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. Quentin Tarantino and his buddies
over there were shooting a video.
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7. They found him.
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8. They were scoping the place out a
couple of hours before, around 7:00.
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9. They didn't notice
the deceased then.
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10. We've been canvassing the area.
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11. All right, thanks, Kelly.
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12. Let me know if
anything turns up.
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13. Lawrence Bello,
47. Lives in Syosset.
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14. Not anymore.
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15. $33. All his credit
cards. And a wife.
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16. Looks like blunt-force
brain surgery.
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17. Probably took a header
into the climbing blocks.
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18. CSU found some blood and
tissue on the corner there.
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19. What did he do, slip on the ice?
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20. With a little help.
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21. He's got some
bruises on his neck.
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22. Finger marks.
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23. Probably got
grabbed by the throat.
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24. Big hands, going by the spread.
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25. Detectives, CSU's got
something across the street.
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26. It's monogrammed, initials
LB. Same as your vic, right?
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27. Uh-huh!
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28. The perp leaves the wallet,
but takes the briefcase?
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29. What was he expecting
to find? I don't know.
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30. Bello didn't look like he
was carrying gold bricks.
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31. Long Island Railroad
commuter pass, Sporting News.
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32. A screwdriver.
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33. Might be the perp's.
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34. The locks look like
they were jimmied.
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35. Go ahead and bag it.
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36. New York Child Health
and Welfare Agency.
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37. Lawrence Bello, case supervisor.
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38. A social worker.
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39. Yeah, the taxpayers
will be heartbroken.
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40. The playground, is it famous
for its after-hours recreation?
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41. According to the beat cops,
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42. the worst thing that goes on
there is some underage drinking.
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43. Anyway, looks like gambling
was Mr. Bello's vice of choice.
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44. That Sporting News
we found in his briefcase,
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45. he already had his
picks of the week circled.
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46. He could have been paying
off a bookie and come up short.
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47. Or some nut doesn't
like the welfare system.
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48. But the only prints on the
briefcase belong to Bello,
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49. and there's no prints
on the screwdriver.
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50. Tradesman All-Pro.
Expensive item.
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51. Professionals use these.
Plumbers, electricians.
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52. There's a Mrs. Bello.
Wants to see you.
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53. Usually, Larry takes the
6:30 from Penn Station.
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54. Yesterday, he called to say
he had a late appointment.
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55. I assumed it was about his kids.
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56. His kids?
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57. I mean, his foster kids.
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58. He took kids out of bad homes
and found families for them.
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59. Can you think of any reason
why he was in that park last night?
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60. No. He didn't like the cold.
He was always getting sick.
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61. Was he mugged?
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62. We're not sure.
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63. Mrs. Bello, did your husband
ever talk to you about his gambling?
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64. Gambling? He didn't gamble.
What makes you think that?
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65. Well, we know he was
interested in sports.
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66. No, he'd watch it on TV
and read the sports page.
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67. Did any of his friends
share his interest?
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68. Larry and I didn't socialize
very much. We had each other.
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69. He was here for a couple
of hours in the morning
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70. and then he left
to do his fieldwork.
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71. He was always very busy.
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72. How busy with his gambling?
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73. You know, you're not doing him any favors
by pretending you don't know about it.
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74. So, sometimes he liked to talk
about how many points the Jets got
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75. instead of how many cigarette
burns he found on a five-year-old.
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76. Some days, this job...
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77. How did he make out with
the betting? Did he lose?
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78. I wouldn't know.
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79. He always seemed
on top of things.
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80. You see what he had in
his briefcase before he left?
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81. The usual stuff. I put his
case files in for his visits.
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82. An appointment sheet.
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83. Did he check in,
in the afternoon?
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84. For his messages.
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85. Um...
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86. He got one from his wife, one
from our supervisor, Mr. De Simio,
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87. and one from the Pattersons.
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88. Who are they? Foster parents.
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89. Mr. Bello kept playing phone tag
with them. He needed to see them.
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90. I didn't see their
file in his briefcase.
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91. Well, he didn't connect
with them until late afternoon.
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92. The way he was talking, I thought
they were candidates for an action memo.
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93. Mr. Bello seemed
pretty angry with them.
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94. You have an address?
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95. Patterson, Henry and
Sharlene. 3002nd Avenue.
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96. Three blocks from
where he was killed.
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97. Sure, Mr. Bello was here.
He left just before 7:00.
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98. Why, he do something wrong?
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99. Other than getting himself killed
in your neighborhood last night, no.
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100. Sharlene, take the kids
into their room to play, okay?
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101. Are they both fosters?
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102. Just the little one.
Robbie is ours.
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103. They told us at Health and Welfare
that Bello had a beef with you.
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104. Because we put a
deposit on a new place.
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105. We should have
checked with him first.
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106. He said moving was going
to mess us up with the agency,
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107. that we might not be
able to keep all our kids.
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108. How many fosters you have now?
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109. Three.
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110. Anyhow, we got it
all straightened out.
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111. I signed some forms,
then Mr. Bello left.
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112. That's funny, we didn't see any forms
with your name on them in his briefcase.
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113. He said he was gonna
come back with some forms.
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114. Uh-huh.
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115. Where are the other
two kids, Mr. Patterson?
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116. My sister took them to a movie.
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117. On a school night?
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118. You know, I got
three kids myself,
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119. and a whole pile of winter
clothes by the front door.
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120. Here, I hardly see
enough for two kids.
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121. If I go into your kid's room, I bet
I'll find two beds, two bathrobes,
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122. just two of
everything. Am I right?
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123. Henry, what's going on?
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124. He was just about to tell us
why you're short two foster kids.
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125. Sharlene, don't say anything.
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126. Yeah, maybe we'd all be more comfortable
not saying anything downtown. Come on.
