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. Superglue. I catch
the punk that did this,
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7. I'm gonna glue my
hand to his face.
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8. Ah, don't assume
it was kids.
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9. Divorce, the locksmith's
best friend.
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10. He changes the locks,
she glues them shut.
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11. Mr. Franklin
is a widower.
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12. And I promised
I would fix his AC today.
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13. I'm almost done.
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14. Now what?
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15. Must be the fuse.Here.
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16. You smell something?
What's that smell?
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17. Look at this.
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18. What is that, blood?
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19. Mr. Franklin?
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20. Mr. Franklin?
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21. Mr. Franklin, are you
all right? It's me, Mr. Couri.
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22. Mother of God...
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23. What the hell hit him,
a howitzer?
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24. Whatever it was,
they got it down the alley. The window here was jimmied.
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25. Well, how long's
Mr. Franklin been like this?
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26. Body's in full rigor.
Say, since about 4:00 this morning.
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27. We're ready to move him. Okay.
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28. Next of kin's
been notified.
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29. There's a message
on his machine from his job.
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30. DeLuca Janitorial.
He was due there two hours ago.
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31. The one day he
would've been happy to show up at work.
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32. Well, somebody went
to a lot of trouble to give him the day off.
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33. The shooter pulled the fuse.
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34. Franklin comes in,
tries the light.
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35. Sets his groceries
down. Boom.
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36. First shot catches
him in the arm.
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37. Second shot,
he goes down here.
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38. He gets up,
heads toward the bedroom.
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39. Third shot puts him
down in the doorway. He crawls into the room.
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40. End of story.
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41. Well, even at
4:00 in the morning,
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42. somebody must've
heard something.
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43. Goose down.
The shooter muffled the shots with a pillow.
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44. A very small pillow.
Where's the rest of the bird?
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45. Well, you see here
how the blood spatter goes off at right angles?
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46. The shooter
used a drop cloth.
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47. CSU found a piece
of plastic sheeting snagged on a floor nail.
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48. Okay, so he rolls
up the mess,
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49. superglues the door lock
to give himself a little lead time...
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50. And he's back out the window. Very neat.
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51. A shooter Martha
Stewart would've loved.
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52. The neighbors heard
Mrs. Molinari and her new beau
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53. going for a world record
at 3:00 in the morning,
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54. but nobody heard
the cannon fire an hour later.
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55. Did any of them say
why Mr. Franklin was killed?
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56. Seven years in
the same building.
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57. A friend to orphans
and small animals.
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58. Not an enemy
in the world.
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59. Well, did the friend
that shot him leave prints?
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60. Nope. No fingerprints,
no footprints.
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61. We're thinking of putting
out a sketch of Casper, the Friendly Ghost.
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62. Well, have Profaci
pull Mr. Franklin's financials.
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63. Maybe he had some IOUs.
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64. They had to be big ones.
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65. No one puts this much
effort into collecting a $100 marker.
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66. Hey, Franklin swung
a mop for 10 bucks an hour.
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67. No bookie's gonna
front him any serious money.
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68. You got
a better motive?
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69. The 1001 nights
of a janitor?
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70. Well, talk to his daughter.
See who he was spending them with.
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71. Did he keep any
cash or jewelry here?No.
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72. Dad deposited his
paycheck every Friday.
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73. And he gave me
mom's pearl necklace
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74. and her engagement
ring after she died.
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75. That was
eight years ago.
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76. Do you know...
Was he seeing anybody recently?
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77. I don't think so.
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78. There were people
he felt comfortable around.
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79. Do you know if
he was having any money problems?
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80. No. He wouldn't
talk to me about that.
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81. Did you notice
any change in his spending habits?
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82. Well, for the past
couple of weeks,
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83. he did give me some
extra money to help out with school.
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84. How much extra?
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85. $500.
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86. Where was this
money coming from?
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87. He changed jobs last month.
He said he got a raise.
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88. Franklin put in nine years
at Hudson University.
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89. He took a 5% pay cut
to come work for me.
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90. What, do you have
better company picnics?
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91. They had him cleaning
the labs in the medical department
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92. where they keep
rats for experiments.
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93. He said he was
sick of the smell.
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94. His daughter said that
he picked up some extra money at work.
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95. Well, maybe he found
some loose change under the seat cushions.
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96. He told her he got
a raise. Now, why would he lie?
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97. Any of your customers
ever complain about
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98. missing typewriters
or computers?
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99. Absolutely not.
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100. So you don't mind
if we call them then?
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101. They'll be thrilled
you're being investigated for thievery.
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102. Come on, guys,
nobody was getting hurt.
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103. Let us be
the judge of that, huh?
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104. Franklin cleaned
a building on Madison
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105. with a dental practice
on the 11th floor.
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106. Two dentists, brothers,
with bad hair plugs.
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107. Well, after hours,
they're movie producers with bad hair plugs.
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108. Spell it out,
Mr. DeLuca.
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109. Amateur videos.
They got racks of them in the adult stores.
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110. And these dentists were
making these movies right in the examination rooms?
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111. Yeah. Franklin said
they had women
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112. in and out of
there all night long.
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113. Regular-looking women.
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114. Maybe they were patients.
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115. And Franklin was
being paid to look the other way?
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116. 300 a week.
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117. I found one slug
fragment big enough to type as a.32.
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118. Fired by what kind of
a.32 is a good question.
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119. A.32 did that?
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120. With a little help
from fulminate of mercury.
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121. Spectro-analysis
confirmed the presence of mercury crystals.
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122. Explosive tips.
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123. I'll call the CIA
and ask them
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124. if they counted
their bullets lately.
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125. If you know
what you're doing,
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126. anyone can make
fulminate of mercury in their own basement.
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127. How? You
break open a couple of thermometers?
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128. Welcome to the late
20th century, Lennie.
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129. They don't use mercury
in thermometers anymore.
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130. You have to buy it
at a supply house.
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131. Home-made bullets,
drop cloth, no prints, no fibers.
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132. You smell a pro?I smell an MO.
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133. Let's run it by OCCB. Thanks.
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134. Victim was a janitor?
