The Law of Second Chances (48 page)

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Authors: James Sheehan

BOOK: The Law of Second Chances
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“Is that another similarity between Carl Robertson’s murder and Sal Paglia’s—the fact that no shell casings were found?”

“Yes.”

“Thank you, Detective. I have no other questions.”

“Cross-examination?” the judge asked Spencer Taylor. Jack wondered if Spencer had the balls to go after Nick. Of course, at this point he obviously had nothing to lose.

“Yes, your honor,” Spencer replied. He was livid. He wanted to rip Nick’s throat out. He had never seen a cop give that kind of testimony in a criminal case.

“Detective Walsh,” Spencer began, “you were the lead detective on this case, weren’t you?”

“Yes.”

“So it was your decision to arrest the defendant and charge him with the murder of Carl Robertson?”

“That’s correct.”

“This woman you talked about, is it accurate to say that you considered her an accomplice in this murder?”

“That was a possibility we considered, yes.”

There it was—the connection that Jack feared most.

“A possibility?” Spencer asked.

“Yes. We had no evidence linking the two. It was no more than a supposition.”

“I want to talk about the bullet for a moment. Are you telling this jury that the defendant could not be the shooter because the bullet did not pass through the skull?”

“No, I’m not saying that. I don’t have that kind of expertise. All I can say is that I would expect the bullet to pass through the skull if it was fired at close range.”

“That would be speculation on your part, then?”

“Yes.”

“And you would defer to the coroner’s opinion as to what occurred in this case?”

“Yes.”

Spencer had actually scored a point. He decided to quit while he was ahead. “No further questions, your honor.”

“Redirect?”

“No, your honor,” Jack replied.

Nick Walsh stepped down from the witness stand.

“The defense rests, your honor.” It was four o’clock in the afternoon.

“Do you have any rebuttal, Mr. Taylor?”

Spencer wanted to bring the coroner back on to rebut Nick Walsh’s testimony, but it was too dangerous. Besides, he had done okay with Nick on cross. “No, your honor,” he said.

“All right. I think we’ll adjourn for the day and have closing arguments in the morning.”

Luis left the courtroom immediately after Nick and caught up with him in the hallway by the elevators.

“Mr. Walsh,” Luis said. Nick turned and looked at him questioningly. “I just wanted to thank you for your honesty in that courtroom. It may have saved my son’s life.”

“It’s my job to be honest,” Nick replied.

Luis expected that would be all, but Nick lingered. Luis could tell he wanted to say something else.

“You know, my younger brother Jimmy died a few years ago,” Nick began. “He had his own war with drugs. There weren’t too many positive things in his life. That kick in that championship game was one of them. He took it with him always, talked about it all the time. He also talked constantly about a guy named Rico who made it all happen. So I guess I want to say thank you to you too.”

Luis was speechless. He hadn’t even realized Nick knew who he was. The two men shook hands warmly and then parted.

Jack took Dick, Joaquin, Henry, and Charlie out to a steak house that night. He invited Luis, but Luis was still too nervous about the outcome to eat. The trial certainly was not over for Jack either. The verdict was always in doubt until the jury delivered it. But these people had put their lives on the line for him and this cause, and he wasn’t letting them get out of town without showing his appreciation.

Even though Henry had just met Dick and Joaquin, they were all getting along famously.

“We’ve been talking, Jack,” Dick said, “and we’ve decided that being your friend is very dangerous to our health.”

“Yeah, I know,” Jack volleyed back. “But look at the
benefits—a couple of weeks on a beautiful lake in the Virginia mountains, travel to Wisconsin and New York City, free steak dinner.” They all laughed.

“Next time we’re actually going to swim in the lake,” Charlie added.

They were seated in a private little spot in the back of the restaurant. Jack had ordered a couple of bottles of wine, and the waiter poured. Jack stood to offer a toast. He surprised himself by getting a little choked up.

“You all went beyond the limit for me, and for Benny and Luis. It’s something that words cannot do justice to. I cherish you all.”

“Hear, hear,” Joaquin added as they all clinked glasses.

The steaks were delicious. They drank and laughed until a little past midnight. Then they went their separate ways.

