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. Four lamb chops, three
martinis, key lime pie...
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7. Boys' night out. Leave me alone.
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8. And a Montecristo I can
still smell on your breath.
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9. So don't inhale.
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10. Pick up the pace, Byron.
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11. Oh, why? So I can
live an extra hour?
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12. If you don't mind.
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13. Byron, look!
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14. Well, he's doing
something. What...
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15. Hey, what's up?
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16. Look! Look! Here! Here!
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17. Hey!
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18. Be careful!
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19. A man! He ran that way.
He was attacking that woman.
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20. I'll take her.
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21. This is 22. We've got a
10-54 on the south circular.
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22. Female down. Suspect on foot.
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23. He went over there,
Central Park West.
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24. I couldn't... I got
one of his gloves...
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25. Come on, relax. Relax. Central,
this 22. We need a bus rush!
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26. Hang in there,
buddy. Hang tough.
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27. He just sat there, talking to
me, with that knife sticking in him
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28. until the ambulance showed.
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29. Said the perp hopped
a wall to the CPW.
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30. Did he get a look at him?
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31. Up close and personal.
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32. 5'8". Dark coat.
Black hair. Hispanic.
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33. He pulled off one of the
guy's gloves in the scuffle.
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34. It's bagged for CSU.
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35. Heroes.
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36. Hey, who is she?
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37. Jane Doe, no ID, just
a house key in her sock.
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38. What, like a wallet would
have slowed her down?
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39. Yeah. She doesn't look good.
There's blood all over her head
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40. and a bloody rock found
on the ground next to her.
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41. Rape? No time.
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42. He was pulling down her sweats
when the Bickersons spotted him.
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43. She fell on the rock?
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44. It was no accident. He hit her
and must've meant to stun her.
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45. How is she?
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46. Dead.
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47. Oops!
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48. An hour ago? I was taking
my break in the basement.
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49. Who was on the door? Nobody.
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50. Thanks. All right.
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51. Nothing.
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52. Yeah. This guy was helping Mrs.
Bronsky with her groceries. 11D.
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53. Hey! Hey! Is this about
what's going on in the park?
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54. You're looking for some
guy that jumped over the wall?
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55. Yeah.
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56. Black coat? Dark hair?
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57. You saw him? Yeah.
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58. Hispanic. Hauling ass.
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59. He nearly got hit by a cab.
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60. Which way did he run? Down.
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61. Into the subway.
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62. Great. So he lives uptown
or he lives downtown.
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63. Thanks.
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64. The Mayor down there yet?
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65. White female jogger gets
attacked in Central Park.
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66. It happens once a year, and it's
always the crime of the century.
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67. Anything at the scene?
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68. Camera trucks. Profaci and Newman
are showing her picture to other joggers.
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69. Hey, Detective! I got
something here for you.
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70. You want me to carry you?
Or you want to carry me?
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71. Now, the jogger tackled your perp
here. Here's his footprint, stopping hard.
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72. Size nine, maybe a Reebok. While
he's down, he pulls out his knife.
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73. How do you know he
didn't have it out already?
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74. Because when he stuck his
gloved hand into his pocket to get it,
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75. he pulled some coins out, too.
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76. They're on top
of the footprints.
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77. We got any fingerprints
on the coins?
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78. Worth checking.
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79. Check this one. A
Colombian 20-peso piece.
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80. I guess he kills people and doesn't
like to pay a buck fifty for the subway.
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81. The same size as the new token?
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82. Yeah. It's the slug du jour.
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83. Our guy ran into the subway.
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84. Well, maybe he still had
one of the pesos on him.
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85. He would have to take off his
glove to stick it in the turnstile.
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86. The transit authority emptied the
turnstiles at that station at our request.
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87. You find a Colombian
coin in there?
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88. No, I found three.
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89. This one and this one had good
prints, and one of them is in our system.
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90. Mr. Francis Murphy.
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91. Larceny, larceny, criminal
possession... No violence, no sex crimes.
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92. Maybe he decided
to try something new.
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93. And he's black. Our guy isn't.
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94. What about the other stuff?
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95. Well, all the coins on the
ground had nothing but mud.
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96. The gloves, common
dime-store variety.
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97. Only prints on the
knife are the victim's.
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98. But I don't think the killer's
too happy he left it behind.
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99. Why? Got an inscription
from grandma?
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100. It's a Mercer.
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101. Engraved brass handle.
Must've set him back at least $200.
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102. Maybe two dozen stores
in the city carry them.
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103. Thanks. Well, we got a
sketch from our jogger.
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104. You want to hit a
couple of knife stores?
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105. Let's start with Francis Murphy.
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106. Maybe our guy got
his coin from him.
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107. Murphy might know him.
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108. We don't even know if our
guy used that coin, though.
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109. Well, there's two dozen knife stores.
There's only one Francis Murphy.
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110. Don't move.
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111. You want to take my picture?
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112. I don't want that
moke spotting me.
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113. He doesn't head to work
in the next 10 minutes,
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114. he violates his parole.
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115. Looks like a fine
upstanding citizen.
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116. The parole board thought so.
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117. I don't know what the
hell they were thinking.
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118. You baby-sit Francis
Murphy like this?
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119. Murphy? He's priority
B. Doesn't kill people.
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120. Doesn't hit people on the head.
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121. Yeah? Well, we think
he knows people who do.
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122. Is he into something?
I should know.
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123. You'll be the first.
Where do we find him?
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124. In theory, Roosevelt's
Ribs. Working the fire pit.
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125. Odds that he's actually
there? Two in five.
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126. Lunch time, perfect.
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127. Thanks.
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128. Murphy? Well, he
wouldn't pay attention.
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129. Charred a whole hog
before he got it right.
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130. So you let him go?
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131. Yeah.
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132. Plenty of ex-cons
where he come from.
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133. You make a habit of
employing convicts?
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134. Being that I'm one myself,
yeah. But I don't take no crap.
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135. They do the job or they go away.
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136. Suppose Mr. Murphy found a
better position somewhere else.
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137. Street hustles.
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138. He'll sell you a stolen
VCR, brand new in the box.