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135. You mean,
as in a clean-up guy for the Mob?
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136. No, as in a janitor.
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137. Who's he to rate
a quality hit like this?
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138. You know,
we find the shooter, maybe he'll tell us.
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139. Hmm.
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140. James Poulos,
aka, Jimmy the Pin.
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141. Never heard of him.You weren't born
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142. when he was doing
his best work.
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143. Uh, see, one conviction,
1956. Twelve-year stretch in Attica.
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144. We'll say
hello for you.
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145. Thanks, Manny.
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146. Listen, Jimmy,
somebody copped your MO
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147. down in the Village
a few days ago.
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148. The whole thing
was by the numbers,
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149. right down to
the fuse box gimmick.
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150. No kidding?
Well, you're never gonna find him.
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151. They found you. 1956.
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152. One time, junior.
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153. Because some bum
ratted me out.
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154. But it was never
on the forensic evidence. Never.
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155. That hit in the Village?
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156. For 12.95,
any dope could have done it. Here.
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157. "The Assassin's Technical
Manual.Free Nation Publications."
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158. Those nuts who run
around the woods
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159. playing Rambo,
they printed that.
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160. They interviewed you?Nah.
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161. They didn't even
get my permission.
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162. And they sure as hell
ain't paying my royalties.
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163. We're in our
seventh printing.
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164. It's a mail-order
success story.
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165. How do you measure
success, in confirmed kills?
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166. Read the disclaimer.
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167. It's for informational
and entertainment purposes only.
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168. Well, for our
informational purposes,
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169. we'd like a list of
the people who order this trash.
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170. Obviously, you're unfamiliar
with one of our other publications.
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171. "A Citizen's Guide
to Constitutional Freedoms."
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172. Look, we're asking
for a mailing list,
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173. not the name of
a confidential source.
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174. I spilled patriot blood
in defense of the First Amendment.
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175. I'm not about to surrender
it to some Jose-come-lately.
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176. He'll argue that keeping
his mailing list confidential is essential
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177. to the exercise
of his First Amendment rights.
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178. And a judge
will buy that?
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179. You want to spend
six months in court to find out?
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180. I'd like to know
before the killer starts drawing a pension.
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181. He followed
the instructions in here step-by-step. Chapter 6.
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182. There's even a checklist.
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183. The publisher provided
the means for him to commit a felony.
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184. Criminal facilitation?
I don't think so.
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185. I'd like to run with it.
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186. If that's what
you want to do, God bless you.
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187. What does he know?
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188. You're going to trot
out this crap in front of a grand jury?
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189. Just as soon as they
get back from lunch.
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190. I might even toss in
hindering prosecution.
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191. This is a joke.
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192. As your lawyer knows,
I can get this pencil indicted if I'm in the mood.
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193. You can't
make it stick.
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194. Any judge will see
it for what it is,
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195. an end-run around
the First Amendment.
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196. And you'll spend every
dime of your client's money to prove it.
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197. Freedom of the press
isn't free, Mr. Bailey.
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198. But turning over
your mailing list won't cost you a cent.
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199. I can't believe this.
It's extortion.
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200. It's leverage.
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201. Lunchtime's over.
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202. Go ahead. Take me to court.
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203. I welcome the chance
to kick some government butt.
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204. You don't want this
fight, Mr. Bailey.
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205. I'll have every city,
state and federal agency
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206. from the postal
inspector to the IRS
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207. crawling up your
digestive track.
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208. Just hold on a second.
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209. You'll have the list on
your desk first thing in the morning.
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210. All these people
ordered the book?
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211. If you see
one of my ex's in there, let me know.
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212. Oh, look, somebody
in Quantico ordered six copies.
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213. Wonder who that is.
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214. Great. My tax
dollars at work.
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215. Greg Franklin worked
for Hudson University?
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216. Yeah. He quit a month ago.
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217. Well, somebody there
bought the book three weeks ago.
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218. Who's that?
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219. Greg Franklin.
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220. I don't remember
a package coming here for Greg.
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221. Anyway, the mail room
knows he doesn't work here anymore.
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222. Hey, why would he
have a book sent to him after he quit?
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223. Yeah, we asked
ourselves the same thing.
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224. Figure maybe it was
one of his old buddies.
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225. The same one
who put three bullets into him.
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226. I heard he was murdered.
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227. But, look, Greg got
along with everybody who worked here.
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228. Got along so
well, he quit.
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229. He got tired of
the graveyard shift.
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230. Yeah, started working
nights on his new job for less money.
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231. Mr. Krasny, isn't it
possible that Greg left for some other reason?
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232. Somebody accused him
of stealing drugs
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233. from the Department
of Psychiatry. Tranquilizers.
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234. A janitor's always
a good suspect.
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235. Greg worked here nine
years without a problem. I didn't believe it.
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236. Well, what did
Greg say about it?
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237. He said that someone
was out to get him. He didn't know who.
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238. Security leaned on
him hard, so he just quit.
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239. Excuse me.
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240. Well, Franklin was right,
somebody was out to get him.
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241. Well, he got paid
not to notice porno was being filmed.
Copy !req
242. Maybe he took money
not to notice drugs were being stolen.
Copy !req
243. That would explain why
he kept his mouth shut when he was suspected.
Copy !req
244. Maybe he asked for
more money to keep it shut.
Copy !req
245. Somebody got pissed. Yeah.
Copy !req
246. Somebody who was there
when that book showed up at the mail room.
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247. Mail addressed to
former employees goes in that bin.
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248. If we have a forwarding
address, we forward it.
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249. If not, it gets
returned to the sender.
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250. Well, how long does
the mail stay in there?
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251. This isn't the US
Post Office.
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252. Is that good or bad?
Copy !req
253. Turnaround time's
about three days.
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254. Who has access to the bin?
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255. Everyone that works here.
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256. Fifty or 60 people,
counting full-time employees and students on part-time.
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257. Okay, we're gonna
need a list of those names, okay?
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258. Sure.
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259. Sixty doors to
knock on, Rey.
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260. I'll tell you what,
I'll take the coed dorms, you take the rest.