The courtroom was packed the next morning, and speculation was running rampant. Would Jack Tobin’s strong presentation be enough to carry the day, or had the jury already decided Benny was guilty before Jack even started his defense? There was a theory among lawyers that the first side to score a blow was usually the winner. Jack didn’t endorse that theory. He gave jurors a lot more credit than that.

Spencer Taylor was first up. The obvious frustration that he had displayed in court the day before had vanished. He was back to his old self, making eye contact with each juror and flashing that winning smile as he thanked them for their attention and service.

“You are the backbone of our system of justice,” he reminded them before jumping into the substance of his argument.

Spencer’s closing was no surprise to Jack. He took the jurors back to the night of September 1, 1998: “A shot rang out. Three people ran to their windows and saw Benny Avrile standing over the fallen Carl Robertson.”

It was at this point that Spencer diverged from the anticipated script.

“They say that a good lawyer can get you off even if you
are standing over the body,” he told the jurors. “That’s what the defendant is banking on. He hired the best. And now you have heard a tale—a tale that takes you away from what happened on September first and strings together fractured pieces of information and forms a conspiracy, all designed to make the defendant a free man. Don’t get sucked into this fantasy, ladies and gentlemen. Stick to the facts. Stick to what you know. If you do that, you will find the defendant guilty of this crime.”

It was Jack’s turn now. He stood in front of the jurors and didn’t say anything for about thirty seconds, then began in a calm and even tone. “You all promised at the beginning of this trial to do several things. You promised to keep an open mind until all the evidence was in. And you promised to follow the law, which means holding the state to its burden of proof. These are not arbitrary rules in a contest between two opposing parties. These are fundamental laws that come from our Constitution. We sometimes forget that part of the great American experiment was to protect the rights of the innocent at all costs. That is why a man is presumed innocent until he is found guilty in a court of law. It is here in this courtroom that truth is decided. Hype goes out the window. Blustering will not withstand vigorous cross-examination.

“So what has the evidence shown? It has shown that the defendant was at the scene. Period. It has shown that Carl Robertson was attempting to fundamentally change American life—to wean us off oil overnight. It has shown that Leonard Woods was his partner in that endeavor and that Mr. Robertson and Mr. Woods were killed nine hours apart. Mr. Paglia, Mr. Avrile’s former lawyer—who apparently learned about the plan while trying to defend his client—was killed execution-style with the same type of gun and bullets that killed Carl Robertson. These facts didn’t come from me, ladies and gentlemen. They came from that witness stand. The last witness you heard in this case was a twenty-year homicide detective who told you that Mr. Robertson’s murder, a bullet right between the eyes, was not done from close range because the bullet would have passed through the
body. It had all the earmarks of a professional murder—the same as Sal Paglia’s.

“He also told you there was another suspect, a woman, who had an affair with Carl Robertson’s mistress and learned all about Mr. Robertson and his comings and goings. When the defendant was arrested, however, the investigation came to a screeching halt and the police stopped looking for this woman. She was never apprehended and, as you well know, she was forgotten. The prosecution never mentioned her.

“Mr. Taylor has asked you to ignore these facts and convict Mr. Avrile simply because he was there. You cannot do that and live up to the promises that you made.”

Spencer Taylor took advantage of the opportunity for rebuttal, but he didn’t say anything new. The judge then charged the jurors with the law they had to follow, and they retired to deliberate. As he watched the jury file out, Jack thought about Langford Middleton. The judge had kept control of the trial throughout. His rulings were dead-on. He had faced his demons and conquered them. Perhaps this would be the turning point for a man who still had the potential to be a great judge.

Luis was on the verge of losing it completely. He hugged his son before the guards took him away and almost broke down.

“You’re going to be a free man soon,” Luis told him.

“It doesn’t matter, Pop,” Benny replied. “What matters is that you were here for me all the way.” He looked at Jack, who was standing next to Luis. “And I got a better defense than I deserved.”

The jury was out for two hours. Both sides interpreted that as an optimistic sign. “Members of the jury, have you reached a verdict?” the judge asked when they had filed back into the courtroom.

“Yes, we have,” the foreperson, a middle-aged woman, answered.

“Is it unanimous?”

“Yes it is, your honor.”

