1. In the
criminal justice system,
Copy !req
2. the people are represented
by two separate yet equally important groups,
Copy !req
3. the police
who investigate crime
Copy !req
4. and the district attorneys
who prosecute the offenders.
Copy !req
5. These are their stories.
Copy !req
6. Honey, your leashing
is too slack. Shorten up.
Copy !req
7. I said shorten, Ryan.
That's better.
Copy !req
8. Never had any complaints
about my leashing before.
Copy !req
9. Don't worry.
I'm a master at teaching old dogs new tricks.
Copy !req
10. Oh, my God!
Copy !req
11. Decedent is a female,
blond, early 30s, name of Karin Burdett.
Copy !req
12. Looks like she fell,
or jumped from the building.
Copy !req
13. Her place
on the 18th floor has a balcony.
Copy !req
14. Who ID'd her? The doorman.
Copy !req
15. Says her husband
is president of some drug company.
Copy !req
16. Did he see her fall?
Copy !req
17. He says
he was on break.
Copy !req
18. Excuse me,
is Mr. Burdett around?
Copy !req
19. I called upstairs
right when it happened. He wasn't in.
Copy !req
20. What time was that?
Copy !req
21. 11:45 or so.
Copy !req
22. He might have slipped back
in while I was on my break. I better check.
Copy !req
23. You notice what time
he went out this morning?
Copy !req
24. No, I must have missed it.
I might have been on a break then, too.
Copy !req
25. Three breaks in one morning?
You must have one hell of a union.
Copy !req
26. What I have
is a prostate condition. Oh, wait, there he is.
Copy !req
27. Let him in,
Copy !req
28. Mr. Burdett,
we're with the police.
Copy !req
29. Yes, what's wrong?
What happened here?
Copy !req
30. I'm afraid it's about
your wife, sir.
Copy !req
31. My wife?
I was just at the pharmacy getting her prescription.
Copy !req
32. Karin! Take it easy, Mr. Burdett.
Copy !req
33. There's nothing
you can do for her now.
Copy !req
34. Take it easy. All right.
Copy !req
35. All right.
Sit over here.
Copy !req
36. Come on.
Copy !req
37. We got you.
You're gonna be okay.
Copy !req
38. All right,
you just try to relax.
Copy !req
39. We're gonna come
back and talk to you in a minute. All right?
Copy !req
40. Guy is president
of a drug company,
Copy !req
41. and he still has to
schlepp to the drugstore like the rest of us.
Copy !req
42. What do you think
she needed? Happy pills?
Copy !req
43. I hope he got
some for himself.
Copy !req
44. It's Desyrel.
An anti-depressant. Karin had a bad night.
Copy !req
45. What time did you
leave this morning?
Copy !req
46. About 10:00.
Copy !req
47. The pharmacy
doesn't deliver?
Copy !req
48. They said it would
take two hours.
Copy !req
49. Was your wife
expecting anybody?
Copy !req
50. No. She'd taken
some sleeping pills.
Copy !req
51. She was groggy.
She was in no shape to see anyone.
Copy !req
52. Mr. Burdett, did she ever
talk about suicide?
Copy !req
53. No.
Copy !req
54. Clemente,
what have you got?
Copy !req
55. Latent pulled some
nice prints off the door,
Copy !req
56. and over here
on the railing.
Copy !req
57. This where she went off? Uh-huh.
Copy !req
58. Looks like
she stumbled around, knocked over these pots.
Copy !req
59. Hey, Lennie.
Copy !req
60. Well, we got sleeping pills,
broken flower pots...
Copy !req
61. And we got this.
Copy !req
62. Parlodel?
Copy !req
63. It's used
to stop lactation.
Copy !req
64. So where's the baby?
Copy !req
65. CURTIS: Mr. Burdett,
Copy !req
66. these Parlodel for your wife.
Do you know why she was taking them?
Copy !req
67. She gave birth to a girl
three weeks ago.
Copy !req
68. Is the baby staying
with someone else?
Copy !req
69. We gave it up for adoption.
Copy !req
70. Well, how did Mrs. Burdett
feel about that?
Copy !req
71. It was understood
when we were married
Copy !req
72. I didn't want
any more children.
Copy !req
73. I have a teenage son
by my first marriage.
Copy !req
74. When Karin got pregnant,
we discussed it again.
Copy !req
75. In the end it just
didn't make sense.
Copy !req
76. She had two partially
digested Halcion tablets in her stomach.
Copy !req
77. She was feeling pretty good.
Copy !req
78. Good enough to make
it over a railing?
Copy !req
79. She might have managed it.
Copy !req
80. You said she was
taking Parlodel?
Copy !req
81. That's right.
Copy !req
82. The panel didn't pick
up any in her blood.
Copy !req
83. She hadn't taken it
for at least three days.
Copy !req
84. It takes that long
to clear the system.
Copy !req
85. So she stopped taking them.
Maybe they were upsetting her stomach.
Copy !req
86. Or she was getting ready
to take the baby back.
Copy !req
87. What's that?
Copy !req
88. You're jumping ahead.
It's an abraded contusion.
Copy !req
89. Back of her right wrist.
Copy !req
90. From the fall?
Copy !req
91. From having her arm
twisted, hard.
Copy !req
92. He's 57 years old, Lennie.
Copy !req
93. How would you like to
do diaper duty again?
Copy !req
94. Yeah, if that happened to me,
I'd jump off the roof.
Copy !req
95. Look, she would have
fought back. There'd be marks on him.
Copy !req
96. She was too
doped up to fight.
Copy !req
97. You talk to
Burdett's pharmacy?
Copy !req
98. They remember he was there,
but they don't know when or for how long.
Copy !req
99. Still, it's a ten minute trip
he says took him an hour.
Copy !req
100. One vote she was pushed,
one vote she jumped.
Copy !req
101. Van Buren.
Copy !req
102. Could you hold on?
Copy !req
103. See if forensics
can break the tie.
Copy !req
104. And could you
close the door please?
Copy !req
105. Boyfriend?
Copy !req
106. Mrs. Van Buren?
Copy !req
107. No. I heard she took
the Captain's exam. Usually means a transfer.
Copy !req
108. Just when I was
getting used to her sunny disposition.
Copy !req
109. We'll do
another drop,
Copy !req
110. but so far
we keep getting the same results.
Copy !req
111. If we just drop the dummy,
it lands in the water,
Copy !req
112. 56 inches short
of where your victim landed.
Copy !req
113. What if she
had pushed off the rail when she jumped?
Copy !req
114. Gets her maybe a foot
closer to the target.
Copy !req
115. She needed a nice big shove
to land where she did.
Copy !req
116. So much for
May-December romances.
Copy !req
117. It's enough to
make me a cynic.
Copy !req
118. You know, Lennie,
Karin Burdett's obstetrician
Copy !req
119. was the one who prescribed
the anti-depressant.
Copy !req
120. She must have
gotten an earful about the adoption.