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139. Yeah. Nothing
inside but rocks, right?
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140. Yeah.
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141. He'll wrap it up real pretty.
Maybe deal a little dope.
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142. Now the last time I seen him,
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143. he was selling subway
slugs four for $1.
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144. Where was that?
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145. 42nd Street.
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146. Near a place called
Lulu's. Thanks.
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147. You interested?
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148. Does that come with
coleslaw and potato skins?
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149. For you, anything.
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150. All right.
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151. Hey, look, I didn't do
nothing. I don't know nothing.
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152. And I don't want
to know nothing.
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153. Sort of a Zen
thing, huh, Francis?
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154. Keep your life pure and simple.
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155. I don't know.
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156. I hate to intrude on your
ignorance, but do you know this guy?
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157. No, man.
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158. Look, Francis!
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159. No.
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160. Hey. We've been asking around.
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161. We hear you been selling
these pesos, four for $1.
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162. So I'm a coin collector.
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163. Yeah. And you sold some to him.
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164. I told you, I don't
know the guy.
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165. And he used one of your
coins to run away from a murder.
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166. Okay, look. Maybe I do sell
some of these things, all right,
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167. all day, to lots of
different people.
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168. But I don't ask for ID and I
don't look at their faces, man.
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169. Just their dollars.
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170. How many knife stores
you say there were?
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171. I'll check the list.
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172. Hey!
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173. What?
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174. Seventeen knife dealers.
Nobody recognizes our guy.
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175. So far.
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176. Carbon steel. Stainless steel.
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177. All these years I've been using
the wrong knife to carve the turkey.
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178. That's Mr. Conover. I found
him during his evening jog.
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179. Now he recognized a
photo of the deceased.
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180. They talked once on a
run around the reservoir.
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181. Her name was Emily.
You get a last name?
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182. No. But she said she
lived on East 86th Street.
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183. Okay, now what?
Another dozen knife stores?
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184. Or talk to every doorman
between Fifth Avenue and the river?
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185. Profaci will work the ID,
you stick to the cutlery.
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186. Mercers? Nice knives, but I
guess you already know that.
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187. Did you happen to
sell this one to him?
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188. Whose legs did he break?
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189. You know the guy?
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190. I used to gamble a
little. I liked the Lions.
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191. When I lost, if I was a little
slow in paying, he'd come around.
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192. And he took a knife
for what you owed?
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193. No, he'd just take a knife
for the hell of it. I still owed.
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194. What's his name?
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195. He never introduced himself,
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196. except with a slap on the head.
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197. Who was he collecting for?
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198. Keep me out of this.
I'm square with the guy.
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199. Okay. We were never here.
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200. I don't know.
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201. He killed a woman.
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202. With my knife?
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203. No.
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204. Son of a bitch.
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205. He was working for Joey Giabone.
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206. Little Joey?
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207. Yeah.
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208. But don't tell him I said hi.
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209. You're asking me? That's funny.
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210. Hey, we don't have
any attitude here, Joey.
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211. You don't have to be like this.
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212. Come on, fellas, you want
to ask me any questions,
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213. you talk to my lawyer.
You know the rules.
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214. Hey, you! You wanna bowl in
here, you rent shoes, you dope.
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215. Otherwise get outta here!
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216. I own a piece of this joint, you
know. I'm in the amusement business.
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217. Yeah, right. The Feds are after
you for gambling and extortion.
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218. The D.A.'s onto
you for prostitution.
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219. And two members
of the Lopez crew
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220. haven't been seen since
they turned State's evidence.
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221. Yeah. But raping
and killing in the park?
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222. Now we figured
that's him, not you.
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223. So what do you want to
take his weight for, huh?
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224. Hey, what're you
saying? I know this guy?
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225. We're saying he works for
you. We got people who say so.
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226. Now, why open up whole new lines of
inquiry into your amusements business
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227. that you don't need opened up?
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228. Listen to me, worked for me,
you understand. Not works for me.
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229. I got rid of this crazy
Mexican a year ago.
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230. You got a name?
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231. Yeah, I got a name.
Luis Cruz, all right?
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232. Yeah. Got it. Last
known address?
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233. You're beautiful.
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234. Luis Cruz's wonder
years were busy.
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235. Three assault convictions.
Two tours upstate.
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236. Gee, you mean Giabone hired him without
an M.B.A. in Amusements Management?
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237. I guess he got his
training on the job.
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238. So does his description
match our sketch?
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239. Up to the eyebrows.
They're sending us his mugs.
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240. Him? Trouble.
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241. Is he home?
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242. Doesn't live here
anymore, not for a long time.
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243. How long?
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244. A year. Maybe two.
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245. He leave a forwarding address?
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246. Him?
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247. It's Curtis. Yeah.
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248. Okay, thanks.
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249. Profaci ID'd the victim.
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250. Her husband just got
back from a business trip.
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251. He'll meet us at the morgue.
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252. Some fun, huh?
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253. You land at LaGuardia
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254. and there's your wife, dead,
on the front page of the Post.
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255. Here we go.
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256. Detective Briscoe?
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257. Dobson?
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258. What happened to the other guy?
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259. You know each other?
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260. My former partner and I
arrested him for killing his first wife.
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261. That's her.
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262. You couldn't have been married
to this one very long, Dobson.
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263. Fourteen months.
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264. And I guess you cut short the
mourning period on your first wife, huh?
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265. I never had a chance
to mourn her properly,
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266. thanks to you and
the District Attorney.
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267. You should have been
mourning her for 25-to-life.
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268. Detective Briscoe, my
wife is lying there, dead...
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269. Yeah. And we
should talk about that.
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270. Can I have some time alone?
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271. His first wife was getting
ready to divorce him
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272. and take his money
and their kids.
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273. Yeah. He's crazy about the kids.
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274. It's just the wives he
has a problem with.
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275. But he was acquitted?
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276. Well, the case got dropped
in the middle of the trial.
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277. A CI sent us to a junkie mugger
who turned out to be the shooter.
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278. We always assumed
Dobson shot his wife himself.
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279. But the junkie did it?
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280. Yep. So Dobson walked.