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261. How many mailmen know
what a fulminate is?
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262. One.
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263. The chemistry major.
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264. A first-year student
could do it.
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265. If he had
the ingredients? Mmm-hmm.
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266. Mercury nitrate,
nitric acid and ethanol.
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267. It's all here
under lock and key. And strictly rationed.
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268. You wouldn't
believe our budget.
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269. So if one of your
students was cooking up a batch of this stuff,
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270. who would know about it?Unless you
had a cold, you'd know.
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271. You see, during
the heating process,
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272. fulminate of mercury
makes a god-awful stink.
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273. This is a list of
students who work in the campus mail room.
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274. Any of them yours?
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275. Yes, this one.
Ms. Nguyen.
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276. Thank you.
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277. Wednesday night?
I was with my sister.
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278. She came down
from MIT to visit.
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279. Why do you want to know?
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280. Well, last Wednesday,
a janitor who used to work here was shot.
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281. We think by somebody
who knows their way around
Copy !req
282. the campus mail room
and a chemistry lab.
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283. I'm two for two.
But I didn't shoot anybody.
Copy !req
284. Why chemistry?
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285. Well, the killer used
bullets that were tipped with fulminate of mercury.
Copy !req
286. And he works
in the mail room?
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287. It's a possibility.
You know somebody?
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288. I'm not sure.
I don't want to get him in trouble.
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289. Sweetheart, if he
didn't do it, he's not in any trouble.
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290. This boy I work with,
Alan. He usually keeps to himself.
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291. He asked me out to
a movie a few weeks ago. He wouldn't stop talking.
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292. I couldn't follow
what he was saying,
Copy !req
293. but he kept asking
about reagent catalytic salts of mercury.
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294. He said it was for
a class in ethics and contemporary history.
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295. I didn't get
the connection.
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296. You give us his name,
we'll ask him.
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297. Alan Sawyer.
He's a history major.
Copy !req
298. He works in the mail room
Tuesday afternoons.
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299. Alan? Alan Sawyer?
Copy !req
300. I'm Detective Curtis.
This is my partner, Detective Briscoe.
Copy !req
301. We'd like to talk
to you a minute.
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302. About what?
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303. Fulminate of mercury.
You familiar with it?
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304. You must've heard
about my project.
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305. That's right,
you were in the mail room.
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306. Your crystal ball
tell you that?
Copy !req
307. Nah, I went there
to get my paycheck during lunch.
Copy !req
308. Then you must've
talked to Little Orchid?
Copy !req
309. Little Orchid? Who's she?
A friend of Pocahontas?
Copy !req
310. She's a chemistry whiz.
Little Orchid's her name in Vietnamese.
Copy !req
311. She told you
about my project. Yeah.
Copy !req
312. Now, you can
tell us about it.
Copy !req
313. Minamata. It's this
Japanese fishing village.
Copy !req
314. About 40 years ago,
a paper mill dumped
Copy !req
315. 600 tons of mercury
into the bay there.
Copy !req
316. People died,
babies were born with birth defects.
Copy !req
317. That's horrible.
So what's your project about?
Copy !req
318. I'm writing
a history paper for class.
Copy !req
319. It's about the evolution
of corporate responses to environmental disasters.
Copy !req
320. I got the idea from my dad.
He's a corporate lawyer.
Copy !req
321. Hmm. Well, how'd you go
from poisoned fish to mercury explosives?
Copy !req
322. I've been curious
about mercury for a while.
Copy !req
323. Little Orchid wasn't
paying attention to me, anyway.
Copy !req
324. She's hot for Brad Pitt.
Copy !req
325. Okay?
Copy !req
326. Oh, one more thing.
Copy !req
327. Where were you
Wednesday night?
Copy !req
328. In my dorm room,
cramming for a mid-term.
Copy !req
329. It was nice
talking to you guys.
Copy !req
330. My dad's a corporate lawyer,
your witness is confused,
Copy !req
331. I have a fine alibi...
Copy !req
332. And an excuse
for everything.
Copy !req
333. Let's start
with the alibi.
Copy !req
334. I saw him in the bathroom
a couple of times.
Copy !req
335. Besides that,
his door was closed. He had the music going.
Copy !req
336. What about
after midnight?
Copy !req
337. His door was closed.
He had the music going.
Copy !req
338. Believe me,
I'd love to help you lock this guy up.
Copy !req
339. Oh, why is that?
You don't like his music?
Copy !req
340. I don't like him.
The guy's a pig.
Copy !req
341. Let me ask you something.
You ever notice any unusual smells coming from his room?
Copy !req
342. Unusual? The guy's
got a hotplate in there.
Copy !req
343. I don't know what
he's been cooking lately, but it smells like roadkill.
Copy !req
344. Did you ever hear him
talk about a janitor
Copy !req
345. that worked in the
Department of Psychiatry?
Copy !req
346. A guy named
Greg Franklin? No.
Copy !req
347. Why? Was he Sawyer's
mystery lover?
Copy !req
348. Why would you say that?
Copy !req
349. Sawyer's over there
every night around 7:00.
Copy !req
350. He says he gets
paid to do scut work in the research lab,
Copy !req
351. but you never know.
Copy !req
352. I placed an ad in
the campus newspaper. Alan answered.
Copy !req
353. I pay him $100
a week to collate data. On what?
Copy !req
354. We research new
psychotropic drugs
Copy !req
355. using animals and
humans as subjects.
Copy !req
356. So these rats
are all on drugs? Yes.
Copy !req
357. The same kind of
drugs that were stolen last month?
Copy !req
358. No, no. Those
were tranquilizers.
Copy !req
359. Is Alan in some
kind of trouble?
Copy !req
360. Well, the janitor who used
to clean the building was killed a few days ago.
Copy !req
361. Greg? Oh, my God.
Copy !req
362. And you suspect Alan?
Copy !req
363. You're the psychiatrist,
Dr. Varick. Is Alan the type?
Copy !req
364. Well, anyone is
the type, Detective.
Copy !req
365. I don't have to
tell you that.
Copy !req
366. Well, if Alan had
some kind of a beef with Greg,
Copy !req
367. it would narrow
things down.