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127. I swear to God, I
didn't kill Mr. Bello.
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128. You know what, Henry?
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129. Let's forget about Bello.
We want those kids.
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130. I'm not saying anything
else. I want a lawyer.
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131. Fine with us. Maybe Mrs. Patterson
will be a little more cooperative.
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132. You can't talk to
her without a lawyer.
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133. Hey, unlike you,
she's not a suspect.
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134. She can leave anytime she wants.
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135. Now, how about
it, Mrs. Patterson?
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136. You want to tell us what your
husband did with those kids?
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137. You know, if we find out later
that you had anything to do with it,
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138. they're gonna take your son
away. You know what that means?
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139. They're gonna put
him in foster care.
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140. You leave her alone.
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141. Hey, excuse me, you aren't talking
until your lawyer gets here, remember?
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142. So, shut up.
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143. Now, what about
those missing kids?
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144. There weren't any other kids.
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145. It was Bello's idea.
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146. He made them up on the computer
and we pretended to take them in.
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147. And the state shoots you a check
800 bucks a head every month, right?
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148. We only kept half. We
gave the rest to Bello.
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149. He said it was okay.
He'd done it before.
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150. It was going fine, until we
decided to move to a nicer place.
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151. Bello went crazy.
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152. He said moving would bring a whole
new inspection by the agency down on us.
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153. He told us to tear up the lease.
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154. Then he left, just before
7:00, like I told you.
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155. Virtual foster kids.
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156. Yeah, after virtual sex, it
was only a matter of time.
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157. Their story makes sense to you?
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158. They confess to fraud to
avoid a murder charge?
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159. Maybe. Or we're giving
them too much credit.
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160. Bello had a gambling
habit to feed.
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161. Chances are, these aren't the
only foster parents on his team.
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162. All those kickbacks.
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163. He'd be walking around with
a lot of cash in his briefcase.
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164. Somebody knew. Another
parent with virtual kids?
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165. Book these two for fraud. And find
out who else was working the scam.
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166. I could spot all the
phony kids in a half hour
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167. if we were directly
hooked up to birth records,
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168. like we're supposed to.
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169. They've been promising
us for two years.
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170. They've been promising
to fix my chair for three.
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171. This is gonna take days.
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172. Look, the first time
somebody gets a foster kid,
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173. they get put under
a microscope, right?
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174. Yeah, there's a probationary
period, weekly inspections.
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175. There's a whole battery
of people in the loop.
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176. But not the second
time they get a kid?
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177. Well, the foster home's
already approved.
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178. There's less scrutiny. Only
one caseworker is involved.
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179. I'll check foster homes
with multiple placements,
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180. cross-ref, name Bello.
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181. Here we go.
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182. This doesn't make sense. This file
here, it's been dormant for over a year.
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183. Then yesterday
Bello downloaded it.
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184. The same day he was killed.
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185. Whose file is it?
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186. The Corbins.
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187. Two fosters over a period of four
years. Then nothing since a year ago.
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188. And the file wasn't in
Bello's desk or his briefcase.
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189. Alan Corbin?
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190. And who are you?
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191. The police. Do you
mind if we come in?
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192. Lennie Briscoe. What
are you doing here?
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193. I'm working a homicide,
Sal. Larry Bello. And you?
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194. Larry Bello from
Health and Welfare?
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195. You know him?
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196. He placed Alex with us.
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197. Alex being...
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198. Their adopted son. He
was kidnapped this morning.
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199. We'd just gotten to
the children's zoo.
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200. Alex wanted to
see the polar bears.
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201. I turned away for a
second and he was gone.
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202. He's a good-looking boy.
How long have you had him?
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203. Well, we signed the adoption
papers about seven months ago,
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204. and we had him as a foster
nine months before that.
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205. Alex was a crack baby.
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206. When he came to
us, he was so small,
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207. so frail, but you see,
now he's just fine.
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208. The ransom call came in about
an hour after the abduction.
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209. Now the male voice,
sounded black to me.
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210. How much do they want?
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211. Nothing specific. Said the boy was fine,
and he would call back with instructions.
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212. You think that the same people
who killed Mr. Bello took Alex?
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213. Could be a coincidence.
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214. We looked at everybody who
ever set foot in the Corbin's house.
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215. Maids, trades people, but a social
worker? Come on. That's a new one on me.
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216. If Bello was in on the kidnapping,
what's he doing in the morgue?
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217. After he gave his partners
the Corbin's address,
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218. maybe they got
greedy, they cut him out.
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219. This isn't about money.
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220. You got one call eight hours
ago. Didn't even name a price.
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221. What do you think
it's about, Rey?
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222. Well, when kids are adopted,
their files are sealed, right?
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223. To protect the birth
parents' privacy.
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224. And the kid's.
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225. If the birth parents are trying to find
Alex, Larry Bello is the man to see.
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226. No, the mom is a pipe head.
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227. That's been known to
dampen the maternal instinct.
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228. Yeah, but a man killed Bello.
A man made the ransom call.
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229. We could be
looking at the father.
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230. What the hell? Wonder
Boy might be right.
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231. I'll look into it. No,
we'll look into it.
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232. We caught the homicide, Sal. That
makes me and Wonder Boy the primary.
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233. Your deceased is not gonna go
anywhere. I've got a missing kid.
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234. Put them back in your pants, gentlemen.
There's enough work to go around.
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235. Detective Martel, talk to the Corbins,
see what they know about the birth parents.
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236. You two get over to Health and
Welfare, get that boy's file opened.
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237. You know what happens to me if I let you
guys see the file without a judge's say-so?
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238. You mean besides having
dinner on us at The Palm?
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239. That will make a nice change from
standing in the unemployment line.
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240. We don't have time to suck
up to a family court judge.