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281. Now, later on, we found out
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282. the junkie had worked at a
comedy club that Dobson owned.
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283. They knew each other.
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284. That's quite a coincidence.
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285. Yeah. But even if we could establish
Dobson put him up to it, it was too late.
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286. Double jeopardy.
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287. You really think he
would try it again?
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288. Quite a coincidence.
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289. What about motive?
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290. Hey, they were
married, weren't they?
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291. Always the romantic.
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292. Emily was really nice.
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293. Dobson was some kind of
over-achiever when it came to the ladies.
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294. He doesn't strike me
as being that charming.
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295. Well, women go for those guys. It
used to drive me crazy when I was single.
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296. A Barnard girl once dumped
me for a guy who used to hit her.
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297. Did you ever see
Mr. Dobson hit his wife?
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298. No. Did you ever
see bruises on her?
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299. You ever see him
yell at her? No.
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300. And I saw them once a
month at co-op meetings.
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301. As long as she was taking care of his kids,
I think he was getting what he wanted.
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302. So the kids were
number one, huh?
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303. Numbers one through 1,000.
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304. How well do you
know the Dobsons?
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305. Well, they're next door.
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306. Emily used to water my
plants when I was away.
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307. She was always
here, always working.
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308. They own a restaurant together.
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309. So between that
and the children...
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310. She was so good
with his children,
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311. I didn't even realize that
she wasn't the mother.
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312. And Mr. Dobson, how'd
she get along with him?
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313. Fine. You mean like
arguing? Anything like that?
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314. Jessica, where are
Jeremy's gloves? Right here.
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315. Hold them for him.
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316. Just tell them the truth.
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317. Should I just give you a list of
all of our friends and neighbors,
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318. so you can harass
everybody I know?
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319. Well, here's my card. Why
don't you just fax it on over?
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320. This is part of a
normal investigation.
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321. Of a random murder in the park?
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322. Hey, we haven't made
that determination yet.
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323. That's because you're
determined not to.
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324. Detective Briscoe,
let me help you out.
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325. One day last winter, I laced
my wife's ice skates too tight.
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326. Then, another time, I put
too much salt in her soup.
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327. I'll get you the witnesses'
phone numbers.
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328. We're just gonna follow this
wherever it takes us, Dobson.
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329. Fine. Where is it
taking you now?
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330. To your restaurant.
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331. Good thinking.
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332. If you run into the killer there, tell
him I recommend the soft-shell crabs.
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333. Are those in season?
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334. The customers
were crazy about her.
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335. She used to sit down with them
and buy them after-dinner drinks.
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336. I keep expecting her
to walk through the door.
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337. She was always here by now.
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338. And Mr. Dobson? Was
he always here, too?
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339. Of course. You know what
it takes to start a restaurant?
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340. I just can't believe she's dead.
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341. Did they open
this place together?
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342. Yes. With the money that Mr. Dobson
got when he sold his comedy club.
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343. He handled the
business end of things.
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344. Do you know what
business took him out of town
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345. when Mrs. Dobson was killed?
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346. He was meeting some people in
San Francisco about franchising, I think.
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347. I just know that he
didn't want to go.
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348. He told you that?
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349. I could tell.
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350. He hadn't been away from here
since we opened. He was so nervous.
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351. He was calling three times a
night just to see how we were doing.
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352. And to make sure everybody
knew he was out of town.
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353. What do you mean?
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354. Ms. Nash, would you happen to know
who handles the insurance on this place?
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355. I can check the files.
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356. Funny guy, that Mr. Dobson.
How's he taking it?
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357. You mean funny
odd or funny ha-ha?
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358. He cracks me up.
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359. I think he used
to be a comedian.
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360. Yeah. Not exactly my brand of humor.
What kind of policies did he have?
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361. He used to have them all.
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362. Fire and theft, liability
and the partnership policy.
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363. Yeah. Tell us
about the last one.
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364. Well, he and his wife own
the restaurant together.
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365. If either one died, the
other one got $1 million
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366. to keep the business
together. It's very common.
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367. You said he used to
have these policies.
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368. Apparently, the restaurant's cash
flow wasn't meeting projections.
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369. Mr. Dobson let the liability
and fire-and-theft lapse.
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370. But he kept the partnership?
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371. Yes.
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372. I suggested it would be smarter
if he kept the other ones instead.
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373. $1 million, that
sure eases the pain.
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374. Well, I hate to lie down in
front of the bandwagon here,
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375. but nobody we talked to
ever heard them argue,
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376. and I thought it was looking pretty clear
that Emily Dobson was killed by Luis Cruz.
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377. Hey, Dobson had somebody
else do it the first time, too.
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378. Tough part was
making the connection.
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379. Well, why don't we try to
find it a little sooner this time?
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380. Cruz was muscle
for Joey Giabone,
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381. who's into all kinds of things.
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382. You know, restaurant owners have
to deal with a lot of different goons.
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383. Rey, call your friends in OCCB.
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384. Find out who picks
up Dobson's garbage.
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385. This one was easy.
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386. Dobson's restaurant is in
a pilot anti-corruption zone.
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387. Its garbage gets hauled by a
squeaky-clean outfit from upstate.
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388. What about vending
machines? Linen?
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389. The linen's still mobbed up.
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390. Thank God.
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391. But Dobson gets his
tablecloths from Sonny Salvo.
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392. We got his crew list,
and there's no Luis Cruz.
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393. Oh, great. You got any
other dead ends for us?
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394. No, I checked Dobson's
old comedy club.
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395. It had garbage, too. And?
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396. Old Town Carting, sole
proprietor, Joey Giabone.
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397. Thank you, ma'am. Thanks.
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398. You're such a big shot now, Rey,
you can't make it to the Christmas party?
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399. I had no one to tango with.
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400. Why, Rey, you
never dance with me.
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401. No.
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402. Don't you want to hear
who murdered your wife?
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403. You mean this time you're
actually trying to find out?
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404. His name's Luis Cruz.
Does he look familiar?
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405. I was 3,000 miles away when it
happened. I didn't get a good look.
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406. Have you arrested him?
