, good.
Copy !req
608. Because I begged my
lieutenant for the petty cash
Copy !req
609. to get Mrs. Chapman up here,
and she'll be on tomorrow's train.
Copy !req
610. This isn't gonna make up
for that stupid interrogation.
Copy !req
611. I never said it would.
Copy !req
612. So, Counselor,
Copy !req
613. you seeing anyone or what?
Copy !req
614. It's gonna take a lot more
than a half-assed witness.
Copy !req
615. Well, I'm just
getting started here.
Copy !req
616. It was 7:30 or so.
Copy !req
617. And I was on my way to
work with my wife and son.
Copy !req
618. At which stop did you
get off the train, Mr. Bell?
Copy !req
619. At 125th.
Copy !req
620. Is there anyone in the courtroom
who you recognize from the train?
Copy !req
621. Yes. The defendant. He
was sitting next to my son.
Copy !req
622. I was standing in front of him.
He was holding a brown paper bag.
Copy !req
623. Did you see him
get off the train?
Copy !req
624. Yes. He got off at my stop.
Copy !req
625. Only he didn't have the
bag with him anymore.
Copy !req
626. The train was crowded,
was it not, Mr. Bell?
Copy !req
627. It was rush hour, yes.
Copy !req
628. Was there anyone else on
your subway car carrying a bag?
Copy !req
629. I don't know.
Copy !req
630. Well, that's because it was rush
hour, and the subway was packed.
Copy !req
631. Now tell me, see any other
white man on your train?
Copy !req
632. Not that I could see.
Copy !req
633. So, in actuality, you only noticed
Mr. Egan because he was white,
Copy !req
634. and not because he was
carrying a bag, isn't that right?
Copy !req
635. Look, my son is dead.
Copy !req
636. The SOB's color doesn't
make a difference to me.
Copy !req
637. Well, we're just trying to see
if we've got the right SOB, sir.
Copy !req
638. No more questions.
Copy !req
639. Mr. Bell described the man he saw
on the train to a police sketch artist.
Copy !req
640. It resembled Mr. Egan.
Copy !req
641. CSU then found a
partial thumbprint match
Copy !req
642. on the arm rest next to where
Mr. Bell said he was sitting.
Copy !req
643. There were also burn marks
on the floor next to that seat.
Copy !req
644. Is this the picture
you're referring to?
Copy !req
645. Yes, it is.
Copy !req
646. Offered as People's six. Fine.
Copy !req
647. Thank you.
Copy !req
648. Who is Roy Blanchard, Detective?
Copy !req
649. He was a passenger
on the subway that day.
Copy !req
650. And did he survive?
Copy !req
651. Yes, he did.
Copy !req
652. Are you aware that
Mr. Blanchard spent two years
Copy !req
653. in Sing Sing for
aggravated assault?
Copy !req
654. No, I wasn't. What
about Darnell Hurst?
Copy !req
655. He was a passenger on the train
that morning, too, isn't that correct?
Copy !req
656. Yes.
Copy !req
657. Would it surprise you to learn that he
was incarcerated for arson 10 years ago?
Copy !req
658. I didn't think about it.
So your answer is yes?
Copy !req
659. That's right. What
about Jaime Batista,
Copy !req
660. he was a passenger
on that train, too, right?
Copy !req
661. Yes. Four years in
Attica for Mr. Batista.
Copy !req
662. Now tell me, Detective,
Copy !req
663. why didn't you consider Mr. Blanchard,
Mr. Hurst or Mr. Batista suspects?
Copy !req
664. We assumed the perpetrator got off
the train. We didn't look at the survivors.
Copy !req
665. So it had nothing to do with
the fact that they were all black?
Copy !req
666. No.
Copy !req
667. Reynaldo Curtis?
Copy !req
668. What is that,
Detective, Puerto Rican?
Copy !req
669. Objection. Sustained.
Copy !req
670. It was five years ago.
Copy !req
671. I went to get my daughter
from play school at the church
Copy !req
672. on South Broadway in Baltimore.
Copy !req
673. I renew my
objection, Your Honor.
Copy !req
674. As I already ruled,
Counselor, the testimony
Copy !req
675. is relevant in that it
establishes motive.
Copy !req
676. Continue, Mr. McCoy.
Copy !req
677. And did you see anything
out of the ordinary?
Copy !req
678. I saw a man running
from the church.
Copy !req
679. And then thick white smoke
pouring out of the windows.