Copy !req
121. I spent a grand
on a malpractice seminar in Curaçao.
Copy !req
122. Besides finding out
I'm too old for Mai Tais,
Copy !req
123. I learned never to
talk out of school.
Copy !req
124. Your patient is dead,
Dr. Frieder.
Copy !req
125. I doubt she'd mind
if you violate her privilege.
Copy !req
126. Her estate might.
Copy !req
127. You mean her husband?
Copy !req
128. He's the murder suspect.
Copy !req
129. Well, if it makes
you feel any better, Doc,
Copy !req
130. patient chit-chat
isn't privileged.
Copy !req
131. That includes anything
non-medical she might have said to you
Copy !req
132. about wanting to
revoke the adoption.
Copy !req
133. She had been
very ambivalent all along about giving it away.
Copy !req
134. She had 30 days
after the adoption to change her mind.
Copy !req
135. I don't know if she
took any legal steps.
Copy !req
136. Did she tell you
how her husband felt about it?
Copy !req
137. No. But I don't think
he was very supportive.
Copy !req
138. He didn't even show up
for the ultrasound.
Copy !req
139. Too much going on at work.
Copy !req
140. Do you know which adoption
agency they used?
Copy !req
141. They went
through a baby broker. I don't know his name.
Copy !req
142. Well, who did you
hand the baby off to after the delivery?
Copy !req
143. I wasn't at the delivery.
Copy !req
144. What, another
surf-and-sand seminar?
Copy !req
145. I was right here.
They were in Trenton, New Jersey. At City Hospital.
Copy !req
146. A public hospital?
Copy !req
147. Sure, I remember
the Burdetts.
Copy !req
148. Our patients don't usually
pay with a platinum card.
Copy !req
149. And a very close,
loving couple they were.
Copy !req
150. While she was
delivering the baby, he's on a cell phone.
Copy !req
151. Half an hour after
that baby's born,
Copy !req
152. a lawyer shows up
in a limo and signs it out.
Copy !req
153. So you'd have his name
and number in the Burdetts' file.
Copy !req
154. Yes. That's where we keep
confidential information.
Copy !req
155. Oh, come on.
You show me his number, and I'll show you mine.
Copy !req
156. And I guarantee,
you'll have more fun with me
Copy !req
157. than I'm gonna
have with him.
Copy !req
158. I don't think so, Romeo.
Copy !req
159. Last week, a young woman
came in here wanting to get in touch with the Burdetts.
Copy !req
160. Who was she?I don't know,
Copy !req
161. but she didn't get
anything out of me either.
Copy !req
162. And she was a whole
lot cuter than you. Excuse me.
Copy !req
163. I knew it.
Copy !req
164. So what do you think?
The adoptive mother?
Copy !req
165. Well, if she got word
Karin Burdett was making a move
Copy !req
166. to get
the kid back...
Copy !req
167. Remember Baby M?
That got very nasty.
Copy !req
168. Yeah, but they don't
give babies back to dead people.
Copy !req
169. We got to find
these parents.
Copy !req
170. We can try to get
the adoption papers unsealed.
Copy !req
171. By then, the kid will be
getting her first hickey. Oh, Miss.
Copy !req
172. Our lawyer said
that no one was supposed to know who we were.
Copy !req
173. How did you guys... His car service.
Copy !req
174. They drove him here
with the baby.
Copy !req
175. And the hospital told us
you tried to contact the biological parents.
Copy !req
176. I didn't know we were
breaking any laws.
Copy !req
177. Why were you
looking for them?
Copy !req
178. We waited five years
to get a child.
Copy !req
179. I wrote them
a letter to thank them,
Copy !req
180. and to let them know
that Maggie was in a good home.
Copy !req
181. Mr. Tooley wouldn't
pass it on to them.
Copy !req
182. So I found out
where Maggie was born.
Copy !req
183. Did you ever talk
to the parents?
Copy !req
184. No. The hospital wouldn't
give me their name.
Copy !req
185. Where were you last
Sunday morning?
Copy !req
186. We were at a friend's house
in Astoria Park with Ellen's parents.
Copy !req
187. They were visiting
from Indiana.
Copy !req
188. We'll need to talk
to your friend.
Copy !req
189. Why? What's going on?
Copy !req
190. The baby's mother
was found dead last Sunday.
Copy !req
191. Oh, my God.
What happened?
Copy !req
192. We're not sure.
Copy !req
193. Anyone ever tell you
that she wanted to revoke the adoption?
Copy !req
194. No.
Copy !req
195. I can't believe this.
Copy !req
196. Excuse me.
Copy !req
197. Do they want Maggie back?
Copy !req
198. The mother
might have.
Copy !req
199. We don't know
about the father.
Copy !req
200. Well, 12 more days
and it's official. She's ours.
Copy !req
201. I don't think you have
anything to worry about, Mr. O'Brien.
Copy !req
202. We can't even remember
what life was like without her. It was...
Copy !req
203. Isn't she beautiful?
Copy !req
204. Hello, baby.
Copy !req
205. It explains
a lot, Mr. Burdett.
Copy !req
206. The hospital in Trenton,
the lateral pass to the baby broker.
Copy !req
207. Whatever difficulties
Karin and I had,
Copy !req
208. we worked out
like civilized people.
Copy !req
209. Let me get this straight.
Copy !req
210. Your wife cheats
on you with... What's his name?
Copy !req
211. I don't know.
She wouldn't tell me.
Copy !req
212. Okay, so she gets pregnant.
Copy !req
213. Now, you don't kick her out,
you don't slap her around.
Copy !req
214. You even let her
have the baby. Because you're so civilized?
Copy !req
215. Yes.
Copy !req
216. Nobody is that
civilized, Josh.
Copy !req
217. Yeah, all right,
maybe if it was one of your country club pals.
Copy !req
218. But she was sweating up
the sheets with some big good-looking black stud.
Copy !req
219. That can really
piss some people off.
Copy !req
220. You that kind
of people, Mr. Burdett?
Copy !req
221. No.
Copy !req
222. If she gets the baby back,
everybody is gonna know.
Copy !req
223. Stop it.
Copy !req
224. She was playing
Scarlett O'Hara with Mandingo!
Copy !req
225. Enough. That's enough.
Copy !req
226. I did not kill Karin.
Copy !req
227. Now, I've said
all I want to say.
Copy !req
228. I came here voluntarily.
Now, I'm leaving.
Copy !req
229. If you want to talk to me
again, contact my attorney.
Copy !req
230. This guy could
keep snowflakes in his mouth.
Copy !req
231. Well, if he killed her,
it's probably not
Copy !req
232. the first time
he laid a hand on her.
Copy !req
233. You check with
the local precinct?
Copy !req
234. Yeah. No record
of domestic calls.
Copy !req
235. We asked the neighbors.
The walls are thick.
Copy !req
236. They wouldn't have heard
him if he shot her out of a cannon.
Copy !req
237. She have a job? Yeah.
Copy !req
238. Resource Development
at the Shuman Foundation for Women.