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407. We don't know where he is.
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408. We thought maybe you could help.
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409. How could I do that?
Go to detective school?
Copy !req
410. When you ran your comedy club,
Copy !req
411. your trash was picked
up by Old Town Carting.
Copy !req
412. Okay. Which is
owned by a mobster
Copy !req
413. named Joey Giabone,
who employed Luis Cruz.
Copy !req
414. You starting to see a
picture develop here?
Copy !req
415. No.
Copy !req
416. Cruz worked for the mobster who
shook you down. Did you ever meet him?
Copy !req
417. We're gonna find out.
Copy !req
418. My wife is fresh in the morgue,
Copy !req
419. and you want to
send me there, too?
Copy !req
420. You expect me to tell stories
Copy !req
421. about the mobster scum I have to
deal with as an honest businessman
Copy !req
422. because you damn cops are too
corrupt or lazy to do anything about it?
Copy !req
423. Is that a yes?
Copy !req
424. Don't let the door hit
you on the way out.
Copy !req
425. We got a fax from
the San Francisco PD.
Copy !req
426. Dobson was there
when his wife was killed.
Copy !req
427. Leaving town, that
was a nice touch.
Copy !req
428. We got his records from
his hotel and cell phones.
Copy !req
429. He didn't call anyone
but his home and office.
Copy !req
430. He even called home
twice after his wife was killed.
Copy !req
431. To talk to the kids?
Copy !req
432. No. The kids were
on a school trip.
Copy !req
433. He got the answering machine.
Copy !req
434. And an alibi.
Copy !req
435. "Why would I call my wife
if I knew she was dead?"
Copy !req
436. He dots all his "I's."
Copy !req
437. So I guess it's too much to
hope he paid Cruz by check.
Copy !req
438. This might be just as good.
Copy !req
439. Dobson got one 10-second
phone call to his cell phone
Copy !req
440. while he was in San Francisco from a
pay phone on 8th Avenue in Chelsea.
Copy !req
441. Twenty minutes after
his wife was killed.
Copy !req
442. 8th Avenue, it's the same
subway line as Central Park West.
Copy !req
443. The call was charged to a
credit card. Herbert Jaffe.
Copy !req
444. Who the hell is that?
Copy !req
445. You ever see a
$20,000 phone bill?
Copy !req
446. The phone company
just sent this over by UPS.
Copy !req
447. Any calls to San Francisco?
Copy !req
448. Yeah, and Nigeria,
India, Senegal, Guam...
Copy !req
449. I take it you didn't
make those calls?
Copy !req
450. Well, I don't have a whole
lot of friends in Sri Lanka.
Copy !req
451. Three days ago, I
was late heading home.
Copy !req
452. I stopped off at a pay phone in
the Port Authority to call my wife.
Copy !req
453. I punched in my credit card.
Copy !req
454. And somebody saw.
Copy !req
455. Midwest Express.
Copy !req
456. The sharp ones can tell
what number you're dialing
Copy !req
457. from 10 feet away
Copy !req
458. by how your fingers move.
Copy !req
459. Yep. Mom always
said, "Learn a skill."
Copy !req
460. Yeah, in 10 minutes
they've got the number sold
Copy !req
461. to a dozen mokes who miss
their mommies in the old country.
Copy !req
462. INS ought to set
up a bureau here.
Copy !req
463. Well, we keep an eye out.
Copy !req
464. Try to chase the wise guys
away from the phones, you know.
Copy !req
465. Was this one of them? Luis Cruz.
Copy !req
466. We think he used a number
that was stolen here the other day.
Copy !req
467. I can't say as I know that one.
Copy !req
468. Ma Bell's most-wanted list.
Copy !req
469. We keep it updated and
hand it out to the shifts.
Copy !req
470. No Luis Cruz. But
here's a familiar face.
Copy !req
471. Francis Murphy.
Copy !req
472. Look, I told you, I
don't know that guy.
Copy !req
473. Right. Right. You don't know
him, you didn't sell him a slug,
Copy !req
474. and now you didn't give him
a stolen credit card number
Copy !req
475. you picked up from
the Port Authority.
Copy !req
476. You know, you've got a lot of
interesting sidelines, Francis.
Copy !req
477. And every one of
them leads to him.
Copy !req
478. You provided his
transportation to a murder.
Copy !req
479. You provided him the number he
used to call the guy who hired him.
Copy !req
480. No, no way. You know,
Rey, maybe he's right.
Copy !req
481. Maybe it wasn't this guy. I
mean, it's Francis' print on the coin.
Copy !req
482. Francis is the one who
got the credit card number.
Copy !req
483. I think Francis
looks good for it.
Copy !req
484. Hey, now, you
know that ain't right.
Copy !req
485. If I can't arrest one slime-bag,
I'll settle for another one.
Copy !req
486. And I still get home in time
for dinner. Cuff him, Rey.
Copy !req
487. Look, look. Hey, hey, suppose I
just want to walk on out of here.
Copy !req
488. Now what fun would that be?
Copy !req
489. All right, all right. Okay. All right.
All right. Luis Cruz. He's a Mexican.
Copy !req
490. Yeah, we know.
Where do we find him?
Copy !req
491. I don't know, man.
That's too bad.
Copy !req
492. Okay. All right, all right, all
right. Look, he's got a girlfriend.
Copy !req
493. Asian honey, you
know. On 8th Avenue.
Copy !req
494. You know how many girls
out here call themselves Joy?
Copy !req
495. I guess it would help if
her name was Agnes.
Copy !req
496. She's Asian. Does that
help? Hangs out with this guy.
Copy !req
497. Oh, yeah, Mr. Personality.
Copy !req
498. Is this the guy that tried to shove
Phoebe in the trunk of that cab?
Copy !req
499. No, that was Vincent. This is the
one that hangs out with extra-short Joy.
Copy !req
500. But she's not
Asian. She's black.
Copy !req
501. Not that one. The one that gets
nauseous if she smokes too much weed.
Copy !req
502. Ladies, this is
all fascinating...
Copy !req
503. Hey! It's not like you're
paying for the time.