Copy !req
680. A lot of people in the
church were injured.
Copy !req
681. Six were killed.
Copy !req
682. Were you able to describe
the man to the police?
Copy !req
683. It was dark,
Copy !req
684. but I could see he was wearing
an army jacket and boots.
Copy !req
685. He was white, 5'10" or
11, about 190 pounds.
Copy !req
686. No further questions.
Copy !req
687. The man running
from your church,
Copy !req
688. you never saw his face,
did you, Mrs. Chapman?
Copy !req
689. No.
Copy !req
690. Is that because you only saw him
from behind as he was running away?
Copy !req
691. It was dark. He was
running in the other direction.
Copy !req
692. So you cannot say that it was Mr. Egan
you saw running from your church?
Copy !req
693. No. But you can say
that the man was white?
Copy !req
694. Yes. I see.
Copy !req
695. Tell me, are you still a
member of that congregation?
Copy !req
696. No, I now worship
at Jafaria Salaam.
Copy !req
697. Exactly what
denomination is that?
Copy !req
698. We are Muslims.
Copy !req
699. That have anything to do
with the Reverend Farrakhan?
Copy !req
700. Objection! In my chambers.
Copy !req
701. It's irrelevant, not
to mention insulting.
Copy !req
702. I'm just raising the possibility
of other potential suspects.
Copy !req
703. Louis Farrakhan? Please.
Copy !req
704. The Reverend Farrakhan publicly blames
the white man for his people's problems.
Copy !req
705. I'm just suggesting that, perhaps,
the witness is following suit.
Copy !req
706. You're playing on the fears
and prejudices of the jury.
Copy !req
707. You raise the specter
of a black separatist
Copy !req
708. and an anti-Semite
with this particular jury.
Copy !req
709. You picked the venue McCoy,
Copy !req
710. and you called in the
crying parents of the victims
Copy !req
711. killed on the train
and in the church.
Copy !req
712. Is that playing any less
on the jury's prejudices?
Copy !req
713. I'll let you proceed,
Mr. Le Clair,
Copy !req
714. but try and limit your questioning
to the colorably relevant.
Copy !req
715. Because metallic arsenic
is regulated by OSHA,
Copy !req
716. you can't just walk in off
the street and purchase it.
Copy !req
717. So we assumed that whoever made the bomb
had some sort of professional access to it.
Copy !req
718. We then sent a police sketch to
several chemical companies in Baltimore.
Copy !req
719. What did you find?
Copy !req
720. His name was Brian
Egan, and he was a
Copy !req
721. part-time truck driver
for Berkman Chemical.
Copy !req
722. Is Berkman Chemical a
supplier of metallic arsenic?
Copy !req
723. Yes, it is.
Copy !req
724. Thank you.
Copy !req
725. What is it, Detective?
Copy !req
726. Not enough crime down
in Baltimore for you?
Copy !req
727. You gotta come up here and
solve New York's crimes as well?
Copy !req
728. I was the primary on the
bombing in the church.
Copy !req
729. To date, those
cases are still open.
Copy !req
730. What makes you think the
two incidents were related?
Copy !req
731. Two gas bombs made the same
way, from the same materials.
Copy !req
732. And that was all?
Copy !req
733. The victims in both
were African American.
Copy !req
734. So, obviously, you think that racial
animus was involved in both these cases?
Copy !req
735. It wasn't my concern.
Copy !req
736. Tell me, Detective,
Copy !req
737. how many of your cases from
five years ago are still open?
Copy !req
738. Three.
Copy !req
739. Dominick D'Alleva, Tomasso Bucci
Copy !req
740. and Fred O'Meara,
isn't that right?
Copy !req
741. That's right.
Copy !req
742. You still flitting around the
country trying to close these cases?
Copy !req
743. There's no reason
to... Yes or no?
Copy !req
744. No.
Copy !req
745. I didn't think so.
Copy !req
746. I'll tell you what, Detective,
Copy !req
747. I think racial animus is of
bigger concern than you let on.
Copy !req
748. Objection. No more questions.
Copy !req
749. The People rest.
Copy !req
750. The Defense rests,
too, Your Honor.
Copy !req
751. I can't believe he
didn't put on a case.
Copy !req
752. I guess he didn't
think you made yours.
Copy !req
753. A witness ID'd Egan, he
had access to the arsenic.
Copy !req
754. We found his prints on the
train. It should be enough.
Copy !req
755. The cops who beat up
Rodney King were acquitted.