Copy !req
239. It's a charity.
Copy !req
240. Well, if it's anything
like this place, everybody knows her business.
Copy !req
241. I do know she and Mr. Burdett
were having some problems over her pregnancy.
Copy !req
242. You mean,
they had arguments? Physical arguments?
Copy !req
243. God, no. I didn't mean
to give you the wrong impression.
Copy !req
244. I just overheard
a phone call.
Copy !req
245. She was pretty furious.
Copy !req
246. What did she say?
Copy !req
247. I just heard a little.
She said something like,
Copy !req
248. "It's your baby.
It's damn time you took responsibility for it."
Copy !req
249. Maybe not those
exact words.
Copy !req
250. Are you sure she was
talking to Mr. Burdett?
Copy !req
251. Well, I assumed
it was him.
Copy !req
252. Could it possibly have
been somebody else?
Copy !req
253. No.
Copy !req
254. You mean...
Copy !req
255. No, not Mrs. Burdett.
I would have picked up on something like that.
Copy !req
256. Who would have figured
in an office full of women, she kept her affair a secret?
Copy !req
257. You'd expect
she'd put a star next to her rendezvous?
Copy !req
258. Depends how good
her boyfriend is. Here we go.
Copy !req
259. Ian Fraser, Esquire.
Matrimonial Law.
Copy !req
260. She was fooling around
with a divorce lawyer?
Copy !req
261. No, I think this
was business.
Copy !req
262. She had an appointment
with him two weeks ago.
Copy !req
263. Maybe she chose
the baby over Burdett.
Copy !req
264. "Morris Keach,
Vice President of RLH Contracting
Copy !req
265. "and Co-Chairman
of the Saint Vincent's Children's Foundation."
Copy !req
266. Here he is accepting
a $10,000 check from Karin Burdett.
Copy !req
267. And here he is
sharing a cocktail with her at a Foundation luncheon.
Copy !req
268. If they were any cozier,
he'd be sharing his pants with her.
Copy !req
269. And he's the right
complexion.
Copy !req
270. We got friendly last year,
when I solicited her Foundation for a grant.
Copy !req
271. She called me up
and asked me to lunch.
Copy !req
272. Just like that?
Out of the blue? What did she want?
Copy !req
273. Best I could figure,
Copy !req
274. she wanted to talk
about my kids. I have three.
Copy !req
275. She wanted to know
what it's like raising them in the city.
Copy !req
276. She was looking for
a good nursery school?
Copy !req
277. No. Raising them
as African Americans.
Copy !req
278. What kind of problems
they might run into.
Copy !req
279. She was thinking
of adopting an African American baby.
Copy !req
280. Actually, Mr. Keach,
she gave birth to one.
Copy !req
281. Really?
Copy !req
282. You think I'm the father?
That's nuts.
Copy !req
283. Look, Mr. Keach,
you got yourself in a jam. We can understand that.
Copy !req
284. And Karin Burdett
wouldn't let you off the hook.
Copy !req
285. She expected help
with the baby.
Copy !req
286. Now I know you're nuts.
Copy !req
287. Yeah?
Where were you on Sunday morning?
Copy !req
288. I went running
at the reservoir. This is unbelievable.
Copy !req
289. I did not sleep
with Karin Burdett.
Copy !req
290. So prove it to us.
Take a paternity test.
Copy !req
291. I want to talk
to a lawyer first.
Copy !req
292. He'll tell you we
can get a warrant.
Copy !req
293. Well, then get one.
Copy !req
294. Until the adoption is final,
the O'Briens are a little gun-shy.
Copy !req
295. That's why they asked me
to talk to you about this paternity test.
Copy !req
296. It's very simple.
Copy !req
297. The police think whoever
killed Karin Burdett is the baby's father.
Copy !req
298. They have a suspect,
they'd like to establish paternity.
Copy !req
299. What's in it
for the O'Briens?
Copy !req
300. Nothing.
Copy !req
301. Isn't doing
your civic duty its own reward?
Copy !req
302. It's a headache
they don't need.
Copy !req
303. Mr. Brody, we're talking
about a small blood sample from the baby.
Copy !req
304. So you can determine
that her father murdered her mother?
Copy !req
305. Little Maggie already has
more baggage than Greyhound.
Copy !req
306. She's got inherited
megaloblastic anemia. She's got asthma.
Copy !req
307. The O'Briens'
cup runneth over.
Copy !req
308. We feel badly for them,
but we have a situation.
Copy !req
309. Well, let me talk to them.
Copy !req
310. Ross is getting
the big stall from the O'Briens.
Copy !req
311. Keach's lawyer
won't let him go anywhere near a needle.
Copy !req
312. Can you bust
his alibi?
Copy !req
313. He was running
by himself.
Copy !req
314. We showed his picture
around the reservoir. Nobody remembers him.
Copy !req
315. Toss it back to the D.A.
Let them worry about the paternity test.
Copy !req
316. Actually, there might be
another way to hook up Keach to the baby.
Copy !req
317. The kid has an inherited
medical condition. Megaloblastic anemia.
Copy !req
318. So either Karin Burdett
or Keach would have had to pass it on.
Copy !req
319. The M.E. said whoever
passed it on to the kid would be taking medication.
Copy !req
320. Large doses
of folic acid.
Copy !req
321. Well, here's the inventory
from the Burdetts' medicine cabinet.
Copy !req
322. Folate,
one milligram tablets.
Copy !req
323. Wait a minute,
that's not right.
Copy !req
324. This prescription
is made out to Joshua Burdett.
Copy !req
325. He's the father?
He's black?
Copy !req
326. Maybe the pharmacy
made a mistake.
Copy !req
327. Or maybe he's taking
it as a supplement.
Copy !req
328. I heard it's good
for thinning hair.
Copy !req
329. Burdett has
an ex-wife, right?
Copy !req
330. Ask her
if he has anemia.
Copy !req
331. Yes, Josh has
the condition.
Copy !req
332. We were worried
that he might pass it on to our son David,
Copy !req
333. but we were lucky.
Copy !req
334. Mrs. Houston,
as far as you know,
Copy !req
335. what's your ex-husband's
ethnic background?
Copy !req
336. Burdett is an old
Anglo-Scottish name.
Copy !req
337. And his mother,
I think, was French-Italian.
Copy !req
338. Did you ever meet
his relatives or see any pictures of them?
Copy !req
339. Josh was an only child,
and his parents died when he was very young.
Copy !req
340. What are you getting at?
Copy !req
341. His late wife gave birth
to a baby with megaloblastic anemia.
Copy !req
342. The baby was part black.
Copy !req
343. That's... Oh, what about
Karin's parentage?
Copy !req
344. Danish. About as
white as you can get.
Copy !req
345. Excuse me.
Copy !req
346. David, would you and Veronica
go upstairs please, until I'm finished?
Copy !req
347. Thank you, honey.
Copy !req
348. You saw my son.
He's not black.