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241. Now, you give us the
name of the kid's parents,
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242. we promise nobody will
know where it came from.
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243. Sorry, I can't do
it. I could get sued.
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244. Now, you listen to me! If we get
to that kid too late because of you,
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245. a lawsuit's gonna be
the least of your worries.
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246. Rey. Rey, take it easy.
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247. Listen, we're not trying
to get you in any trouble.
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248. Just point us in the
right direction, you know?
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249. You said the mother
was a crack addict?
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250. When Bello put her kid in the
system, he would have referred her
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251. to one of six rehab clinics
we have under contract.
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252. A referral from Larry
Bello 16 months ago?
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253. Even if I had time to look,
those files are in storage.
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254. Well, maybe this will help. It's a
photo of her son. His name is Alex.
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255. Oh, yes. I've seen a
baby picture of him.
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256. I remember because of the
raspberry birthmark on his wrist.
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257. You know the mother's name?
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258. Mays. Like Willie. Jenny Mays.
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259. Attitude to spare. She said
the kid's name was Jamal.
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260. What about the boy's
father? She ever mention him?
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261. She hardly even
mentioned the boy.
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262. I practically had to beg her
to show me a picture of him.
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263. Any idea where
we could find her?
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264. No.
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265. She was in and out of
here for a few months.
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266. Then she came down with
pneumonia. We sent her to Mount Sinai.
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267. That's when the state
terminated her parental rights.
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268. That must have
boosted her morale.
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269. Standard operating procedure.
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270. She showed no interest in her
boy. The state had to do something.
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271. What about calling
her next of kin?
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272. She mentioned she had people
in Springfield, Massachusetts.
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273. I'm sure they tried
to contact them.
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274. You want to find her, try Mount Sinai.
They'll have her Medicaid records.
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275. Monroe.
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276. Jenny Mays. Lived in 2D.
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277. Chipped two tiles
in the bathroom.
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278. I could have charged
her for it, too, but I didn't.
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279. She moved out five months ago.
The hospital gave you this address?
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280. That's right.
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281. Well, she didn't look sick.
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282. She didn't have nothing
catching, did she? No.
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283. Did she leave a
forwarding address?
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284. Uh-uh.
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285. Most likely living
with her boyfriend.
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286. He came by a couple of
times to pick up her mail.
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287. He got a name?
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288. Michael. Nice looking boy. Big.
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289. Did Jenny have a job?
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290. Well, she used to work
a register at Loehmann's,
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291. but she quit that
before she moved.
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292. I'm told she got a better
job somewhere else.
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293. All right, let's
try it this way.
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294. When she paid the rent,
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295. do you remember what
bank her check came from?
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296. Checks? I don't take
checks. Hard currency only.
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297. Except for one month, I
did let her pay in trade.
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298. What did she do, bake cookies?
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299. My fuse box sparked out. Her boyfriend
replaced it. Got me a new one at cost.
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300. He's an electrician.
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301. Now, where does he work?
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302. Well, there's a sticker on the
fuse box with a phone number on it
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303. in case I need service. Come on.
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304. We're looking for
a Michael Walters.
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305. Hey, Mikey.
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306. What did I do,
man? What did I do?
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307. Nothing, until you cut out.
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308. Michael Walters, you are
under arrest for obstruction.
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309. You have the right
to remain silent.
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310. He's not my boy.
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311. But you helped
Jenny take him, right?
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312. No. I didn't even
know she had a kid.
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313. So what, you ran just
to give us a workout?
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314. Call it a survival reaction. Pale
faces, dark suits. Usually bad news.
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315. Hey, you want real bad news?
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316. He dropped his screwdriver
next to Larry Bello's briefcase.
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317. A Tradesman All-Pro,
just like the rest of his set.
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318. Just like a lot of
tools sold in this city.
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319. Well, it was enough
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320. to get us a search
warrant for his apartment.
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321. We got people
in there right now.
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322. Oh! Rey, I don't
think Mikey likes it.
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323. Help yourself out, Mr. Walters.
Tell us where the boy is.
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324. Michael, don't say anything.
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325. He's with Jenny, right?
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326. Where are they?
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327. I don't know what
you're talking about.
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328. Curtis.
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329. Uh-huh.
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330. Okay, thanks.
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331. That was Detective Martel.
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332. He just found a pair of shoes
in Mr. Walters' apartment.
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333. Matches the footprints
found at the playground.
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334. And guess what? There
was blood on the soles.
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335. Give us a minute.
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336. Thanks for the call.
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337. I knew it sounded
too good to be true.
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338. Martel did call from
Walters' apartment.
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339. Confirmed Jenny lived there.
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340. He's staying put just
in case she turns up.
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341. In the realm of the "what if."
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342. Bello agreed to sell
Jenny Mays an address.
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343. She asked my client
to act as go-between.
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344. Then Bello upped the
ante, there was a scuffle.
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345. Oh! I get it. The whole
thing was an accident. Huh?
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346. Yes, it was.
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347. He pleads to man
two, minimum sentence.
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348. And we get Alex Corbin.
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349. He'll help you any way he can.
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350. I'll make a recommendation
to the D.A. Now he talks.
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351. Jenny took him to my sister's.
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352. Please, don't hurt her.
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353. Jenny Mays?
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354. No, I'm Darla. Darla Walters.
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355. Where are they?
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356. Where are who? What's going on?
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357. Hey, Darla, you want to join your
brother Michael down at the station?
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358. Just keep being a wiseass.
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359. She left about an hour ago with
her boy. She took her suitcase.
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360. Going where? Where?
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361. She called a cab.
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362. I heard her say Port Authority.
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363. She's got family
in Massachusetts.
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364. Keep an eye on her.
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365. We caught it just
as it left the terminal.
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366. We kept the passengers
on board. Not a happy bunch.
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367. Thanks.