Copy !req
756. They had film of Marion Barry
smoking crack, he was re-elected mayor.
Copy !req
757. Juries have rendered verdicts to
advance political agendas for 200 years.
Copy !req
758. We've certainly come a long way.
Copy !req
759. Reasonable doubt equals racial
division. What are you gonna do?
Copy !req
760. I'm gonna lead them to
the right political statement.
Copy !req
761. Some people just
need to point the finger.
Copy !req
762. Things don't go as
they like, it's because
Copy !req
763. their forefathers were
dragged here in chains.
Copy !req
764. Yes, slavery was an obscenity,
but it ended 100 years ago.
Copy !req
765. Still, they're stuck in
the ghetto, they blame us.
Copy !req
766. Cut off the welfare
checks, we're damn racists.
Copy !req
767. Their kids are hooked
on crack, our fault.
Copy !req
768. A train is gassed in Harlem,
Copy !req
769. guess where they're
gonna point the finger?
Copy !req
770. Now, you've heard the
witnesses in this case.
Copy !req
771. The only thing they've got against
my client is the color of his skin.
Copy !req
772. I say, enough. It's
time to send a message.
Copy !req
773. You can't blame
whitey for everything.
Copy !req
774. Not anymore.
Copy !req
775. We don't need those anymore.
Copy !req
776. Over the past two weeks, I
put on a near-perfect case.
Copy !req
777. I proved the defendant had access to
the materials used to make the bomb.
Copy !req
778. I proved he was on the subway
the day the bomb exploded.
Copy !req
779. You heard testimony
Copy !req
780. that someone fitting his
description committed a similar crime,
Copy !req
781. using the identical toxic gas,
Copy !req
782. five years ago in Baltimore, which
just happens to be his hometown.
Copy !req
783. A near-perfect case,
Copy !req
784. and still, there's a
chance I could lose.
Copy !req
785. That's why I tossed
those law books,
Copy !req
786. and that's why Mr. Le Clair is
absolutely right when he says
Copy !req
787. that black fingers
are pointing at us.
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788. Where else are
they going to point?
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789. No, none of us ever dragged
anyone here in chains.
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790. We never hanged anybody's
grandfather from a tree
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791. for looking too long at
the master's daughter.
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792. We're a lot smarter
than that and subtler.
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793. Instead of chains, we
use reasonable doubt.
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794. Instead of restricted bathrooms,
we use unanimous verdicts.
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795. Yes, we can send a message.
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796. We can say the racial divide in this
country has grown and is growing,
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797. and here's another example
of just how unfair it gets.
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798. Or we can say, "Enough."
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799. Equal protection under the
law means exactly what it says.
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800. Have you reached a verdict?
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801. We have.
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802. On the first count
of the indictment,
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803. murder in the first degree of
Thomas Bell, how do you find?
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804. We find the defendant guilty.
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805. On the second count
of the indictment,
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806. murder in the first degree of
Harvey Brand, how do you find?
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807. We find the defendant guilty.
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808. On the third count of the
indictment, murder in the first degree
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809. of Kareem Alexander,
how do you find?
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810. We find the defendant guilty.
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811. What'll you have?
Whatever's on tap.
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812. All right. You should quit.
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813. I should do a lot of things.
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814. So, all's well, right?
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815. Detective Curtis,
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816. do I detect a note of the
self-congratulatory in your voice?
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817. Why not?
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818. You know, I've been thinking,
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819. how bad do you suppose
Egan wants to die?
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820. I mean, it's pretty obvious,
a part-time truck driver
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821. cooking up a complex
bomb like that,
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822. not to mention a $50,000
retainer to his lawyer.
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823. You won on 20 counts,
McCoy. Why the sit down?
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824. I thought maybe Mr. Egan
was ready to negotiate.
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825. Oh, you'll knock it
down to 10 counts.
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826. Now is not the best time
for wiseass, Mr. Egan.
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827. We know you
weren't in this alone.
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828. Give us your conspirators, I'll drop
the request for the death penalty.
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829. I don't see the joke, Mr. Egan.
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830. You don't see anything, you
have no idea what's really going on.
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831. Why don't you tell me?
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832. I'm just the tip of the iceberg.
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833. You're a racist and a murderer,
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834. and you just found out
your country won't tolerate it.
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835. You mean your country won't.
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836. Mine is growing.
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837. You think you can stop it?
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838. You can't stop anything.
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