Copy !req
349. And neither is Josh.
Copy !req
350. I'm sorry, Mrs. Houston,
but this baby...
Copy !req
351. Karin was unstable.
Copy !req
352. I called Josh
that Sunday morning.
Copy !req
353. He had to go out
and get her some pills.
Copy !req
354. I could hear her
screaming like a banshee.
Copy !req
355. She was capable
of anything with anybody.
Copy !req
356. We've already
been down that road.
Copy !req
357. Josh is not black.
Copy !req
358. I was married to him
for nineteen years. I'd know.
Copy !req
359. Your lawyer
is on his way in.
Copy !req
360. To pass the time,
let's talk about you volunteering a blood sample.
Copy !req
361. For what?
Copy !req
362. A paternity test.
Copy !req
363. You and that baby
you can't run away from fast enough.
Copy !req
364. That's ridiculous.
I'm not the father.
Copy !req
365. Well, you both
have the same anemia.
Copy !req
366. So do thousands
of other people.
Copy !req
367. First I killed Karin
because she had a child by another man.
Copy !req
368. Then I killed her
because she had my child?
Copy !req
369. Because she wanted
to keep your child.
Copy !req
370. And because everybody
in your just-us-white-folks executive suite
Copy !req
371. was gonna find out
you're black, Josh.
Copy !req
372. That's absurd.
I mean, look at me.
Copy !req
373. I want to talk to him.
Copy !req
374. Hello, my brother.
Copy !req
375. Damn, look at you.
Copy !req
376. You did it. You passed.
Copy !req
377. You know, I thought up
close I'd be able to tell, but I swear, I can't.
Copy !req
378. So what's it like
when it's just you and them?
Copy !req
379. You laugh along when
they tell the jokes?
Copy !req
380. Oh, you know what
I'm talking about, right?
Copy !req
381. Or do you tell
nigger jokes, too, just to keep up appearances?
Copy !req
382. If you don't mind.
Copy !req
383. Oh, am I sitting too close?
What, I remind you of somebody? Your mother?
Copy !req
384. Was she dark-skinned?
High yellow?
Copy !req
385. Redbone?
Copy !req
386. You're scared now,
aren't you?
Copy !req
387. You been scared
for almost 40 years.
Copy !req
388. And all that fear
came gushing out Sunday morning.
Copy !req
389. You panicked.
Isn't that right?
Copy !req
390. You go ahead.
Tell me what happened.
Copy !req
391. Take the weight off,
my brother. You'll feel better.
Copy !req
392. I'm Mr. Burdett's attorney.
Copy !req
393. You mind telling me
what my client is doing here?
Copy !req
394. We're arresting your client
for the murder of his wife.
Copy !req
395. Take him down
to booking.
Copy !req
396. Josh Burdett,
you're under arrest.
Copy !req
397. You have the right
to remain silent.
Copy !req
398. Anything you do say can
and will be used against you in a court of law.
Copy !req
399. You have the right
to an attorney...
Copy !req
400. It seems he had
everybody fooled.
Copy !req
401. His whole life
was a charade. It's pathetic.
Copy !req
402. Maybe 30, 40 years ago
it made more sense.
Copy !req
403. Back then
they had lynch mobs and bullwhips.
Copy !req
404. Now they use
toilet plungers. Progress.
Copy !req
405. You confirmed
that he's the father of this child?
Copy !req
406. We're just waiting
for a blood sample from the baby.
Copy !req
407. What else? Weak alibi.
Copy !req
408. Forensics to establish
the manner of death.
Copy !req
409. His motive being that
he didn't want anyone to know he was black. Why?
Copy !req
410. Shame, loss of friends,
his work.
Copy !req
411. I can just imagine
what he was afraid of.
Copy !req
412. Don't imagine it.
Prove it.
Copy !req
413. Madeline's phone number.
I promised her you'd call.
Copy !req
414. Ross. Yeah.
Copy !req
415. Since when?
We'll get right on it.
Copy !req
416. That was Curtis.
The adoptive mother
Copy !req
417. has disappeared
with the baby.
Copy !req
418. I don't know
where they are.
Copy !req
419. She left
without telling you?
Copy !req
420. What's it to you?
Copy !req
421. They can come
and go as they please.
Copy !req
422. That child's paternity
is evidence in a murder.
Copy !req
423. I'm her father.
Copy !req
424. You're crazy if you think
I'm gonna help you to prove Burdett is anything.
Copy !req
425. Why? What are you
worried about?
Copy !req
426. If Mr. Burdett turns out
to be the biological father,
Copy !req
427. it gives him legal standing
to revoke the adoption.
Copy !req
428. His wife wanted
our baby back. Maybe he does, too.
Copy !req
429. Who told you that?
Was it Mr. Burdett?
Copy !req
430. Did he threaten you
or pay you to do this?
Copy !req
431. The paternity test
could help convict Burdett of murder.
Copy !req
432. No judge will ever grant
custody to a murderer.
Copy !req
433. Tell that to
the Simpson kids.
Copy !req
434. Mr. O'Brien, I have
a court order for the paternity test.
Copy !req
435. I can compel you
to tell us where your child is.
Copy !req
436. What are you going to do,
cite him for contempt?
Copy !req
437. His position is,
he doesn't know
Copy !req
438. where his wife
and baby are. Period.
Copy !req
439. We need that test.
Copy !req
440. We need to turn up
the heat on O'Brien.
Copy !req
441. If he's getting
paid off by Burdett,
Copy !req
442. he's on the hook
for a lot more than contempt.
Copy !req
443. I'll get Briscoe
and Curtis on it.
Copy !req
444. Then talk to
Burdett's employers. Let's nail down his motive.
Copy !req
445. You can't be right, Ms. Ross.
Josh is a straight arrow.
Copy !req
446. If he says he's white,
he's white.
Copy !req
447. He checked white
on his application.
Copy !req
448. I thought it was illegal
to ask an applicant's race.
Copy !req
449. It is now.
That was filled out in 1963. The bad old days.
Copy !req
450. What if he'd said
he was black?
Copy !req
451. He was hired
as a sales associate in our Richmond office.
Copy !req
452. The market
was southern doctors and pharmacists.
Copy !req
453. The application would have
ended up in the trash.
Copy !req
454. And now?
If the company found out he was African American?
Copy !req
455. Now? Hell, we'd probably
put him on the board.
Copy !req
456. Cheaper
than Colin Powell.
Copy !req
457. You're wrong about Josh.
I've known the man for twenty years,
Copy !req
458. and I never saw any hint
Copy !req
459. he was anything
but what he said he was.
Copy !req
460. What kind of hints
were you looking for?
Copy !req
461. Well, for example,
Copy !req
462. there was a young black man
a couple of years ago. Shawn Taitt.
Copy !req
463. A real comer
Josh put under his wing.
Copy !req
464. Then one day, he's gone.
Josh had enough of the attitude.
Copy !req
465. Everything was
"black this, black that."