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368. Hey, kiddo. Are you Alex?
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369. His proper name is Jamal.
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370. And you're Jenny.
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371. Don't worry, Jamal, everything
is going to be all right.
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372. Stand up, please.
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373. Jenny Mays, you're under arrest
for the kidnapping of Alex Corbin,
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374. for the murder of
Lawrence Bello.
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375. You have the right
to remain silent.
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376. Unless they changed the rules
since I sat on your side of the table,
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377. felony murder requires a felony.
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378. Try kidnapping, Paul.
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379. In the commission and furtherance
of which, Larry Bello was killed.
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380. Mike never told me what he did.
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381. I didn't find out until I
heard it on the news.
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382. He was your accomplice.
Share the crime, share the time.
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383. An accomplice to what? She had
no intention of kidnapping her son.
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384. She just wanted to see him.
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385. I was a sick junkie when
they took him away from me.
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386. I never got to say goodbye.
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387. You were saying goodbye
all the way to Springfield?
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388. She saw her boy on the street,
she was overcome by emotion.
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389. She took him. Chalk it
up to maternal instinct.
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390. That doesn't explain
the ransom call.
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391. I only wanted to let the
Corbins know Jamal was okay,
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392. so that they wouldn't worry.
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393. Look, Jack, you've got a dead,
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394. corrupt bureaucrat
and his confessed killer.
Copy !req
395. I've got a reformed drug addict,
Copy !req
396. with a good job, who's only
guilty of wanting her son.
Copy !req
397. Offer us something reasonable.
Copy !req
398. I'll let you know.
Copy !req
399. For the record,
Copy !req
400. we'll take custodial interference
and a suspended sentence.
Copy !req
401. If I don't hear from you by tomorrow,
I'll prepare my motion for dismissal.
Copy !req
402. I imagine you already have
a draft in your briefcase.
Copy !req
403. She just wanted to see
him. That's all it was about.
Copy !req
404. We didn't scheme any kidnapping.
Copy !req
405. You told the Corbins you
were after ransom money.
Copy !req
406. We didn't want money, she just
told me to call them, to throw them off.
Copy !req
407. She thought of that, and
you expect us to believe
Copy !req
408. that she didn't think of kidnapping
her son until she saw him?
Copy !req
409. Well, if she told me she
was gonna kidnap him,
Copy !req
410. I never would have helped her.
Copy !req
411. I don't want kids.
She knows that.
Copy !req
412. We are done talking, Mr. McCoy.
Copy !req
413. We were promised a deal.
Copy !req
414. No deal until he
tells us the truth.
Copy !req
415. He lied about her leaving town, and
he's lying now about her involvement.
Copy !req
416. I didn't know she
was taking the bus.
Copy !req
417. She must have just
panicked, that's all.
Copy !req
418. Look, I told you all
everything I know.
Copy !req
419. Me and Jenny didn't
set out to hurt nobody.
Copy !req
420. Things just went wrong.
Copy !req
421. She's laying the
murder on her boyfriend.
Copy !req
422. As long as he keeps lying for
her, she might get away with it.
Copy !req
423. This is giving me a headache.
Copy !req
424. Drop the felony murder. See if
she'll take a plea on kidnapping.
Copy !req
425. Paul is asking for Custodial
Interference and no jail time.
Copy !req
426. It's not acceptable.
Copy !req
427. Split the difference.
Copy !req
428. Split the difference? Have
you read the file on Jenny Mays?
Copy !req
429. I'm sure I'm about
to get a synopsis.
Copy !req
430. Crack addict since the age
of 17, in and out of rehab.
Copy !req
431. Arrests for vagrancy,
petty larceny, possession.
Copy !req
432. So far, par for the course.
Copy !req
433. When Child Welfare was
called in 18 months ago,
Copy !req
434. they found her son
lying in his own filth.
Copy !req
435. He'd been crying for 10 hours
straight, while she was out buying drugs.
Copy !req
436. He was malnourished,
underweight, covered with rashes.
Copy !req
437. If they hadn't taken him
away from her, he'd be dead.
Copy !req
438. And if the police
hadn't found her,
Copy !req
439. who knows what fresh hell
she would have put him through.
Copy !req
440. She's not charged with
being a lousy mother.
Copy !req
441. Her story doesn't
make sense, Adam.
Copy !req
442. I'm not giving her a
walk for lying to us.
Copy !req
443. You think she premeditated
the kidnapping, prove it.
Copy !req
444. Before Paul throws the
charges back in our face.
Copy !req
445. This is her desk. The police said
they'd be by today to pick up her things.
Copy !req
446. I never thought I'd see
her on the 6:00 news.
Copy !req
447. She talk to you about Jamal?
Copy !req
448. Just that she put him up for adoption
because of a medical situation.
Copy !req
449. An addiction to
crack. Past tense.
Copy !req
450. Not Jenny? Well, she
certainly kept that to herself.
Copy !req
451. She ever mention
wanting him back?
Copy !req
452. No. I wasn't that close to her.
Copy !req
453. She was taking her son to
Springfield when she was arrested.
Copy !req
454. Did you see any signs that
she was planning to leave?
Copy !req
455. She mentioned Springfield
a couple of weeks ago,
Copy !req
456. when I helped her change the
direct deposit on her paycheck.
Copy !req
457. She was moving her account from
Copy !req
458. the Credit Union to the
bank on Union Square.
Copy !req
459. I don't get the connection.
Copy !req
460. There's a branch in Springfield,
where her parents live.
Copy !req
461. She said they only had
social security to live on.
Copy !req
462. She wanted to send them
money every month to help out.
Copy !req
463. She was in a rush to
get the paperwork done.
Copy !req
464. She's meticulous.
She was skipping town,
Copy !req
465. but not without making sure
she'd get her last paycheck.