Copy !req
504. Okay. Just let us
know when you're done.
Copy !req
505. I know her. She's got a
place around the corner.
Copy !req
506. Thank you.
Copy !req
507. Now what do we
get for being so nice?
Copy !req
508. Freedom.
Copy !req
509. Don't move.
Copy !req
510. What're you doing?
Looking for Luis Cruz.
Copy !req
511. You got to be kidding.
Copy !req
512. Men's clothes. Whose are these?
Copy !req
513. Luis', okay?
Copy !req
514. Where is he?
Copy !req
515. Where is he?
Copy !req
516. He runs out on me.
He steals my $400.
Copy !req
517. Then he gets the police
busting in on my door.
Copy !req
518. I hope you find him.
I hope you shoot him.
Copy !req
519. No problem. Just
tell us where he went.
Copy !req
520. Mexico. You go
to Texas, turn left.
Copy !req
521. You dragged me down here
because somebody made a call
Copy !req
522. to my cell phone with
a stolen credit card?
Copy !req
523. Thanks for telling me.
I'll get a refund on my bill.
Copy !req
524. It was Luis Cruz, telling
you the job was done.
Copy !req
525. This Luis Cruz, he's the
one who murdered my wife?
Copy !req
526. Shouldn't you be chasing him
down instead of harassing me?
Copy !req
527. What was the call about?
Copy !req
528. Mr. Dobson doesn't
have to tell you anything.
Copy !req
529. Just thought maybe your client
would like a chance to clear himself.
Copy !req
530. He did business with Giabone.
Cruz worked for Giabone.
Copy !req
531. Cruz killed his wife and
then Cruz called him.
Copy !req
532. So what? So what? If I ever
see him, I'll kill him. And wrong.
Copy !req
533. I'm gonna pick up my kids.
Copy !req
534. Give us a second, Counselor.
Copy !req
535. How's this for fond memories?
Copy !req
536. I can't believe it.
Copy !req
537. Yeah. He still
makes my skin crawl.
Copy !req
538. He's not about to sign a
confession. It's up to you.
Copy !req
539. It would help if we had
this Cruz. Where is he?
Copy !req
540. There's a murder warrant
out for him. We've notified INS
Copy !req
541. and sent a request for help
to the Mexican Federal Police.
Copy !req
542. I wouldn't count
on seeing him soon.
Copy !req
543. Hey, he comes into $1 million.
Copy !req
544. He gets a phone call from the
killer 20 minutes after the killing.
Copy !req
545. Nothing else makes sense.
Copy !req
546. Plus, he killed another
one just like this one.
Copy !req
547. Do it.
Copy !req
548. You bring me a root beer?
Copy !req
549. Michael Dobson, you're under
arrest for the murder of Emily Dobson.
Copy !req
550. You have the right
to remain silent.
Copy !req
551. Anything you do say can and will
be used against you in a court of law.
Copy !req
552. "Case number 64030.
People v. Michael Dobson.
Copy !req
553. "The charge is Murder
in the First Degree."
Copy !req
554. First?
Copy !req
555. Murder for hire, Your Honor.
Copy !req
556. Not guilty!
Copy !req
557. Counselor.
Copy !req
558. This is a potential
capital case.
Copy !req
559. The risk of flight must
be considered high.
Copy !req
560. My client runs a
business in the city.
Copy !req
561. He has two small children.
Copy !req
562. The children need me at home.
Copy !req
563. I'm their only parent.
Copy !req
564. Because he
murdered their mother.
Copy !req
565. Is that what he's
charged with here?
Copy !req
566. No. This is a
subsequent homicide.
Copy !req
567. No, this is a vendetta.
That charge was dropped.
Copy !req
568. First degree, no bail.
Copy !req
569. Next. Let's go.
Copy !req
570. This guy again. Never
heard of a divorce lawyer.
Copy !req
571. This time we don't let
him get away with it.
Copy !req
572. You were the one that
dropped the charge last time.
Copy !req
573. Yeah. Before I learned he was
connected to the trigger man.
Copy !req
574. This time we can link Dobson to
Luis Cruz, before and after the murder.
Copy !req
575. People saw them together
at Dobson's comedy club.
Copy !req
576. And the call on the stolen credit
card right after the call to Dobson
Copy !req
577. was to Cruz's mother in Mexico.
Copy !req
578. So we have everything
except Senor Cruz.
Copy !req
579. Murder for hire,
without the hiree.
Copy !req
580. Well, the jury won't need him,
Copy !req
581. as long as they get to hear what
happened to the first Mrs. Dobson.
Copy !req
582. Yeah, good luck.
Copy !req
583. To mention the death of his
first wife in any way, in any form,
Copy !req
584. would poison the
minds of jury members.
Copy !req
585. Two dead wives, both
murdered by surrogates,
Copy !req
586. establishes a
distinctive pattern,
Copy !req
587. which makes it admissible
under the Molineux rule.
Copy !req
588. The only pattern
here is misfortune,
Copy !req
589. that the People seek
to gain an advantage
Copy !req
590. from the tragedies
in this man's life.
Copy !req
591. Please. Every woman this
man marries ends up dead.
Copy !req
592. At whose hand?
Copy !req
593. My client was never
convicted of killing his first wife.
Copy !req
594. Molineux doesn't require
a conviction or even a trial.
Copy !req
595. But the lack of a conviction is a factor
to weigh in assessing probative value.
Copy !req
596. We're prepared to offer
evidence of the first murder.
Copy !req
597. Which would be an end
run around double jeopardy.
Copy !req
598. If this jury convicted,
Copy !req
599. we could never be sure of which
crime they were convicting him.
Copy !req
600. So the People are penalized
Copy !req
601. because this man killed
before and got away with it?
Copy !req
602. Yes, they are. There'll be no mention
of the death of the first Mrs. Dobson.
Copy !req
603. When can I see my children? Their
Aunt Fatty won't bring them here.
Copy !req
604. You'll have to petition
Children's Services.
Copy !req
605. Assuming you want
them to see you this way.
Copy !req
606. Suddenly, you're worried
about their well-being?