Copy !req
466. Mr. Burdett fired him?
Copy !req
467. And get us sued?
Copy !req
468. Josh promoted him
to our office in Duluth.
Copy !req
469. One sub-zero winter,
and Taitt got the idea. He quit.
Copy !req
470. Mr. Burdett told
your colleagues you had an attitude problem.
Copy !req
471. Maybe that's what
he told them, but we got along fine
Copy !req
472. until I found out
he was from Knoxville.
Copy !req
473. What, you don't like
people from Knoxville?
Copy !req
474. I told him
I had family there.
Copy !req
475. And they knew
a Burdett family.
Copy !req
476. A black family. Mmm-hmm.
Copy !req
477. A month later I was
shipped off to Duluth.
Copy !req
478. Did you suspect why?
Copy !req
479. Mmm-hmm.
He was passing.
Copy !req
480. You could have sued.
Copy !req
481. Why make trouble for the man?
He's a whole other generation.
Copy !req
482. I can just imagine
what he went through,
Copy !req
483. being a black kid
in Tennessee in the '50s.
Copy !req
484. That's the fourteenth
Burdett I've spoken to in Knoxville.
Copy !req
485. Not one of them will
claim Josh Burdett.
Copy !req
486. What about birth records?
Copy !req
487. They're in the Knox
county clerk's office.
Copy !req
488. They're working on it,
but it might take some time.
Copy !req
489. There's nothing in
his personal records either. No birth certificate,
Copy !req
490. no relatives
in his address book, no photos.
Copy !req
491. The paternity test
might be our only way to prove he's black.
Copy !req
492. What's happening
with the O'Briens?
Copy !req
493. The police haven't
found any pay-offs by Burdett.
Copy !req
494. But they turned up
this check.
Copy !req
495. Leonard Hillman, Esquire.
Twenty thousand dollars.
Copy !req
496. Burdett wrote it a week
before his wife died.
Copy !req
497. Hillman specializes
in employment discrimination claims.
Copy !req
498. Yeah, he sued this office
two years ago.
Copy !req
499. So, what does a white male
executive need with a civil rights attorney?
Copy !req
500. I'll ask.
Copy !req
501. By the way,
how'd it go last night?
Copy !req
502. With Madeline?
She's bright, attractive, funny. As advertised. Thanks.
Copy !req
503. You're welcome.
Copy !req
504. In case you're wondering,
she thought you were charming, passionate.
Copy !req
505. Passionate?
Copy !req
506. About your work.
Copy !req
507. She said you mentioned
Claire Kincaid.
Copy !req
508. Because Madeline's brother
spent three months in the hospital
Copy !req
509. thanks to a drunk driver.
I was not obsessing.
Copy !req
510. Don't worry. For some reason,
she'd like to see you again.
Copy !req
511. Yes, Mr. Burdett
came to see me.
Copy !req
512. No, I can't tell you
what we discussed.
Copy !req
513. Fine. So let's discuss
my problem, Mr. Hillman.
Copy !req
514. Just so happens in
my spare time I'm president of a large company.
Copy !req
515. Go on.
Copy !req
516. This company
doesn't hire women.
Copy !req
517. So I've mislead my employers
and the shareholders by claiming I'm a man.
Copy !req
518. And they fell for it?
Hard to believe.
Copy !req
519. Can I be fired for that?
Copy !req
520. As a general rule,
misrepresentations not material to your work
Copy !req
521. are not grounds
for dismissal.
Copy !req
522. So if they fire me
for lying about my gender, or race,
Copy !req
523. they're liable for a claim
of wrongful termination?
Copy !req
524. Yes. But in the hypothetical,
Copy !req
525. most executives
are employed under personal services contracts,
Copy !req
526. which have standard
provisions for termination for acts of moral turpitude.
Copy !req
527. Such as lying. Yes.
Copy !req
528. But, again
in the hypothetical,
Copy !req
529. that could put
your considerable stocks and pension benefits at risk.
Copy !req
530. You charge the average
executive $20,000 to talk about those risks?
Copy !req
531. No, what Joshua Burdett
paid me is a retainer.
Copy !req
532. 'Cause he thought
he was about to get fired?
Copy !req
533. Because his company
was about to find out he's African American?
Copy !req
534. I can't comment.
Copy !req
535. Burdett has
a retirement package worth over $8,000,000.
Copy !req
536. With stock options,
it's double that.
Copy !req
537. We're in
the wrong business.
Copy !req
538. Burdett concluded
it'd be cheaper to kill his wife.
Copy !req
539. Except he paid
the lawyer a retainer.
Copy !req
540. The lawyer as much
as told me that Burdett and his wife had decided
Copy !req
541. to get their baby back.
Copy !req
542. There goes his motive.
Copy !req
543. Why do you always
give me bad news while I'm digesting?
Copy !req
544. If it's true,
why didn't Burdett tell us?
Copy !req
545. Is there somebody
he's trying to protect?
Copy !req
546. He has an ex-wife
and a teenaged son.
Copy !req
547. Even if Burdett was
willing to take the heat for his decision,
Copy !req
548. maybe they weren't.
Copy !req
549. Will you please find out
what they were doing that Sunday morning?
Copy !req
550. I'll get this.
Copy !req
551. Frances Houston,
Burdett's ex-wife,
Copy !req
552. said she called
him in the morning,
Copy !req
553. just before he went
to the pharmacy. That's confirmed by her LUDs.
Copy !req
554. We got calls on her line
and on her son's,
Copy !req
555. roughly 20 minutes
before and after Mrs. Burdett was killed.
Copy !req
556. They live about 10 minutes
from the Burdetts.
Copy !req
557. So either of them
had the time to do it.
Copy !req
558. But look at these.
Copy !req
559. LUDs from last week.
Ms. Houston got a 12-minute collect call
Copy !req
560. from a convenience store
in Hobart, Indiana.
Copy !req
561. The adoptive mother,
don't her parents live in Indiana?
Copy !req
562. Yes. Look at the next call
Ms. Houston made.
Copy !req
563. Western Union.
Copy !req
564. I doubt she was sending
birthday greetings.
Copy !req
565. Ms. Houston wired $3,000
to a Mrs. Teresa Gaydos in Hobart.
Copy !req
566. She's your mother-in-law,
isn't she?
Copy !req
567. Mr. O'Brien, hindering
prosecution is a felony.
Copy !req
568. If you don't
cooperate now, today, I will prosecute you.
Copy !req
569. You and your wife
will go to jail.
Copy !req
570. You will lose
custody of your baby.
Copy !req
571. Mr. McCoy...
Copy !req
572. I mean it!
Copy !req
573. People who get in the way
of my murder cases get run over.
Copy !req
574. Come on.
Copy !req
575. He tells you
what he knows,
Copy !req
576. you don't press charges
against him or his wife.
Copy !req
577. Let's hear it.
Copy !req
578. Ms. Houston came to us
before Burdett was arrested
Copy !req
579. and she said, "Watch out.