Copy !req
368. Not that I know of.
Copy !req
369. I'm sorry I can't
be more helpful.
Copy !req
370. We faxed his photo to
every chemical supply house in the area.
Copy !req
371. Nobody called back to say
that he was in their store.
Copy !req
372. Campus security's
letting CSU
Copy !req
373. and the bomb squad
search the common areas of Sawyer's dorm.
Copy !req
374. We figured if he made
the stuff in his room,
Copy !req
375. they might find gas
residue in the hallway.
Copy !req
376. You talk to a judge
about a search warrant for his room?
Copy !req
377. Yeah, Judge Serena.
She wasn't too impressed with our coincidences.
Copy !req
378. Yeah. Our profile of
someone with knowledge of explosives
Copy !req
379. and someone who had access
to the mail room and Psychiatry Department
Copy !req
380. wasn't specific enough.
Copy !req
381. Did you tell her about
the smell from his room?
Copy !req
382. Oh, you'll be glad to
know that "Unidentified
Copy !req
383. "transient odors
aren't probable cause."
Copy !req
384. Well, bring Alan
in for a chat.
Copy !req
385. See what he thinks
about our coincidences.
Copy !req
386. I've never seen this book.
Is it any good?
Copy !req
387. Oh, yeah.
It's a real page-turner.
Copy !req
388. So you in the mail room,
coincidence number one.
Copy !req
389. Little Orchid,
coincidence number two.
Copy !req
390. I explained that. Yeah, right,
the contaminated fish.
Copy !req
391. Number three,
you work in the same lab
Copy !req
392. that Franklin
was cleaning up.
Copy !req
393. That doesn't count.
Copy !req
394. I know two people
in the mail room from pre-med.
Copy !req
395. They take classes in
that same building.
Copy !req
396. Number four,
the stench in your room.
Copy !req
397. That one's easy.
Copy !req
398. I tried making Hom yu.
It's this Chinese pork dish.
Copy !req
399. It really stinks
the place up.
Copy !req
400. You got it all
covered, don't you?
Copy !req
401. Here, check
my fingerprints.
Copy !req
402. You'll see that
I wasn't in that guy's apartment.
Copy !req
403. Give me a break.
You wore gloves, Alan.
Copy !req
404. You know we didn't
find any prints.
Copy !req
405. What about my hair?
If I was there as long as you say,
Copy !req
406. you would've found
some of my hair.
Copy !req
407. Hey, we know
about the drop cloth
Copy !req
408. and the lights
and the pillow.
Copy !req
409. You followed every
damn instruction in that book!
Copy !req
410. So, I'm guilty because
you don't have any evidence?
Copy !req
411. Lori Franklin is here.
Copy !req
412. Ms. Franklin.
Copy !req
413. Is that him?
Copy !req
414. Yes. Now take your time.
Copy !req
415. His name is Alan Sawyer.
Copy !req
416. No, I never heard
Dad talk about him.
Copy !req
417. No, I never saw him.
Copy !req
418. Okay. Thanks for coming in.
Copy !req
419. CSU finished
their search of the dorm.
Copy !req
420. No fulminate of
mercury residue.
Copy !req
421. But look what
they found missing.
Copy !req
422. The mercury-filled
bubbles that make
Copy !req
423. the thermostats in
his dorm go on and off.
Copy !req
424. You know, it's time
I called my parents.
Copy !req
425. No, it's time we
put you under arrest
Copy !req
426. for the murder
of Greg Franklin.
Copy !req
427. Stand up.
You have the right to remain silent.
Copy !req
428. Anything you say can and
will be used against you in a court of law.
Copy !req
429. You have the right
to an attorney.
Copy !req
430. If you cannot afford
one, one will be appointed to you.
Copy !req
431. You understand that?
Copy !req
432. Yes.
Copy !req
433. But I'd really like
to talk to my parents.
Copy !req
434. No, first, we're
gonna talk about
Copy !req
435. where you got
the mercury for your bullets.
Copy !req
436. Hey, you know that
really had us going, Alan. Till now.
Copy !req
437. The thermostats in your
dorm. They're missing the mercury switches.
Copy !req
438. Coincidence number five.
And your prints are on those switches.
Copy !req
439. Okay.
Copy !req
440. I put on a shower
cap and plastic gloves.
Copy !req
441. I put down the drop cloth
and I unscrewed the fuse and I waited for him.
Copy !req
442. As soon as the door
closed, I shot him.
Copy !req
443. Why'd you do it, Alan?
Copy !req
444. Did it have
something to do with the stolen drugs?
Copy !req
445. I stole those
so they'd blame him and fire him.
Copy !req
446. Why? What did
Franklin ever do to you?
Copy !req
447. He was a Knight Templar.
Copy !req
448. He was 600 years old.
Copy !req
449. They told me he was
trying to kill me.
Copy !req
450. Who said that?
Copy !req
451. King Philip
and Pope Clement.
Copy !req
452. They told me to shoot him
and they told me how.
Copy !req
453. I still can't believe
the judge turned us down for bail.
Copy !req
454. Whatever perfume you
were wearing, Ms. Ross, I should start wearing too.
Copy !req
455. Anyway, I talked to
Alan, and we're changing our plea.
Copy !req
456. You finally got around
to reading his confession?
Copy !req
457. Please, I was halfway to
the Garden last night when I caught this case.
Copy !req
458. We're pleading not guilty
by reason of mental disease.
Copy !req
459. I beg your pardon? The kid hears voices.
Copy !req
460. Didn't you read
his statement?
Copy !req
461. Every word.
Copy !req
462. Including how he carefully
planned and executed a cold-blooded murder.
Copy !req
463. I didn't say he was
stupid. He's a diagnosed schizophrenic.
Copy !req
464. Diagnosed by whom?
Copy !req
465. Dr. Christian Varick.
Copy !req
466. Chief of psychiatric
research at Hudson University.
Copy !req
467. Alan's been under his care
for the last four months.
Copy !req
468. The police talked to
Varick. He never said he was treating Alan.