The foreperson handed the verdict to the bailiff, who handed it to the judge, who read it and passed it over to the clerk to publish.

“The defendant will rise,” Langford Middleton bellowed.

Benny stood up. Jack stood with him.

“Madam Clerk, publish the verdict.”

The clerk stood up and read the verdict. “We the jury find the defendant, Benny Avrile, not guilty.”

Benny immediately turned to his father. The two men held each other and let the tears fall. Jack just watched. It was all the thanks he needed. He was certain now that Rico was back and would take Benny under his wing and teach him finally how to navigate the field of life—how to carve out his own turf and protect it. Benny was going to be fine.

Jack looked to the back of the courtroom where Henry was standing. Henry gave him a thumbs-up. Jack returned his gesture with a smile. They had made the decision to fight this fight together. Nothing more needed to be said.

66

On Wednesday night, Jack met Molly at an Italian restaurant in the West Village. He was a little late, as usual, and Molly was waiting for him outside in the cold. She was dressed warmly in a knit cap and Navy peacoat over jeans and black boots. She looked good. She always looked good.

“My client’s father, Luis, recommended this place,” he told her as the maitre d’ seated them. “He said the food is great.”

The restaurant itself was not much to look at. It was small—maybe twenty tables. The walls were pale yellow and hung with painted landscapes of the Italian countryside. The place was clean, and each table had a white linen tablecloth.

“It’s very quaint,” Molly commented as she took off her peacoat, revealing a black wool turtleneck that accentuated her fine figure. About ten minutes later, Luis and Benny walked in.

Luis saw Jack and Molly and headed toward their table with Benny in tow. Jack saw him coming and started to stand.

“Don’t get up,” Luis told him. “We’re not staying. I left my credit card here the other night and I just came in to pick it up. We’ve got reservations elsewhere.”

Jack stayed seated. “Luis Melendez, I want you to meet Molly Anderson.”

Luis took Molly’s hand graciously. “Pleased to meet you,” he said.

“And that’s his son Benny behind him.” Benny did not come forward. He stayed behind his father and nodded to Molly. She remained seated and nodded back.

As they headed for the exit, Benny turned and gave Jack a thumbs-up. He was not smiling. Molly saw it and understood.

She had come to this dinner to break off the relationship in a natural way so there would be no lingering suspicion. Her excuse was going to be the geographical distance between them. She had planned a short speech, and she had wanted to make it before they ordered dinner. Her plan had been foiled, however, and she no longer needed to give an explanation. It was simply time to go.

“Jack, I just remembered there’s something I have to do. I’m sorry. It completely slipped my mind. I’ve got to go.”

It was Jack’s turn to understand. “You’re not even going to give me the chance to lay it out for you?” he asked.

Molly stood up. “I’m not going to sit in this restaurant after what just happened.”

“You don’t need to worry about Benny coming back or anything like that. Luis and I made sure that wouldn’t happen before we set this up. They’re gone.”

“Sorry, Jack, I can’t take your word on this one. If you want to, you can walk with me.”

Jack called the waiter over and handed him a fifty. “We have an emergency. We have to leave.”

“I understand, sir,” the waiter replied, bowing slightly.

Outside the restaurant, Molly sidled up close to him. “Don’t worry, Jack, I’m not going to molest you in public,” she said as she undid the middle buttons of his overcoat and ran her hands over his chest, then his stomach and his groin. She then bent down and checked his ankles and all the way up his legs. Jack didn’t move.

“I’m not wearing a wire,” he told her.

“I know,” she replied. “Now we can talk.” They started walking down the street again as if they were taking a moonlight stroll. “When did you find out?”

“I didn’t know for certain until tonight, when Benny gave
me the thumbs-up. I had my suspicions before that. Every night during the trial when we met, you only asked me one question about what was going on, and then you went on to something else. Pat would have grilled me for hours.”

“I’m obviously not Pat.”

“I know, but it just seemed that if you were that interested in me, you would have been more interested in what I was doing. Then I thought about when we first met. I was on the front page of the New York papers on Sunday, and you conveniently walked into the Pelican diner on Monday morning and sat a stone’s throw away from me. By Wednesday, we were having an affair. That’s pretty quick work.”

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