Copy !req
607. Suddenly, you are?
Copy !req
608. Well, it's been nice chatting.
Copy !req
609. Sit down, Mr. Dobson.
Copy !req
610. Garçon! We're not done.
Copy !req
611. You're here to offer me a deal.
He's here to offer me a deal.
Copy !req
612. We're listening.
Copy !req
613. Speak for yourself.
Copy !req
614. Murder two.
Copy !req
615. Sentencing recommendation?
Copy !req
616. Who cares?
Copy !req
617. Hello! Attention, everybody! I
did not kill Emily. I loved her.
Copy !req
618. Until she was worth more
to you dead than alive.
Copy !req
619. Just like your first wife.
Copy !req
620. You think my problems
with my first wife,
Copy !req
621. whom I did not kill,
were over money?
Copy !req
622. Spare us, Mr. Dobson.
Copy !req
623. The only reason I wanted
out of my first marriage
Copy !req
624. was because I was
in love with Emily.
Copy !req
625. Back then?
Copy !req
626. She was a waitress
at my comedy club.
Copy !req
627. And a beautiful, warm-hearted,
sensitive woman. Everything I'm not.
Copy !req
628. I noticed the difference,
and I fell in love with her.
Copy !req
629. And I wanted to spend
the rest of my life with her.
Copy !req
630. To think I would kill her...
Copy !req
631. You just can't understand.
Copy !req
632. Romeo, thy name is Dobson.
Copy !req
633. He was running around
on his first wife with this one.
Copy !req
634. He just gave us another
motive for his first murder.
Copy !req
635. Yeah. Two years too late.
Copy !req
636. Adam, I want to go
for the death penalty.
Copy !req
637. He's a slow-motion
serial killer.
Copy !req
638. We still have time before
we have to make that decision.
Copy !req
639. Before I have to
make that decision.
Copy !req
640. If he goes to jail for
the rest of his life,
Copy !req
641. he's not going to
kill any more wives.
Copy !req
642. You can buy a hit man
on the street for $500.
Copy !req
643. Dobson's done that twice now.
Copy !req
644. He's not gonna be able
to do it again from jail.
Copy !req
645. Maybe not.
Copy !req
646. But people on the
outside might think again
Copy !req
647. if the price was
raised to $500 plus
Copy !req
648. one lethal injection.
Copy !req
649. Here's our notice of intent to seek
the death penalty for Michael Dobson.
Copy !req
650. But we still have to convict Dobson
without mentioning his first dead wife.
Copy !req
651. We have what we need,
Copy !req
652. plus now we know that
Dobson had a girlfriend
Copy !req
653. when he murdered his first wife.
Copy !req
654. Think he's doing it again?
Copy !req
655. Call Briscoe and Curtis.
Copy !req
656. Mr. Dobson is in
mourning. His wife is dead.
Copy !req
657. You understand?
Copy !req
658. Yeah. That's why we're here.
Copy !req
659. This is no time to be
talking about such things.
Copy !req
660. Hey, hey, hey, do we tell
you how to bus dishes?
Copy !req
661. What about respect, you know?
For the family? For the dead?
Copy !req
662. If Mr. Dobson was fooling around,
he's the one with no respect.
Copy !req
663. In my country, we
don't tell such stories.
Copy !req
664. Welcome to America. Speaking of which,
you do have your green card, don't you?
Copy !req
665. Yes.
Copy !req
666. All right.
Copy !req
667. You know, Mr. Dobson, he's a
man. He has a woman on the side.
Copy !req
668. Is that another
custom in your country?
Copy !req
669. Not just in my country.
Copy !req
670. I saw him once.
Copy !req
671. So, they say you've been
having an affair with Mr. Dobson.
Copy !req
672. No. He's my boss. That's all.
Copy !req
673. Well, a bus boy named Antonio
Copy !req
674. says that he saw you and Mr. Dobson
in the storeroom a few weeks ago.
Copy !req
675. So? We're in the...
Copy !req
676. You were caressing him.
Copy !req
677. It was nothing.
We're just friendly.
Copy !req
678. Ms. Nash, we're going to
be calling you as a witness.
Copy !req
679. To testify against
Michael? I won't do it.
Copy !req
680. You won't have a choice.
Copy !req
681. You're going to twist
it. I know you are.
Copy !req
682. Twist what?
Copy !req
683. Michael and I, we're in love.
Copy !req
684. But that has nothing to do with
what happened to Mrs. Dobson.
Copy !req
685. How do you know?
Copy !req
686. Michael was going to get a
divorce so that we could be together.
Copy !req
687. He didn't need to kill her.
Copy !req
688. He and Mrs. Dobson had
discussed it. It was all set.
Copy !req
689. I don't know. There's no record of
either of them seeing a divorce attorney.
Copy !req
690. Well, that can't be
right. Michael told me.
Copy !req
691. Michael told her.
Copy !req
692. If either of the Dobson's ever saw a
divorce lawyer, it was the invisible one.
Copy !req
693. Sure. Because
he's got a better idea
Copy !req
694. for a more profitable
way to end his marriage.
Copy !req
695. No legal fees, no alimony,
and a million-dollar bonus.
Copy !req
696. And the girlfriend gives him an extra
motive. The jury gets to take its pick.
Copy !req
697. And Dobson knows it.
His lawyer just called.
Copy !req
698. We'll take man one.
Copy !req
699. You'll plead to manslaughter, Mr. Dobson,
despite the fact that you're innocent?
Copy !req
700. You're gonna make me look
guilty. I have to be realistic.
Copy !req
701. You have to be honest.
Copy !req
702. Any plea bargain would have to
include a full recitation of the facts.
Copy !req
703. Your facts.
Copy !req
704. I needed money.
Copy !req
705. Show me one restaurant
owner who doesn't.
Copy !req
706. I lied about getting a divorce
to some broad I was banging.
Copy !req
707. So shoot me. Whoa! I
wanna take that back.
Copy !req
708. No deal.
Copy !req
709. Jack McCoy's office.
Copy !req
710. When? Keep him there. I'm sure
he'll want to see him right away.