Copy !req
469. I doubt he forgot.
Copy !req
470. Maybe your detectives
forgot he told them.
Copy !req
471. I am paying Alan $100
a week as a test subject in a drug study.
Copy !req
472. It would've been
nice to know that before we arrested him.
Copy !req
473. My hands were tied
by the doctor-patient privilege.
Copy !req
474. You understand my dilemma.
Copy !req
475. His lawyer claims
he can't appreciate
Copy !req
476. the consequences
of his actions.
Copy !req
477. That might've been
true four months ago.
Copy !req
478. He was paranoid,
he heard voices, he had violent fantasies
Copy !req
479. concerning the Crusades
and the medieval knights.
Copy !req
480. And now?
Copy !req
481. According to my
research assistant's evaluations,
Copy !req
482. he is asymptomatic.
Copy !req
483. No more voices? That's right.
Copy !req
484. As long as he keeps
taking his medication.
Copy !req
485. Which is what?
Copy !req
486. Well, half the subjects
in my study are taking fluphenazine.
Copy !req
487. The other half are on T489.
It's an experimental drug.
Copy !req
488. I broke Alan's
double-blind coding last night
Copy !req
489. to see which
group he was in.
Copy !req
490. He's been taking T489.
Copy !req
491. It's had
a remarkable effect.
Copy !req
492. So Pope Clement
and King Philip?
Copy !req
493. I don't know why Alan
killed Mr. Franklin,
Copy !req
494. but it had nothing to
do with his disease.
Copy !req
495. This is pretty much
what Varick told me over the phone.
Copy !req
496. You want to change your
plea back to plain vanilla not guilty?
Copy !req
497. We're not
conceding anything.
Copy !req
498. Motion to
suppress the confession?
Copy !req
499. Plan B.
Copy !req
500. Twice during his
interrogation,
Copy !req
501. my client asked to
speak to his parents.
Copy !req
502. Twice, the police refused.
Copy !req
503. His client
is not a minor.
Copy !req
504. Asking for mom and
dad is not the same
Copy !req
505. as invoking
the right to counsel.
Copy !req
506. It is if dad's
an attorney.
Copy !req
507. A corporate attorney
from Baltimore.
Copy !req
508. Miranda doesn't say
that a defendant can
Copy !req
509. only ask for New York
criminal lawyers.
Copy !req
510. The police knew his
father was an attorney?
Copy !req
511. He told them so in
an earlier interview.
Copy !req
512. He said it
in passing.
Copy !req
513. Your Honor, if he
wanted to speak to his father as an attorney,
Copy !req
514. he should've said
so when he was read his rights.
Copy !req
515. There are no magic
words, Mr. McCoy.
Copy !req
516. Your officers
should've erred on the side of caution.
Copy !req
517. Mr. Sawyer was
denied counsel.
Copy !req
518. I'm gonna suppress
his confession.
Copy !req
519. Is there any other
evidence that might sustain the charges?
Copy !req
520. We have his fingerprints
on the broken thermostats...
Copy !req
521. Along with the prints of
a dozen other individuals.
Copy !req
522. I don't see
legal sufficiency here, Mr. McCoy.
Copy !req
523. I'm dismissing the
charges and releasing Mr. Sawyer.
Copy !req
524. He shoots my
father three times, he confesses,
Copy !req
525. and now he gets to go home?
Copy !req
526. What about my
father's rights?
Copy !req
527. Doesn't anybody
care about that?
Copy !req
528. We do.
Copy !req
529. And we have every intention
of pursuing the case against Alan Sawyer.
Copy !req
530. The police do
anything right?
Copy !req
531. They searched
everywhere Sawyer could've hidden evidence.
Copy !req
532. I wish I could tell
you to take a plea.
Copy !req
533. Call Briscoe and Curtis.
Give them the bad news.
Copy !req
534. This is interesting.
Copy !req
535. I asked the Baltimore
state's attorney
Copy !req
536. to run Sawyer's
parents for a gun permit.
Copy !req
537. His father
owns a Ruger.32.
Copy !req
538. I'll call Amtrak.
Copy !req
539. We have nothing to tell you,
Ms. Ross. We don't know where the gun is.
Copy !req
540. As a lawyer, you
know it's the law
Copy !req
541. to report a lost
or stolen weapon.
Copy !req
542. I'm familiar
with the law.
Copy !req
543. Since no report was made,
the gun should still be here.
Copy !req
544. Fred, please.
This isn't helping him.
Copy !req
545. When we heard that
Alan was arrested,
Copy !req
546. we looked for the gun
and it wasn't here.
Copy !req
547. We're not saying
that Alan took it.
Copy !req
548. When was
Alan last here?
Copy !req
549. Our son is sick.
He's not responsible for his actions.
Copy !req
550. That's not what
Dr. Varick says.
Copy !req
551. Well, he's wrong.
Copy !req
552. Alan spent the night here
about a month ago.
Copy !req
553. In the morning,
I found him huddled in the corner of his room,
Copy !req
554. naked and crying.
Copy !req
555. He said the voices were
telling him to do terrible things.
Copy !req
556. We'd never seen
him this bad.
Copy !req
557. We thought the drugs
had him under control.
Copy !req
558. Did you call Dr. Varick?
Copy !req
559. Well, of course.
Copy !req
560. He said it was
an anxiety attack.
Copy !req
561. Told us to put him
on the train back to New York.
Copy !req
562. Have you spoken
to Alan since? No.
Copy !req
563. We tried to
visit him in jail.
Copy !req
564. He won't see us.
Copy !req
565. He's scared.
He knows that he needs help.
Copy !req
566. You want to have him
committed, Ms. Ross?
Copy !req
567. Two days ago,
you wanted him in prison.
Copy !req
568. Two days ago,
I hadn't spoken to his parents.
Copy !req
569. And where did they get
their medical degree?
Copy !req
570. Maybe they're wrong.
Maybe Varick is.
Copy !req
571. We can file for
a Section 934-A admission
Copy !req
572. and let the doctors at
Bellevue make the call.
Copy !req
573. It might keep him off
the streets for at least a couple of months.