Copy !req
466. Paul will argue the bank move
was to support her parents.
Copy !req
467. Only makes her
halo shine brighter.
Copy !req
468. The only people wearing
halos would be her parents.
Copy !req
469. I checked with the county registrar
in Springfield. They're both dead.
Copy !req
470. Good going, Claire.
Copy !req
471. It's still only circumstantial
evidence of premeditation.
Copy !req
472. We need to back it up.
Copy !req
473. Her boyfriend.
Copy !req
474. Unless Jenny never told him.
Copy !req
475. It wouldn't surprise me.
Copy !req
476. You're making this up.
Copy !req
477. Look at the date
stamped at the bottom.
Copy !req
478. She opened the account a full
week before she kidnapped Alex.
Copy !req
479. But she would have told me.
Copy !req
480. Mr. Walters, all this lying
on behalf of Jenny is noble,
Copy !req
481. but it's just putting
you in a very deep hole.
Copy !req
482. I can't believe she didn't
tell me what she was doing.
Copy !req
483. Okay, so she played
him. You here to rub it in?
Copy !req
484. Actually, we were hoping that
she had said something to him.
Copy !req
485. What about Larry Bello?
What did she tell you about him?
Copy !req
486. She knew he might get hurt.
Copy !req
487. He said he wanted a grand for the
address, so she scraped it together.
Copy !req
488. An hour before the meeting,
he said he wanted two grand.
Copy !req
489. Jenny flipped out.
Copy !req
490. She told me she wanted
that address, whatever it took.
Copy !req
491. Including murder? No.
Copy !req
492. We thought I might have
to scare him, but not kill him.
Copy !req
493. I wouldn't be seeking a dismissal
if I thought my motion had no merit.
Copy !req
494. I prosecuted dozens of
felony murder indictments.
Copy !req
495. I know the requirements.
This crime doesn't meet them.
Copy !req
496. It's textbook. It takes a felony,
in this case a kidnapping,
Copy !req
497. and a murder during the
commission of that felony.
Copy !req
498. The intent to kidnap wasn't
formed at the time of the murder.
Copy !req
499. They're separate crimes.
Copy !req
500. Referring to the moving affidavits,
Your Honor, Ms. Mays made preparations
Copy !req
501. to leave the state with her son
a week prior to Mr. Bello's death.
Copy !req
502. That evidence can be
interpreted any number of ways.
Copy !req
503. She spent her last dime
to get the boy's address.
Copy !req
504. It wasn't just to say
hello and goodbye.
Copy !req
505. Whatever plans she had, she did
not communicate them to her boyfriend.
Copy !req
506. How can his killing Bello be in furtherance
of a kidnapping he wasn't even aware of?
Copy !req
507. His knowledge isn't important.
Ms. Mays was calling the shots.
Copy !req
508. She told Walters to get the Corbins'
address by any means necessary,
Copy !req
509. including the use of force.
Copy !req
510. That's enough for me.
Copy !req
511. Mr. Robinette, your
motion is denied.
Copy !req
512. The charges stand. Voir
dire to begin tomorrow.
Copy !req
513. Judge, can we go
off the record here?
Copy !req
514. Tomorrow, I intend to move
to recuse you from this case.
Copy !req
515. On what grounds?
Copy !req
516. Your bias against my client.
Copy !req
517. Three years ago,
over dinner at Elio's
Copy !req
518. you said all drug addicts should
be rounded up and sterilized.
Copy !req
519. I don't remember saying
anything of the kind.
Copy !req
520. I do. And if I subpoena
him, so will Ben Stone.
Copy !req
521. We nearly fell off our
chairs when you said it.
Copy !req
522. You can either
recuse yourself now,
Copy !req
523. or after your views on forced sterilization
become a matter of public record.
Copy !req
524. Let's do this by the book,
Paul. I want a hearing.
Copy !req
525. Thank you, Mr. McCoy.
Copy !req
526. For the record,
Copy !req
527. I won't be available
to hear this case.
Copy !req
528. I'm sending it back to
Part 40 for reassignment.
Copy !req
529. Congratulations, Paul.
You just bullied a judge.
Copy !req
530. I'm a bully?
Copy !req
531. I don't have 500 attorneys in my
office, or a $200 million war chest,
Copy !req
532. the power to investigate
and arrest any citizen,
Copy !req
533. and a well-armed
police force to back it up.
Copy !req
534. That's you, Jack. You're the
biggest badass on the block.
Copy !req
535. Ben Stone. He's traveling in Europe. He's
not available to testify at any hearing.
Copy !req
536. Paul knew.
Copy !req
537. Yeah, pure poker.
Copy !req
538. He caught a break with the
new judge. Lisa Pongracic.
Copy !req
539. Permanent resident
of the Great Society.
Copy !req
540. No breaks.
Copy !req
541. I'm sure Paul checked the
roster before making his move.
Copy !req
542. You talk to him about a plea?
Copy !req
543. I offered him man one.
He won't even discuss it.
Copy !req
544. Paul knows how it works.
Copy !req
545. If we go to trial, we'll
have to seek the maximum.
Copy !req
546. Murder two.
Copy !req
547. Whatever his reasons, I think
a trial is exactly what he wants.
Copy !req
548. Jenny Mays sent her boyfriend to
beat an address out of Lawrence Bello.
Copy !req
549. Then she followed Alex Corbin
from that address and kidnapped him.
Copy !req
550. She says that she never
thought to kidnap him
Copy !req
551. until the moment she
saw him on the street.
Copy !req
552. The evidence says that,
that was her intent all along.
Copy !req
553. If, after you've heard all the testimony,
you think she's telling the truth,
Copy !req
554. you must find her
guilty of kidnapping.
Copy !req
555. If you think she was lying,
Copy !req
556. then you must also
find her guilty of murder.