Copy !req
711. The INS just picked up
a friend of yours at JFK
Copy !req
712. trying to sneak
back into the country.
Copy !req
713. Luis Cruz.
Copy !req
714. Him, I'll make a deal with.
Copy !req
715. And what's in this for Mr. Cruz?
Copy !req
716. How about he
doesn't get executed?
Copy !req
717. Man, I should've
stayed in Oaxaca.
Copy !req
718. Maybe you just shouldn't
have murdered Emily Dobson.
Copy !req
719. Who's that again?
Copy !req
720. We have three eyewitnesses
who can put you at the scene,
Copy !req
721. including the man you
stabbed with your knife.
Copy !req
722. Man one and he cooperates fully.
Copy !req
723. Murder two. I don't need
him to convict Dobson.
Copy !req
724. He's just icing on the cake.
Copy !req
725. Okay.
Copy !req
726. I killed her for
Dobson, for $10,000.
Copy !req
727. How did you know Dobson?
Copy !req
728. From his old comedy club.
Copy !req
729. He did some
business with my boss.
Copy !req
730. Joey Giabone?
Copy !req
731. Yeah.
Copy !req
732. We picked up the club's garbage,
Copy !req
733. provided some working capital,
and we kept the property safe.
Copy !req
734. Racketeering,
loan-sharking and extortion.
Copy !req
735. That's what Dobson called it, but I
guess he liked the way I did my job.
Copy !req
736. You said he paid you $10,000.
Copy !req
737. Your girlfriend said you took $400
from her before you left the country.
Copy !req
738. What happened to the money?
Copy !req
739. I never got it yet.
Copy !req
740. Dobson mailed it
to me after the job
Copy !req
741. to one of those private
post office boxes.
Copy !req
742. What happened? It
got lost in the mail?
Copy !req
743. The cops were on me so fast, I
couldn't wait around for it to get there.
Copy !req
744. I was gonna come
back for it like next year.
Copy !req
745. Why didn't you?
Copy !req
746. The mailbox place
called my girlfriend.
Copy !req
747. They said all mail had to be picked
up in 30 days or they send it back.
Copy !req
748. So I took the chance.
Copy !req
749. Why didn't you have
your girlfriend pick it up?
Copy !req
750. Yeah, right.
Copy !req
751. These are the decisions I love.
Copy !req
752. Do we put the hired
killer on the stand
Copy !req
753. before the insurance
agent and the girlfriend,
Copy !req
754. or do we put the girlfriend and
insurance agent on before the hired killer?
Copy !req
755. Counselors.
Copy !req
756. We got the money
from the mailbox.
Copy !req
757. All there?
Copy !req
758. Ten large, as advertised. And we
ran it through Forensics as ordered.
Copy !req
759. Priority. And?
Copy !req
760. And I just thought maybe we
would find Dobson's fingerprints on it.
Copy !req
761. You didn't?
Copy !req
762. Not a one. But all over
the place, Joey Giabone.
Copy !req
763. Giabone?
Copy !req
764. That's what it says.
Copy !req
765. Cruz's former employer.
Copy !req
766. Maybe not former.
Copy !req
767. Whoa! Whoa! Wait a minute.
Copy !req
768. You're not saying
Dobson didn't do it?
Copy !req
769. Okay, you explain it.
Copy !req
770. We're offering him an opportunity
to give us a simple explanation.
Copy !req
771. How his fingerprints
got on the money.
Copy !req
772. Mr. Giabone will be happy to
tell you anything you need to know
Copy !req
773. regarding Mr. Cruz
and Mr. Dobson
Copy !req
774. if you arrange with Adam Schiff
and the U.S. Attorneys Office
Copy !req
775. to grant him complete immunity
relating to anything he might mention.
Copy !req
776. Transactional immunity?
Copy !req
777. He's under investigation
for a dozen major crimes.
Copy !req
778. You want to bowl a few
frames? Today is ladies' day.
Copy !req
779. Mr. Giabone, this would
help us. It would also help you.
Copy !req
780. It's only a buck a game.
Copy !req
781. You're not a target of this
investigation, but you can be.
Copy !req
782. Stand in line.
Copy !req
783. We might as well have bowled.
Copy !req
784. Well, he did do
business with Dobson.
Copy !req
785. Extortion. The money would have
passed from Dobson to Giabone,
Copy !req
786. not the other way around.
Copy !req
787. Giabone loan sharks, too. Cruz
said that Dobson borrowed money.
Copy !req
788. Back when he ran
the comedy club.
Copy !req
789. Yeah. He borrowed it then.
When did he pay it back?
Copy !req
790. Did he pay it back?
Copy !req
791. You've already used me
once to help you try to kill him.
Copy !req
792. You handled the
restaurant's books.
Copy !req
793. We just want to know if Dobson
owed money to Joey Giabone.
Copy !req
794. Another gangster,
right? Well, what if he did?
Copy !req
795. Does that hurt him or help him?
Copy !req
796. It depends.
Copy !req
797. Look, if he owed money
to somebody like that,
Copy !req
798. doesn't it mean they could have
killed Mrs. Dobson to scare him?
Copy !req
799. Did he owe money?
Copy !req
800. Yes. He owed somebody.
Copy !req
801. And he was scared.
Copy !req
802. How do you know?
Copy !req
803. There were phone
calls he wouldn't take.
Copy !req
804. He installed a video camera
outside the restaurant.
Copy !req
805. He even borrowed money from
me once, $6,000 to make a payment.
Copy !req
806. He said he could be killed.
Copy !req
807. And you didn't
mention this before?
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808. He needed money to
pay somebody back.
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809. I thought you'd use
that against him, too.
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810. I don't want to talk about it.
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811. You said you
didn't kill your wife.
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812. If you know somebody that did...
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813. You mean Joey
Giabone, the mobster?
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814. No. The sugar-plum
fairy. Forget it.
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815. You'd rather be convicted?
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816. You're preparing the brilliant case
against me. What choice do I have?
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817. What are you protecting?
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818. What could possibly be any
worse than what you're facing?
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819. Your children.
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820. Give that man a cigar.
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821. Giabone threatened
your children?
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822. You people...