Copy !req
574. The parents will
swear out an affidavit?
Copy !req
575. Already done.
Copy !req
576. Pick him up. We might not need to.
Copy !req
577. His parents think
there's a chance
Copy !req
578. he might volunteer
to commit himself.
Copy !req
579. My parents think
this is a good idea?
Copy !req
580. Yes, they do.
Copy !req
581. They're very
concerned about you.
Copy !req
582. I feel... I feel
awful about that dead man.
Copy !req
583. He didn't... Alan, we're not
here to discuss that.
Copy !req
584. If you agree to
commit yourself, Alan, you'll get help.
Copy !req
585. Isn't that what you want?
Copy !req
586. Yeah, yeah. I...
Copy !req
587. Alan...
Copy !req
588. I know.
I'm not gonna say anything about that.
Copy !req
589. I...
Copy !req
590. I just... I don't know
what's happened to me.
Copy !req
591. I mean, I wasn't always...
I just don't understand it.
Copy !req
592. All right,
Alan, that's enough.
Copy !req
593. Mr. McCoy just
wants to lock you up
Copy !req
594. until he can charge
you with murder again.
Copy !req
595. I want him where he
won't hurt himself or anyone else.
Copy !req
596. The problem is you
want him in the system.
Copy !req
597. My job is to keep him
out. If he needs help, he'll get it.
Copy !req
598. During my examination,
Mr. Sawyer experienced auditory hallucinations.
Copy !req
599. He described
violent fantasies,
Copy !req
600. and he expressed
ideas of reference.
Copy !req
601. In your opinion,
does he pose a danger to himself or others?
Copy !req
602. Yes, he does.
Copy !req
603. Thank you.
Copy !req
604. Doctor, how much time
did you spend with Alan before concluding
Copy !req
605. he's a menace to society?
Copy !req
606. Uh, 45 minutes.
Copy !req
607. Thank you for
stopping by today. No more questions.
Copy !req
608. I have a BS in chemistry
from Harvard, an MD and a PhD from Yale.
Copy !req
609. I did my residency in
psychiatry at Columbia, and for the last 10 years,
Copy !req
610. I've been conducting
clinical studies
Copy !req
611. in the treatment
of schizophrenia.
Copy !req
612. And Alan was a subject
in one of these studies?
Copy !req
613. Yes. For the past
four months,
Copy !req
614. he was under my care
and receiving drug therapy.
Copy !req
615. An experimental drug?
Copy !req
616. Yes. T489.
Copy !req
617. Which has effectively
controlled his symptoms.
Copy !req
618. Your Honor,
we offer into evidence the weekly evaluations
Copy !req
619. prepared by Dr. Varick
and his staff.
Copy !req
620. So entered.
Copy !req
621. Doctor, in your
expert opinion,
Copy !req
622. does Alan pose a danger
to himself or to others?
Copy !req
623. As long as he is
properly medicated,
Copy !req
624. there is no reason
to commit him.
Copy !req
625. Properly medicated.
Copy !req
626. Does that mean if
Alan is released today,
Copy !req
627. you'll take him
back into your study and give him T489 again?
Copy !req
628. No. His value as
a test subject has been compromised.
Copy !req
629. I see.
Copy !req
630. Alan's parents
and two respected psychiatrists agree
Copy !req
631. that Alan hears voices.
Copy !req
632. He's erratic and
possibly violent.
Copy !req
633. How do you explain that?
Copy !req
634. Your respected psychiatrists
spent a total of an hour-and-a-half with Alan.
Copy !req
635. And his parents are
parents, not doctors.
Copy !req
636. Isn't it possible
that you made a mistake?
Copy !req
637. It's not likely.
Copy !req
638. That arrogant bastard.
Copy !req
639. Obviously, arrogance
goes a long way with Judge Steinman.
Copy !req
640. She and Varick must
be the only two people in that building
Copy !req
641. that don't think Alan
should be committed.
Copy !req
642. I don't understand
what Varick's thinking.
Copy !req
643. That makes two of us.
I looked at Alan's evaluations.
Copy !req
644. The day after his
so-called anxiety attack, he was given perfect scores.
Copy !req
645. Well, maybe his
anxiety passed.
Copy !req
646. But why isn't
there a mention of it?
Copy !req
647. You'd think they'd
note it as a possible
Copy !req
648. side effect of
an experimental drug.
Copy !req
649. Varick's fudging
his evaluations?
Copy !req
650. Or his research assistant is.
Her signature's on every one.
Copy !req
651. Then why didn't
she testify?
Copy !req
652. Ask Alan's lawyer.
It was his call.
Copy !req
653. But you're the one
who evaluated him, Ms. Perry.
Copy !req
654. But Dr. Varick's the
one with the alphabet soup after his name.
Copy !req
655. Believe me, he makes
a better witness than I do.
Copy !req
656. Someone who's never
examined Alan?
Copy !req
657. Not true.
Copy !req
658. He conducted
the initial interview, he did the diagnosis,
Copy !req
659. and he met with
Alan every month.
Copy !req
660. And in between,
he relied on your evaluations.
Copy !req
661. Well, we've worked
together six years. He trusts my judgment.
Copy !req
662. Then why isn't there
a record of Alan's anxiety attack?
Copy !req
663. I discussed it
with Dr. Varick.
Copy !req
664. He said it was unrelated
to his condition and his medication.
Copy !req
665. What was it related to,
Ms. Perry, the phases of the moon?
Copy !req
666. His parents said he
was hearing voices.
Copy !req
667. Parents say and do
a lot of things, Ms. Ross.
Copy !req
668. We have to rely on
our own observations.
Copy !req
669. Hey. Absolut soda, please.
Copy !req
670. Excuse us, Mike.
Copy !req
671. Sure.
Copy !req
672. Will I need a refill?
Copy !req
673. You're buying this
round and the next. Yeah?
Copy !req
674. Perry boasted how effective
Varick was on the stand.
Copy !req
675. She'd know.
She's seen him in action.
Copy !req
676. "Filed in Philadelphia
County, 1991.
Copy !req
677. "The estate of Cathy Simon
v. Dr. Christian Varick."