Copy !req
557. Mr. Robinette will ask you
to feel sorry for Jenny Mays.
Copy !req
558. That's all right, you
can feel sorry for her.
Copy !req
559. But don't forget that
there is a dead man here
Copy !req
560. and a grieving family.
Copy !req
561. And don't forget Alex
Corbin was abducted
Copy !req
562. by the woman who got him
addicted to crack in her womb,
Copy !req
563. who neglected him in ways
that will turn your stomach,
Copy !req
564. and who finally abandoned
him to the care of strangers.
Copy !req
565. So, go ahead and feel
sorry for Jenny Mays,
Copy !req
566. but never forget who
the real victims are here.
Copy !req
567. The People's case rests
on one word, kidnapping.
Copy !req
568. They use it to describe
what my client did.
Copy !req
569. They could have used other
words. Custodial interference.
Copy !req
570. Restitution. Justice.
Copy !req
571. That's right, justice.
Copy !req
572. But they're stuck on kidnapping.
They say she planned it all along.
Copy !req
573. They're right. She did.
Copy !req
574. But it doesn't matter,
Copy !req
575. because the real kidnapper
here is the state of New York.
Copy !req
576. It stole Jamal Mays
from his mother,
Copy !req
577. and gave him to a white
family, to raise as a white child.
Copy !req
578. Now, over the next few days,
Copy !req
579. I'm going to talk to you
about racism in this country.
Copy !req
580. About black children
lost in white America.
Copy !req
581. I'm going to show you
how trans-racial adoption
Copy !req
582. has become the code word for the
cultural genocide of African-Americans.
Copy !req
583. Now, you won't hear this from them.
They don't want to talk about race.
Copy !req
584. Because they are
good, moral people,
Copy !req
585. they'll concede there is racism in
America, and, oh, what a shame that is.
Copy !req
586. But they'll never concede it has any
bearing on what happens in this courtroom.
Copy !req
587. Or in the district
attorney's office.
Copy !req
588. I know, because I worked
in that office for seven years.
Copy !req
589. And they won't point the finger at
the Child Health and Welfare Agency,
Copy !req
590. because one hand
washes the other.
Copy !req
591. Because they're all a part
of the same racist system.
Copy !req
592. I'll lay the facts
out before you.
Copy !req
593. Then it's up to you
to right the wrong
Copy !req
594. that was done to
Jenny and Jamal Mays.
Copy !req
595. The zoo had just
opened for the day,
Copy !req
596. and I stopped at the concession
stand to buy Alex some hot cocoa.
Copy !req
597. Just like that, he disappeared.
Copy !req
598. And what did you do?
Copy !req
599. Well, I went crazy
looking for him.
Copy !req
600. The whole time he was gone,
I couldn't sleep. I couldn't eat.
Copy !req
601. I just prayed he'd
come back to us.
Copy !req
602. When Alex was first placed in
your home, what condition was he in?
Copy !req
603. He was underweight.
He was always sick.
Copy !req
604. He was difficult to
feed. He never cried.
Copy !req
605. He didn't know more
than a couple of words.
Copy !req
606. He was 20-months old and he
couldn't even walk without help.
Copy !req
607. And now?
Copy !req
608. I can hardly keep up with him.
Copy !req
609. He knows his numbers up
to 20. He talks constantly.
Copy !req
610. He's as normal
as our other child.
Copy !req
611. Thank you.
Copy !req
612. You sound like an excellent
mother, Mrs. Corbin.
Copy !req
613. Tell me,
Copy !req
614. why did you change Jamal's name?
Copy !req
615. Alex is my father's name.
Copy !req
616. I wanted to make him feel
like he was a part of the family.
Copy !req
617. Did you ever consider Jamal
might have been his father's name?
Copy !req
618. No. I didn't know
anything about his parents.
Copy !req
619. So, when he grew up and
asked you about his roots,
Copy !req
620. what were you going to tell him?
Copy !req
621. I don't know. His
file was sealed.
Copy !req
622. All they told me was his
mother was a crack addict.
Copy !req
623. Then you didn't know his grandfather
was a cabinet maker in Springfield.
Copy !req
624. No.
Copy !req
625. Or that his mother's
great-great grandmother
Copy !req
626. rolled bandages
for the Union Army.
Copy !req
627. Or that her uncle was a surveyor
for the Union Pacific Railroad.
Copy !req
628. You couldn't tell him
about any of those people.
Copy !req
629. No. Because I wasn't
allowed to know.
Copy !req
630. But you could tell him his
mother was a crack addict.
Copy !req
631. They didn't take Alex away
from her because of me.
Copy !req
632. She couldn't take care of herself,
let alone a defenseless baby.
Copy !req
633. Then why didn't they take away
your daughter five years ago,
Copy !req
634. after you were arrested for
driving under the influence of drugs?
Copy !req
635. Objection.
Copy !req
636. In my chambers.
Copy !req
637. Donna Corbin was hooked
on pain killers for three years.
Copy !req
638. When the police pulled her over,
Copy !req
639. she had her two-year-old
in the back seat.
Copy !req
640. There's a record of this?
Copy !req
641. Well, thanks to Mrs. Corbin's
lawyers, the record was expunged.
Copy !req
642. But Mr. McCoy can
confirm the facts,
Copy !req
643. even though he didn't
submit them for discovery.
Copy !req
644. It's not Rosario material.
It's irrelevant and prejudicial.
Copy !req
645. It dramatizes the double
standard that victimizes my client.
Copy !req
646. White drug addicts go to Betty
Ford while their kids stay with nannies.
Copy !req
647. Black addicts wait months
for a bed in a rehab clinic,
Copy !req
648. while their kids are hijacked by
the Child Health and Welfare Agency.
Copy !req
649. This is all a smoke screen.
Copy !req
650. Your Honor, even if it were
true, it's a generalization.