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823. Almost as painful as being
railroaded to the death chamber
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824. is watching your
minds slowly turn.
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825. Then give us a shove.
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826. I owed the bastard money.
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827. The restaurant turned out
to be not such a great idea.
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828. He said, "Pay." I said,
"I'd love to, but I can't."
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829. He killed my wife,
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830. my beautiful innocent wife,
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831. all because of me.
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832. Because I sat down
with scum like that.
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833. And the call from Cruz to you.
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834. He said, "I just
killed your wife.
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835. "Now you can pay Mr. Giabone."
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836. And once you geniuses got
involved, there was another call.
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837. "Keep your mouth
shut, or your kids..."
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838. My kids!
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839. But my client's already
been cooperating fully.
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840. Yes. But with whom?
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841. With you. Is that right?
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842. Mr. Cruz?
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843. Exactly when did you stop
working for Joey Giabone?
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844. I heard you've
been asking around.
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845. You heard in Rikers?
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846. I'm not convicted. I can use the
phone. I know what's going on.
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847. I've been reflecting.
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848. I want to do the right thing.
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849. I think it's a
little late for that.
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850. You want Giabone, don't you?
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851. You told us Dobson hired you.
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852. Excuse me, but I'd
like to keep breathing.
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853. Can I have a minute
to confer with my client?
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854. We can confer right now.
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855. They want Giabone,
and I can give him to them
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856. if they do the
right thing for me.
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857. We have a deal in place, which you're
now telling us you violated by lying.
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858. It's void.
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859. So let's start over.
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860. Giabone's a lot more important
than some crazy husband.
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861. Man one.
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862. The minimum.
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863. Then witness
protection. Federal.
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864. And I tell everything.
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865. So now Dobson's poster boy for
"When bad things happen to bad people."
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866. That's Cruz's new story.
Giabone ordered the wife hit.
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867. He knew Dobson would
get the insurance money
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868. and be able to pay
back what he owed.
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869. What have we got here?
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870. A hit man who changes
his story to get a better deal?
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871. When Cruz first showed up, he
was the final nail in Dobson's coffin.
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872. But it couldn't have worked out better
for Dobson if he'd arranged it himself.
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873. That's interesting, isn't it?
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874. Have you got the phone
number for that mailbox place?
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875. Yeah. Here.
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876. Cruz came back
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877. because somebody called his girlfriend
and said he had to pick up his mail.
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878. Hello, Mailbox City?
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879. I've got a box there, and I'm
gonna be out of town for a while.
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880. How long will you hold my mail?
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881. Thank you.
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882. As long as I pay
the bill, forever.
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883. That's nice of them. Now
who called Cruz's girlfriend?
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884. Okay, number one.
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885. "Hello, I'm calling from Mailbox
City with a message for Luis Cruz."
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886. No, that wasn't her.
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887. Number two.
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888. "Hello, I'm calling from Mailbox
City with a message for Luis Cruz."
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889. I don't think so.
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890. Okay. Number three.
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891. "Hello, I'm calling from Mailbox
City with a message for Luis Cruz."
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892. That's her. That's the
bitch! You hear me, bitch?
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893. You got my Luis. I'm gonna
get you! Hey, hey! Come on!
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894. You got my Luis!
Bitch, I'm gonna get you!
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895. Well, I assume we no longer have
any doubt that Dobson's our man.
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896. What kind of mind could
set up something like this?
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897. We know she
visited him at Rikers.
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898. After the case started
going against him.
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899. "Margaret, dear, would you
mind making a call for me?"
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900. He conned her.
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901. And he thinks he's
still conning us.
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902. I told you, McCoy.
I'm not going to testify.
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903. If your own investigation
supports Mr. Dobson's position,
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904. I trust you'll do the
right thing anyway.
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905. Do whatever you want. I
will not endanger my family.
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906. Very touching, Mr. Dobson.
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907. Your nobility must be one of the things
that made Ms. Nash so devoted to you.
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908. She has nothing to do with this.
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909. On the contrary.
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910. Claire.
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911. Honey, shut up. He's
trying to screw me.
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912. No, Ms. Nash, he's trying
to use you. He already has.
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913. Margaret, he's full of crap.
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914. You made two phone calls
at your boyfriend's request.
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915. One was to the killer's
girlfriend, the other was to the INS.
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916. An anonymous tip to be
on the lookout for Luis Cruz.
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917. Here are the phone records.
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918. You're saying my client had
something to do with this?
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919. He asked her to
make those calls.
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920. Isn't that right?
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921. Margaret.
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922. Why would he do that?
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923. Because he knew
if Cruz came back,
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924. we'd find the money with
Joey Giabone's fingerprints.
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925. If the money has
Giabone's fingerprints...
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926. Dobson used some of the money
he'd borrowed from Giabone to pay Cruz.
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927. If Cruz was picked up with the
money, it would point to somebody else.
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928. Somebody else did hire
him. Michael didn't do it.
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929. You're very trusting.
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930. Is that why you used
her, Mr. Dobson?
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931. He gave you the number
of the killer's girlfriend.
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932. How did he know that?
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933. He knew these people.
They were after him.
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934. And the fact that the money for
the hit man was in that mailbox,
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935. how did he know that?
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936. I don't know.
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937. Go ahead, Mr. Dobson,
explain it to us. We're all listening.
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938. Michael?
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939. You're going to
testify about all this.
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940. Margaret, Margaret, you
don't have to say anything.
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941. If you don't, I'll charge you
as an accomplice to murder.
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942. Margaret.
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943. You want to go to
prison for him? What is it?
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944. Do you really want to be
Mrs. Dobson number three?
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945. Here's number one.
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946. And here's number two.
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947. And what do you want me to do?
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948. Women!
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949. I still can't believe he
committed the same murder twice.
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950. I mean, what did he
think? No one would notice?
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951. A guy like that thinks he can
talk his way out of anything.
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952. And now he gets to do his routine
for the jury in the penalty phase.
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953. Then the appeals court, then
the higher court, the newspapers,
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954. the governor. He'll be on death
row well into the next century.
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955. Plenty of time to
practice his shtick.
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