Burdett didn't kill his wife."
Copy !req
580. She said once
he clears himself,
Copy !req
581. he's gonna fight us
for the baby.
Copy !req
582. She told us to take
Maggie out of state. She even offered us money.
Copy !req
583. Did she say why
she was doing this?
Copy !req
584. I can't understand
how an educated woman like her could say it,
Copy !req
585. but she said
Copy !req
586. she didn't want "some
nappy-haired little monkey" ruining her family.
Copy !req
587. Now you don't think
he killed his wife? Thanks for telling us.
Copy !req
588. The bad news is,
we might charge him with hindering prosecution.
Copy !req
589. Prosecution of whom?
Copy !req
590. The police identified
the fingerprints
Copy !req
591. found in your bedroom
and on the balcony.
Copy !req
592. They found yours,
your wife's, your housekeeper's,
Copy !req
593. and your ex-wife's.
Copy !req
594. Frances?
Copy !req
595. She paid the O'Briens
to take the baby out of state.
Copy !req
596. We think she
killed your wife.
Copy !req
597. Anything you want to
tell us, Mr. Burdett?
Copy !req
598. Uh, excuse us.
Copy !req
599. z
Copy !req
600. For now, whatever my client
tells you is off the record.
Copy !req
601. Let's hear it.
Copy !req
602. Before we were married,
I told Karin about my background.
Copy !req
603. It was our secret.
But the pregnancy was a mistake.
Copy !req
604. We argued for weeks
about terminating it.
Copy !req
605. We finally agreed
on the adoption.
Copy !req
606. But after we gave up
our baby, Karin became so unhappy.
Copy !req
607. I loved her,
she wanted our child back,
Copy !req
608. so that's what
we decided to do.
Copy !req
609. That Saturday,
I told my son the truth about everything.
Copy !req
610. The next morning,
Frances called me.
Copy !req
611. She said David was angry
and behaving erratically.
Copy !req
612. She begged me to reconsider.
I said our mind was made up.
Copy !req
613. I didn't know what to think
after Karin died. I called Frances.
Copy !req
614. She said Karin was dead
and we had to protect our son.
Copy !req
615. She told you your son
killed your wife?
Copy !req
616. No.
Copy !req
617. No, not in so many words.
But that's what I understood.
Copy !req
618. That's why
I misled the police.
Copy !req
619. I discussed your offer
with Ms. Houston.
Copy !req
620. I explained that prosecutors
don't just like to beat the other guy.
Copy !req
621. They want him to
limp off the field.
Copy !req
622. No wiggle room,
Ms. Joyner.
Copy !req
623. Manslaughter one,
eight-and-a-third-to-25,
Copy !req
624. or she goes on trial
for murder two.
Copy !req
625. Then you won't
like my counter.
Copy !req
626. Second degree manslaughter,
minimum time.
Copy !req
627. That's unrealistic.
We've got her prints, her pay-offs to the O'Briens.
Copy !req
628. I said man two,
minimum time.
Copy !req
629. Do you really want to
put your son through a trial, Ms. Houston?
Copy !req
630. Let her worry
about her son.
Copy !req
631. Frankly, Ms. Joyner,
I'm surprised you'd represent a bigot.
Copy !req
632. I don't see a bigot here.
I see a woman deceived
Copy !req
633. and pushed to the brink
by a self-hating coward.
Copy !req
634. Everyone at my firm
agrees, Mr. McCoy.
Copy !req
635. No jury will
ever convict her.
Copy !req
636. This trial is about a baby.
Copy !req
637. A child of white
and African American parents.
Copy !req
638. Karin Burdett bore it.
She wanted to raise it.
Copy !req
639. That's why she's dead.
Copy !req
640. The evidence
will show that
Copy !req
641. Frances Houston
knew Karin Burdett was home alone,
Copy !req
642. that she struggled with her,
and pushed her off of a balcony.
Copy !req
643. That she bribed a witness.
Copy !req
644. That she did all this
because she didn't want
Copy !req
645. her narrow-minded
circle of friends
Copy !req
646. to know that she had once
been married to a black man.
Copy !req
647. Because, as she stated
in the vicious vocabulary of racism,
Copy !req
648. she didn't want
a "nappy-haired little monkey"
Copy !req
649. ruining her good name.
Copy !req
650. Mr. McCoy
wants you to believe that my client is a bigot.
Copy !req
651. Well, I'm here to
tell you she's not.
Copy !req
652. She's a realist.
She knows what goes on in America.
Copy !req
653. You'll hear that educated
black men earn far less than their white counterparts.
Copy !req
654. That black men
are denied the access, the promotions,
Copy !req
655. the memberships
given to white men.
Copy !req
656. That black men
are routinely harassed and brutalized by the police.
Copy !req
657. That's what my client
was thinking about.
Copy !req
658. She wanted to
preserve for her son
Copy !req
659. the protection
the word "white" afforded him.
Copy !req
660. She didn't want him
to have a lesser life,
Copy !req
661. because the word "black"
had been added next to his name.
Copy !req
662. If, at the end
of this trial,
Copy !req
663. you believe that
my client caused the death of Karin Burdett,
Copy !req
664. please understand it was
not the premeditated act of a racist,
Copy !req
665. but the unintentional
act of a mother
Copy !req
666. desperate to save
the son she loves.
Copy !req
667. She didn't do it
because she's a racist,
Copy !req
668. she did it to protect
her son from racists.
Copy !req
669. It explains
their witness list.
Copy !req
670. Statisticians,
social scientists.
Copy !req
671. You got to admit,
that's some mitigation defense.
Copy !req
672. Something for
every prejudice.
Copy !req
673. The white jurors
wouldn't want their kids growing up black either.
Copy !req
674. And black jurors
because they know
Copy !req
675. that the playing field
isn't level?
Copy !req
676. If I were the defense,
I wouldn't count on much support there.
Copy !req
677. How many whites
on the jury? More than one?
Copy !req
678. That's all Ms. Houston
needs for a mistrial.
Copy !req
679. If the jury
disregards the facts.
Copy !req
680. Fine, you win their minds,
she wins their hearts.
Copy !req
681. I'm not ready
to concede anything.
Copy !req
682. All we have to do
is convince the jury
Copy !req
683. that her son would be
no worse off living as a black man in this country.
Copy !req
684. You can start by making sure
they never hear from these witnesses.
Copy !req
685. These witnesses
are relevant, Your Honor.
Copy !req
686. Professor Murphy's study
quantifies the economic discrepancies
Copy !req
687. between the races.
Copy !req
688. Professor Harrison's work
on law enforcement practices
Copy !req
689. has been cited
in every...
Copy !req
690. None of which
has anything to do with her client.
Copy !req
691. It goes to
her state of mind,
Copy !req
692. her fear her son
would suffer the fate of many African Americans.
Copy !req
693. Your Honor, if Ms. Joyner
wants to establish her client's state of mind,
Copy !req
694. she can call her
to the stand.