Copy !req
651. Mr. Robinette can't apply it
to the specifics of this case.
Copy !req
652. Why not, if the shoe fits?
Copy !req
653. You're practicing
law, not social science.
Copy !req
654. I'm fighting for my client.
Copy !req
655. You're playing chicken
with your client's future.
Copy !req
656. To prove what? Gentlemen.
Copy !req
657. Your Honor, I want defense counsel's
last question to Mrs. Corbin stricken.
Copy !req
658. And I want special
instructions given to the jury.
Copy !req
659. Denied, Mr. McCoy. You
can deal with it in your closing.
Copy !req
660. I've been a supervisor
Copy !req
661. in the Child Welfare
Agency for 15 years.
Copy !req
662. I can tell you that our
agency's standards
Copy !req
663. are the same for
everyone, regardless of race.
Copy !req
664. Black parents whose kids are in foster
care get the same breaks as white parents.
Copy !req
665. Normally, how long is a child in foster
care before he's put up for adoption?
Copy !req
666. We try to hold off
for about a year,
Copy !req
667. you know, to allow the birth
parents to get their act together.
Copy !req
668. Well, according to his records,
Copy !req
669. Jamal Mays was in
foster for only nine months.
Copy !req
670. Why the rush?
Copy !req
671. I really don't know, but it's
not appropriate. It's not policy.
Copy !req
672. Is it policy to place black
children with white families?
Copy !req
673. We encourage same race adoptions,
but that's not always an option.
Copy !req
674. Our primary concern is
finding a home for these kids.
Copy !req
675. Regardless of race.
Copy !req
676. That's right.
Copy !req
677. Then tell us, how many white children
has your agency placed in black homes?
Copy !req
678. For adoption?
Copy !req
679. I can't think of any.
Copy !req
680. When your agency
went to Family Court
Copy !req
681. to sever Ms. Mays' parental
rights, did you notify her?
Copy !req
682. We certainly did.
Copy !req
683. We sent her a notice by registered
mail. We have her signed receipt.
Copy !req
684. If she wanted to oppose the
severance, what's the procedure?
Copy !req
685. That's spelled
out in the letter.
Copy !req
686. She could write us, call us.
Copy !req
687. Sometimes parents
just show up in court.
Copy !req
688. What did Jenny Mays do?
Copy !req
689. There's no record she did
anything. We never heard from her.
Copy !req
690. Thank you.
Copy !req
691. Black mothers are programmed
for failure by foster agencies.
Copy !req
692. They're less likely to get long-term
housing than white mothers,
Copy !req
693. less likely to get
help finding a job.
Copy !req
694. With what result, Dr. Simmonds?
Copy !req
695. If they can't establish stable
homes, they don't get their kids back.
Copy !req
696. Meaning, a disproportionate number of
black children are funneled into adoption.
Copy !req
697. And what happens there?
Copy !req
698. Adoption agencies restrict
the pool of adoptive parents
Copy !req
699. by setting standards which white
couples are more likely to meet.
Copy !req
700. Why is that?
Copy !req
701. They have the jobs, the
education, the resources.
Copy !req
702. Sounds like an ideal environment
for a black child. Any child.
Copy !req
703. My research doesn't bear it out.
Copy !req
704. I tracked a group of black
children raised by white families.
Copy !req
705. As adults, they're typically low-achievers,
at risk for suicide and substance abuse.
Copy !req
706. Having read Jenny Mays' file,
Copy !req
707. is it your professional opinion that
the Child Health and Welfare Agency
Copy !req
708. acted in Jamal Mays' best interests
when they placed him with a white family?
Copy !req
709. No.
Copy !req
710. Doctor, are you
saying that Jamal Mays
Copy !req
711. will grow up to be a low achiever
if he stays with the Corbins?
Copy !req
712. Yes, probably.
Copy !req
713. Because he's a black child
raised in a white family?
Copy !req
714. Yes.
Copy !req
715. Not because he was
born addicted to crack
Copy !req
716. and then neglected and malnourished
for the first 18 months of his life?
Copy !req
717. Well, that might
have an effect, yes.
Copy !req
718. Paul started an avalanche.
Copy !req
719. Black-and-white adoptions are suddenly
everybody's favorite whipping boy.
Copy !req
720. Right along with this
office. Let's end it.
Copy !req
721. Get in touch with Paul.
See what he'll take.
Copy !req
722. I know what he wanted before cultural
genocide made the front page of The Post.
Copy !req
723. I don't see why
he'd back off now.
Copy !req
724. You won't find Paul Robinette
hawking bean pies for Louis Farrakhan.
Copy !req
725. Maybe not, but
something has changed.
Copy !req
726. He's still a lawyer. Make him
a reasonable offer, he'll take it.
Copy !req
727. And what should I do?
Copy !req
728. The way Jenny Mays
lost her son was tragic.
Copy !req
729. What she did to get
him back was criminal.
Copy !req
730. Maybe your jury won't think that exercising
the maternal instinct is a crime.
Copy !req
731. Read the statutes.
Check the case law.
Copy !req
732. Find something
you can live with.
Copy !req
733. Then somebody have a
conversation with Paul.
Copy !req
734. Scotch and water.
Copy !req
735. I talked to Jenny.
Copy !req
736. We're gonna pass on the offer.
Copy !req
737. I'm sorry to hear that.
Copy !req
738. The system made her a criminal.
She doesn't belong in prison.
Copy !req
739. That's a political position,
Paul, not a defense.
Copy !req
740. It's using institutional racism
to justify murder and kidnapping.
Copy !req
741. Racism doesn't exist
in a bubble, Claire.
Copy !req
742. It forces its victims to
live in a different reality.
Copy !req
743. Look at us. A black man and
a white woman having a drink.