Copy !req
678. Varick conducted drug
studies at Darby University from 1990 to 1993.
Copy !req
679. Cathy Simon was
a senior there.
Copy !req
680. She was one of
his guinea pigs?
Copy !req
681. Yes.
Copy !req
682. According to the complaint,
Copy !req
683. Cathy was diagnosed
as suffering schizoaffective disorder.
Copy !req
684. The first month she
was in Varick's study, dramatic results.
Copy !req
685. Then her mood
swings returned.
Copy !req
686. Varick told her
parents to be patient.
Copy !req
687. Let me guess,
she got worse.
Copy !req
688. Her parents begged Varick
to change her medication.
Copy !req
689. He stopped returning
their calls.
Copy !req
690. Three weeks later,
Cathy Simon jumped off the Tacony Bridge.
Copy !req
691. Son of a bitch.
Copy !req
692. A manic-depressive
commits suicide. Somebody call Ripley's.
Copy !req
693. What's unbelievable, Adam,
Copy !req
694. is Varick knew
something was wrong and ignored it.
Copy !req
695. Well, 12 jurors in
Philadelphia didn't see it that way.
Copy !req
696. And what does any
of this have to do with the Sawyer kid?
Copy !req
697. His evaluations were off.
He had a relapse and Varick missed it.
Copy !req
698. Uh-huh.
Copy !req
699. "I'm sorry. I goofed.
Won't do it again."
Copy !req
700. Drug company funding
his research wouldn't be thrilled to hear that.
Copy !req
701. Why? Mistakes happen.
Copy !req
702. Once is a mistake, twice...
Copy !req
703. Twice, what?
Copy !req
704. If it was
an honest mistake,
Copy !req
705. at this point, he wouldn't
be paying much attention to Sawyer.
Copy !req
706. But he puts his
reputation on the line
Copy !req
707. for a man who
committed a murder.
Copy !req
708. My hunch is something
else is going on.
Copy !req
709. Well, we know
what he told us.
Copy !req
710. What'd he tell
the drug company?
Copy !req
711. We don't give
million-dollar grants to people
Copy !req
712. we don't trust to
test our product.
Copy !req
713. You write a check,
then what?
Copy !req
714. You wait for Dr. Varick
to mail you his results?
Copy !req
715. Of course not.
We have regular audits.
Copy !req
716. And I meet with
Dr. Varick every month to review his data.
Copy !req
717. Did you discuss a patient
named Alan Sawyer?
Copy !req
718. Test subjects
are assigned numbers.
Copy !req
719. Patient number 12.
Copy !req
720. I want to make our
company's position clear.
Copy !req
721. Dr. Varick told us
he followed strict protocols.
Copy !req
722. All potential test
subjects were given physical exams,
Copy !req
723. neuro-psychological workups,
including PET scans.
Copy !req
724. We relied on
Dr. Varick completely.
Copy !req
725. Save that for
your press release. Now, patient number 12.
Copy !req
726. He showed rapid
improvement in the first weeks of the study.
Copy !req
727. Dr. Varick was
very enthusiastic.
Copy !req
728. Sounds like he already
knew Alan was on the experimental drug.
Copy !req
729. Wasn't this
a double-blind study?
Copy !req
730. It's possible
Dr. Varick broke
Copy !req
731. the double-blind code
earlier than he should,
Copy !req
732. but the results
were so remarkable.
Copy !req
733. According to Varick.
Copy !req
734. You're aware the data
were collected by his research assistant?
Copy !req
735. Of course.
Copy !req
736. Jill Perry is
eminently qualified.
Copy !req
737. In fact, we're considering
a grant proposal she submitted.
Copy !req
738. She's branching
out on her own? Yes.
Copy !req
739. Soon as the T489
study is complete,
Copy !req
740. she's taking a position
at Texas Union College.
Copy !req
741. I'm on a first-name basis
with the Dallas County D.A., Ms. Perry.
Copy !req
742. You might get
away from Varick, but not from me.
Copy !req
743. I'm not running from
anybody. Dr. Varick knows I'm leaving.
Copy !req
744. He even helped me
fill out the grant application.
Copy !req
745. What?
What's the matter?
Copy !req
746. Don't you know when
you're being set up?
Copy !req
747. You signed those evaluations.
He testified he relied on your judgment.
Copy !req
748. When it hits the fan,
he'll duck and let you take it in the face.
Copy !req
749. He wouldn't do that.
We both stand behind our work.
Copy !req
750. With his prestige
on the line?
Copy !req
751. It'll be your
word against his.
Copy !req
752. And as you
pointed out,
Copy !req
753. he makes a much better
witness than you do.
Copy !req
754. Who knows, he might
even convince us.
Copy !req
755. Two months ago,
I told him Alan was relapsing.
Copy !req
756. He examined him.
He said I was wrong. Alan was fine.
Copy !req
757. Was he? No.
Copy !req
758. All of his symptoms
returned. The voices, visual hallucinations, the works.
Copy !req
759. But Dr. Varick kept
him on the T489
Copy !req
760. and he told me to keep
his evaluations high.
Copy !req
761. Did he tell you why?
Copy !req
762. He'd convinced the drug
company Alan was the poster boy for T489.
Copy !req
763. They were happy
and he wanted to keep them happy.
Copy !req
764. And keep the grant
money flowing. Hmm.
Copy !req
765. I felt so sorry for
Alan. He knew the drug wasn't working.
Copy !req
766. He was so helpless
and so scared.
Copy !req
767. He thought everyone
was out to get him.
Copy !req
768. Did he threaten
to hurt anyone?
Copy !req
769. Yes.
Copy !req
770. He talked about
Greg Franklin.
Copy !req
771. He said he had
orders to kill him.
Copy !req
772. I told Dr. Varick,
but he didn't think Alan was serious.
Copy !req
773. What about you?
Copy !req
774. I just crossed my fingers.
Copy !req
775. I just talked
to Alan's lawyer.
Copy !req
776. I told him what
Jill Perry said. We have a deal?
Copy !req
777. Alan goes to criminal
detention at Bellevue.