Copy !req
695. Even if I do,
these witnesses are evidence that her beliefs and concerns
Copy !req
696. about racism
in this country are reasonable.
Copy !req
697. There's no question
the beliefs are reasonable.
Copy !req
698. The issue is whether
or not her client actually believes them.
Copy !req
699. We wouldn't be here
if she didn't.
Copy !req
700. Simmer down, counselors.
Copy !req
701. Ms. Joyner, the case
is about the defendant's state of mind,
Copy !req
702. not the state
of the union.
Copy !req
703. And since these witnesses
have no direct knowledge
Copy !req
704. of what your client
was thinking, they're excluded.
Copy !req
705. Now, let's get back
to court.
Copy !req
706. Frances kept telling me
we had to protect David.
Copy !req
707. I felt I had no choice
but to lie to the police.
Copy !req
708. Before this incident,
was the defendant aware you were black?
Copy !req
709. Yes. She found
out six years ago,
Copy !req
710. when my sister
appeared at our door, looking for me.
Copy !req
711. In nearly 20 years
of marriage she had never met your family?
Copy !req
712. No. I'd cut myself
off from them.
Copy !req
713. You see,
when I was a child,
Copy !req
714. my mother always
told me I had "good skin,
Copy !req
715. "good features,
good hair."
Copy !req
716. Back then,
in Knoxville, Tennessee, "good" meant "white."
Copy !req
717. I was often
mistaken for white.
Copy !req
718. I could sit at
the front of the bus,
Copy !req
719. I could drink
at the water fountain reserved for whites.
Copy !req
720. You can't imagine what
an advantage that was
Copy !req
721. when you're bone-dry thirsty
on a hot summer's day
Copy !req
722. and it's another 20 blocks
to a colored water fountain.
Copy !req
723. After college,
I got a good job, because I passed for white.
Copy !req
724. I was promoted, I was
transferred to New York.
Copy !req
725. No one ever asked me
if I was white.
Copy !req
726. Frances had no reason
to question me.
Copy !req
727. After she met
your sister, what happened?
Copy !req
728. She was very upset.
Copy !req
729. She wanted a divorce.
Copy !req
730. In the divorce agreement,
Copy !req
731. were any special conditions
imposed by the defendant?
Copy !req
732. Yes, Frances asked that...
Copy !req
733. Objection.
Approach, Your Honor?
Copy !req
734. Your Honor, the witness
and the defendant signed a binding agreement
Copy !req
735. not to disclose
the terms of their divorce.
Copy !req
736. Without paying
a substantial penalty.
Copy !req
737. Mr. Burdett is willing
to write Ms. Houston a check.
Copy !req
738. There are third parties
to be considered here.
Copy !req
739. Namely,
the defendant's son.
Copy !req
740. Mr. McCoy, what term
of the divorce do you want your witness to testify to?
Copy !req
741. The defendant exacted
his promise that he wouldn't tell anyone he was black.
Copy !req
742. We'll stipulate
to that, Your Honor.
Copy !req
743. All right.
Copy !req
744. Objection sustained.
Copy !req
745. Members of the jury,
Copy !req
746. the defense stipulates
for the record that Mr. Burdett and Ms. Houston
Copy !req
747. agreed as a condition
of their divorce not to disclose Mr. Burdett's race.
Copy !req
748. Go on, Mr. McCoy.
Copy !req
749. No more questions.
Copy !req
750. Mr. Burdett, doesn't the fact
that no one found out you were black
Copy !req
751. prove you're
an accomplished liar?
Copy !req
752. I lied once,
on an application form.
Copy !req
753. After that, the question
never came up.
Copy !req
754. You passed for white
because it gave you an advantage
Copy !req
755. over other
African Americans, isn't that right?
Copy !req
756. Yes.
Copy !req
757. You saw how
blacks were treated
Copy !req
758. by your white friends
and colleagues?
Copy !req
759. Yes.
Copy !req
760. You didn't want that
to happen to you, isn't that right?
Copy !req
761. Yes.
Copy !req
762. Then why make it happen
for your son?
Copy !req
763. Why did you decide
now to come out of the racial closet?
Copy !req
764. Things aren't
the same anymore.
Copy !req
765. Really?
Copy !req
766. When you started at
Northfield Pharmaceuticals,
Copy !req
767. how many black presidents,
vice-presidents and directors were there?
Copy !req
768. None.
Copy !req
769. And now?
Copy !req
770. Three directors,
in Human Resources and Marketing.
Copy !req
771. Out of how many executives?
Ten? Thirty?
Copy !req
772. Nationwide, over 150.
Copy !req
773. Well, the Reverend King
can rest easy.
Copy !req
774. His dream
has finally come to pass.
Copy !req
775. Objection.
Copy !req
776. Withdrawn.
Copy !req
777. There's nothing
in the divorce agreement other than what I told you.
Copy !req
778. I don't want to be
taken by surprise. Why did they object?
Copy !req
779. I have no idea what
Frances was thinking.
Copy !req
780. Now, you'll have
to excuse me.
Copy !req
781. You looked at
the divorce decree, Jack. There was nothing there.
Copy !req
782. Pull the full
record of the divorce.
Copy !req
783. Depositions,
draft agreements, filings, everything.
Copy !req
784. Most of it's
probably sealed.
Copy !req
785. Get a court order.
Copy !req
786. I tried to
reason with Karin.
Copy !req
787. I begged her to think about
Josh's son, and what she would be doing to him.
Copy !req
788. But I wasn't
getting through.
Copy !req
789. What was going
through your mind?
Copy !req
790. All I could
think about was David.
Copy !req
791. How his life
would be changed.
Copy !req
792. All of his friends are white.
And all of their friends are white.
Copy !req
793. I was afraid for him,
for the same reasons that Josh kept secret his...
Copy !req
794. Objection.
Copy !req
795. Sustained.
Copy !req
796. Go on with what happened.
Copy !req
797. Karin said she wasn't
feeling well, and that she needed some air.
Copy !req
798. She went out onto the balcony
and our argument heated up.
Copy !req
799. At one point she was
wagging her finger at me and I slapped it away.
Copy !req
800. And then suddenly
she grabbed my hair and I pushed her.
Copy !req
801. Before I realized
what was happening, she lost her balance
Copy !req
802. and she went
over the balcony.
Copy !req
803. Was that your intent?
Copy !req
804. No.
Copy !req
805. All I could think
about was David.
Copy !req
806. I just wanted
to protect my son, as any mother would.
Copy !req
807. I never thought
to kill Karin.
Copy !req
808. Thank you.
Copy !req
809. Did you seriously
expect Mrs. Burdett to abandon her baby girl
Copy !req
810. for the sake of your son?
Copy !req
811. I don't know what
I expected her to do.
Copy !req
812. I just needed to talk to her.
Copy !req
813. Because you were concerned
that your son's future was in peril
Copy !req
814. if it became known
he was black?