Copy !req
744. Now, how many white men in
this room have taken note of that?
Copy !req
745. How many of them disapprove?
Copy !req
746. And what are they
going to do about it?
Copy !req
747. In Manhattan? That's not
something I'd worry about.
Copy !req
748. In the Manhattan I live
in, I'd be stupid not to.
Copy !req
749. So, thanks to the bigots, every black
criminal has a readymade excuse?
Copy !req
750. Not an excuse.
A mitigating factor.
Copy !req
751. And we end up with verdicts
that are about race, not justice.
Copy !req
752. Everything is
about race, Claire.
Copy !req
753. And all of our goodwill is not going
to make a damn bit of difference.
Copy !req
754. It's a school night.
Copy !req
755. Okay, Paul.
Copy !req
756. But this conversation
is not over.
Copy !req
757. What did you think
Copy !req
758. when you read the notice
telling you about the adoption?
Copy !req
759. The nurse had to read it to me.
Copy !req
760. I was on antibiotics
for the pneumonia.
Copy !req
761. I was running a fever.
Copy !req
762. It just didn't seem real.
Copy !req
763. Why didn't you
oppose the adoption?
Copy !req
764. I didn't know any lawyers.
Copy !req
765. But I was sure they couldn't just take
Jamal away from me without talking to me.
Copy !req
766. Once you got out of the
hospital, what did you do?
Copy !req
767. I was off drugs, and I
got a job, found a home.
Copy !req
768. And I talked to Legal Aid
about getting Jamal back.
Copy !req
769. They told me it
could take years.
Copy !req
770. So I called Mr. Bello.
Copy !req
771. What did he say?
Copy !req
772. He wouldn't tell me
where Jamal was.
Copy !req
773. He said he wasn't even
allowed to tell me anything
Copy !req
774. about the kind of
people he was living with.
Copy !req
775. But he did finally
agree to tell you?
Copy !req
776. Yes, for a lot of
money. I'm not rich.
Copy !req
777. But I never meant
for Michael to hurt him.
Copy !req
778. Just scare him, so
he'd give us the address.
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779. Tell us what happened
when you went to that address.
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780. I saw Jamal with Mrs. Corbin,
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781. and he was beautiful.
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782. He'd grown up so much.
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783. Mrs. Corbin took
good care of him.
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784. But that doesn't give her any
more rights than me. I'm his mother.
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785. He has my blood,
and he has my skin.
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786. I bore him into the world,
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787. and I'm the one who can help
him become a proud black man.
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788. There is just no
way a white woman,
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789. no matter how smart
and rich and decent she is,
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790. could do that for him.
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791. Thank you, Jenny.
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792. You wanted your son back
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793. even before you knew where
he was living, is that right?
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794. Yes.
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795. Even before you knew
the Corbins were white?
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796. Yes.
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797. What if the Corbins
had been black,
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798. would you still have
wanted Jamal back?
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799. Yes.
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800. Then this isn't
about race, is it?
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801. I had to get him back. They
stole him away from me.
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802. They took him away from
you because you were a junkie,
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803. who would rather smoke crack than
change his diapers, isn't that right?
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804. I'm not like that anymore.
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805. No. Now you're someone
who causes a man's death,
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806. who abducts a
child from the streets,
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807. who makes ransom
calls to his parents.
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808. I had no choice.
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809. What about Legal Aid?
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810. Didn't they tell you
that you had a chance
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811. to win custody back of
Jamal through legal means?
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812. That was going to take too
long. He'd be all grown up.
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813. By then it would be too late.
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814. Too late for what?
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815. To make up for
what I did to him.
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816. You felt guilty?
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817. Yes.
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818. So you tore this little
boy from a good home,
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819. just to make
yourself feel better?
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820. No, I did it for him. I
wanted to take care of him.
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821. How?
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822. You quit your
job, isn't that right?
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823. Yes.
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824. You had no home, did you?
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825. No.
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826. No means of support.
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827. You weren't thinking of him,
you were thinking of yourself.
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828. Of your needs. That's not true.
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829. Just like you were thinking of your
needs whenever you lit up a crack pipe.
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830. You're twisting my words.
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831. I am his mother.
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832. I have a natural
right to be with him.
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833. Whatever it takes?
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834. Ms. Mays, is satisfying
your needs so important
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835. that it justifies
taking a man's life?
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836. Objection.
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837. Is it worth your son's future?
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838. Sustained. Mr. McCoy.
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839. I have no more
questions for this witness.
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840. Madam Foreperson, I understand there
has been no change in your situation.
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841. Is that correct?
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842. Yes, Your Honor.
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843. You've only been
deliberating for three days.
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844. Are you absolutely sure you
can't work past this deadlock?
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845. We need clarification
on the law, Your Honor.
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846. Can we find the defendant
guilty on the murder count
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847. even if we don't find her
guilty of the kidnapping?
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848. She's charged
with felony murder.
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849. You cannot convict on the murder without
convicting on the underlying felony.
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850. Then, Your Honor, I don't think
we'll be able to reach a verdict.
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851. Your Honor, I think an Allen Charge
to continue deliberations is appropriate.
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852. It's delaying the inevitable.
I'm declaring a mistrial.
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853. The jury is dismissed.
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854. Counsel, I want to hear from you by
the end of the week about a new trial date.
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855. My last offer still stands.
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856. Hmm.
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857. Well, I'll talk to my client.
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858. I'll make it work.
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859. I didn't want it to go this far.
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860. I wanted the jury to send
a message, and they did.
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861. They sent us both a message.
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862. You're a long way from
the district attorney's office.
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863. Ben Stone once said I'd have to
decide if I was a lawyer who is black,
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864. or a black man who is a lawyer.
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865. All those years, I
thought I was the former.
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866. All those years I was wrong.
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