Copy !req
778. He doesn't get out
until two doctors of our choosing say so.
Copy !req
779. Good. Next case.
Copy !req
780. People v. Christian Varick.
Copy !req
781. Yeah.
On what charge, perjury?
Copy !req
782. A violent schizophrenic
threatened to kill Greg Franklin.
Copy !req
783. Varick knew
and did nothing.
Copy !req
784. He recklessly caused
Greg Franklin's death.
Copy !req
785. Man two.
Copy !req
786. I like it.
Pick him up.
Copy !req
787. The statute's clear,
Your Honor. The defendant has to cause the death.
Copy !req
788. By being aware of
Copy !req
789. and consciously disregarding
a substantial and unjustifiable risk.
Copy !req
790. That's very clear.
Copy !req
791. There's nothing
reckless here, Jack.
Copy !req
792. At worst, it's an
error in judgment.
Copy !req
793. His work is as
much art as science.
Copy !req
794. It's mostly hubris.
Copy !req
795. He could've
hospitalized Alan,
Copy !req
796. changed his medication,
warned Greg Franklin.
Copy !req
797. Instead, he told
his research assistant to falsify records.
Copy !req
798. I had legitimate
reasons for keeping Alan on the experimental drug.
Copy !req
799. I was convinced
he'd bounce back.
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800. Your Honor, there are
other remedies available.
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801. The People are trying
to criminalize medical malpractice.
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802. Lawsuits are fine
for Alan Sawyer
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803. and for Greg
Franklin's family.
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804. The People are entitled
to their own remedy in this court.
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805. Agreed. Your Honor,
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806. research is
about taking risks.
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807. If you let them
put me on trial,
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808. you will be sending a chill
through the entire scientific community.
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809. It's a risk I'm
willing to take.
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810. Mr. McCoy, is there
any way to work this out?
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811. He pleads to criminally
negligent homicide,
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812. he serves three years,
he gives up his license.
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813. He pleads misdemeanor
assault for withholding care from Mr. Sawyer.
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814. One-year probation.
He keeps his license.
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815. That's unacceptable.
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816. Then I guess I'll
see you all in court.
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817. People's 27.
Alan's evaluations.
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818. Take it to projects
and have it blown up 200%.
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819. 200%. How about 500%?
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820. You don't want
the jury to have to squint.
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821. 200.
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822. Get used to working
on a budget. Next.
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823. Speaking of...
Varick's research budget. Relevant?
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824. Let me see Alan's file.
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825. Budget line item eight,
32 PET scans ordered at $1500 a pop.
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826. That's two for every
patient in Varick's study.
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827. No record of any scan here.
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828. Check the summaries
of the other patient files.
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829. No PET scans
for any of them.
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830. Either they're missing
or they were never done in the first place.
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831. Talk to Alan.
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832. I think about him,
you know.
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833. I see his face.
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834. I can't believe
I did that to someone.
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835. You weren't
responsible, Alan.
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836. I'm taking new drugs
now. I don't hear the voices as much.
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837. Do you remember
getting a brain scan for Dr. Varick's study?
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838. A PET scan?
Yeah, sure.
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839. When you first
signed up for the study?
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840. No, later, after the drug
started wearing off. Varick went with me.
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841. Do you remember
where you went?
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842. Somewhere on the West Side.
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843. Sawyer, Alan.
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844. This is just
a billing receipt.
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845. Don't you have
a copy of the scan?
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846. That's stored
in the computer.Do you mind?
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847. No.
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848. We did a coronal
section of the brain
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849. from the top of the skull
down to the brain stem.
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850. You said this
kid was diagnosed as schizophrenic?
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851. That's right.
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852. Well, this tells me
somebody didn't do their homework.
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853. Sit down.
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854. What's going on, Jack?
This is supposed to be a plea conference.
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855. We'll get to that
just as soon as you take a seat.
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856. We uncovered
some new evidence
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857. we just couldn't
wait to tell you about.
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858. This is a PET scan
of Alan's brain.
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859. Which your client ordered
three months into the study.
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860. The same week
Jill Perry told him Alan was in relapse.
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861. Doctor, why don't you
tell us what that red area means?
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862. Come on, Doctor.
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863. I want to hear
it from you.
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864. It means that
I'm going to die.
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865. I'm not schizophrenic.
I have a tumor.
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866. That's why
I heard the voices.
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867. That's why I've
been acting like this.
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868. Alan has a brain tumor,
which at one point may have been operable.
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869. But your client
mistook its effects
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870. for the symptoms
of schizophrenia.
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871. That's why PET scans
are routinely ordered
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872. at the beginning of
any research study into schizophrenia.
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873. But you never ordered them
for any of your patients.
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874. There was a reason
for that.
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875. The company wanted
to get to the FDA as soon as possible.
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876. They gave me six months... Chris, please...
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877. to do the test. Please...
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878. It took one month to
find the test subjects.
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879. There wasn't time
to do the scans.
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880. But you found the time
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881. when Alan stopped
responding to the medication.
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882. That's when you
found the tumor,
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883. but you never did
nothing about it. Why?
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884. You didn't want anyone
to know you were a hack, isn't that right?
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885. All right, come on,
Jack. That's enough.
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886. You bullied your
research assistant,
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887. you defrauded
the drug company,
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888. you allowed
a man to be murdered.
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889. You sentenced
this boy to death
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890. just to cover up
for your incompetence.
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891. I never...
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892. Chris, for God's
sakes, shut up.
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893. Do you want to know
how much longer they say I have?
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894. A year, maybe two.
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895. You bastard.
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896. You let me kill him.
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897. And now,
you've killed me.
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898. When the time comes,
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899. I'm adding
another count to the indictment.
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900. Murder two.
Depraved indifference.
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901. I'm sure Varick's
still convinced of his own competence.
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902. Fact is, he's just
an extreme example of what most of us do.
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903. Everyone cuts
corners, Jack.
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904. Maybe where you come from.
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905. I'll read your briefs
more carefully in the future.
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906. What?
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907. I was just wondering
if there's a motorcycle mechanic out there
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908. keeping his
fingers crossed.
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