Copy !req
815. Yes.
Copy !req
816. Even in this day and age?
Copy !req
817. Oh, yes, Mr. McCoy.
Copy !req
818. For every Tiger Woods,
there's a thousand Fuzzy Zoellers
Copy !req
819. and I did not want
David to go through life
Copy !req
820. facing that
kind of prejudice.
Copy !req
821. Prejudice where?
At school?
Copy !req
822. Oh, yes.
Copy !req
823. Aren't there other
African American students in his class?
Copy !req
824. The only black student
they have is from Bermuda.
Copy !req
825. Who decided to send
your son to this school?
Copy !req
826. It was your decision,
wasn't it, Ms. Houston?
Copy !req
827. Objection.
Copy !req
828. Overruled.
Copy !req
829. Answer his question,
Ms. Houston.
Copy !req
830. My father went to
the Chase Academy.
Copy !req
831. They have
excellent academics.
Copy !req
832. And no African American
students.
Copy !req
833. Isn't that the real reason? No.
Copy !req
834. You wanted your son
to go to a white school, to have white friends.
Copy !req
835. Isn't that right? No.
Copy !req
836. Because you don't like
African Americans.
Copy !req
837. That's not true.
Copy !req
838. You didn't want
your white friends to know
Copy !req
839. you'd been married
to one, did you?
Copy !req
840. No. That you'd shared your bed
Copy !req
841. with a black man.No.
Copy !req
842. Been intimate
with a black man,
Copy !req
843. a "nappy-haired
little monkey"?
Copy !req
844. That's a lie.
I never said that.
Copy !req
845. The O'Briens were lying? Objection.
Copy !req
846. Everyone is a liar,
everyone is a racist except you?
Copy !req
847. Your Honor, I objected.
Copy !req
848. Yes. Sustained,
Mr. McCoy.
Copy !req
849. Isn't it true, Ms. Houston,
that your son has more to fear
Copy !req
850. from your prejudice
than society's?
Copy !req
851. Objection.
Copy !req
852. No, I would like
to answer Mr. McCoy.
Copy !req
853. My son is not afraid of me.
Copy !req
854. He knows that I love him.
Copy !req
855. No more questions.
Copy !req
856. It has only been
three days, Adam.
Copy !req
857. Three days, 10 days.
Copy !req
858. The jury is stalemated.
Copy !req
859. There's always
the next time.
Copy !req
860. You have nothing better to do
than prosecute this woman?
Copy !req
861. It's a hate crime.
Copy !req
862. If that's not
worth prosecuting, what are we doing here?
Copy !req
863. I've been paging you.
Copy !req
864. I've been breathing
six-year-old dust in a warehouse,
Copy !req
865. reliving the mother
of all divorces.
Copy !req
866. Burdett v. Burdett.
It went all 15 rounds.
Copy !req
867. These are draft agreements
from Josh Burdett,
Copy !req
868. these are from
Frances Houston.
Copy !req
869. Take a look at the
custodial provisions.
Copy !req
870. Now look at
the alimony proposals.
Copy !req
871. She's unbelievable.
Copy !req
872. Get Mr. Burdett
to confirm this.
Copy !req
873. You're right.
That's exactly what went on.
Copy !req
874. I was traveling on business
two weeks out of every month.
Copy !req
875. I couldn't possibly
take care of David.
Copy !req
876. It would have been nice
to have this information before the trial.
Copy !req
877. We could have impeached
your ex-wife's testimony.
Copy !req
878. Mr. Burdett,
if there's are-trial,
Copy !req
879. I'm going to use
this material,
Copy !req
880. and I'm putting you
on the stand
Copy !req
881. to authenticate it
and explain what it means.
Copy !req
882. Absolutely not.
My son doesn't know anything about this.
Copy !req
883. Mr. Burdett... I won't do it.
Copy !req
884. Whatever happens
to Frances or me,
Copy !req
885. my son believes
his parents love him.
Copy !req
886. I won't do anything
to make him think otherwise.
Copy !req
887. I gave myself
asthma for nothing.
Copy !req
888. We can't use these unless
he authenticates them.
Copy !req
889. The jury
resumes deliberations at 9:00 a.m. tomorrow.
Copy !req
890. Call Houston's lawyer,
schedule a conference for 8:30.
Copy !req
891. No bagels and coffee?
You should have told me.
Copy !req
892. I would have
brought some.
Copy !req
893. Don't count on keeping
your big appetite.
Copy !req
894. Mr. McCoy, that jury
is out of oil.
Copy !req
895. The engine is freezing over.
I can smell it. They're deadlocked.
Copy !req
896. I'm ready to set
a new trial date right now.
Copy !req
897. And we'll hang
that jury, too. And the one after that.
Copy !req
898. One more trial,
and it's over.
Copy !req
899. Ms. Houston, we uncovered
some documents relating to your divorce.
Copy !req
900. I've highlighted
the relevant portions.
Copy !req
901. When I got a divorce,
I fought for custody of my child,
Copy !req
902. but you actually fought
not to have custody.
Copy !req
903. I don't know what
you're talking about.
Copy !req
904. It's all there in
the draft agreements.
Copy !req
905. Neither of you
wanted custody.
Copy !req
906. Your husband
for practical reasons.
Copy !req
907. And you...
Copy !req
908. He actually had to triple
the alimony payments before you'd agree.
Copy !req
909. They're wrong.
Copy !req
910. What I see in these papers
is a negotiation.
Copy !req
911. Whatever meaning
you're reading into it...
Copy !req
912. Was confirmed by
Mr. Burdett himself.
Copy !req
913. And he'll testify to it
at her next trial.
Copy !req
914. She didn't want the boy
because he's black.
Copy !req
915. Josh would never
get up in court.
Copy !req
916. He already agreed to do it.
Copy !req
917. The next jury won't buy your
Mary-Mother-of-God routine.
Copy !req
918. They'll see you
for who you are.
Copy !req
919. A bigot whose racism
runs so deep, you even hate your own son.
Copy !req
920. I assume there's
an offer coming?
Copy !req
921. Man one,
eight-and-a-third-to-25.
Copy !req
922. Well, I want to see
the other attorneys at the firm.
Copy !req
923. The white attorneys?
Copy !req
924. You walk out that door,
Ms. Houston, the offer is off the table.
Copy !req
925. You'll be retried
for murder two.
Copy !req
926. You have an attorney present.
Give me your answer now.
Copy !req
927. You have a deal.
Copy !req
928. We'll notify the judge.
Copy !req
929. You have no idea
what I went through, Mr. McCoy.
Copy !req
930. Only in your own mind,
Ms. Houston.
Copy !req
931. You're lucky
she didn't call your bluff.
Copy !req
932. About Burdett
testifying?
Copy !req
933. You don't feel bad
about lying to her?
Copy !req
934. She got off easy.
Copy !req
935. Burdett's lie cost
her 20 years.
Copy !req
936. Mine only cost her eight.
Copy !req