False Accusations Jacobson, Alan (books successful people read .TXT) š
Book online Ā«False Accusations Jacobson, Alan (books successful people read .TXT) šĀ». Author Jacobson, Alan
He leaned both hands on the railing in front of the jury box, and looked deeply into their eyes as he spoke. āYouāll hear from one of these witnesses, the grocery clerk who checked her food out right after the argument occurred. Heāll tell you exactly what she said. Youāll hear for yourselves just how angry she was. Heāll also testify that she purchased a six-pack of Millstone Premium Draft beerāremember this because in a moment Iāll mention these beer cans again, and youāll see their relevance.
āSo what was it that she did in order to get even with Dr. Madison?ā Denton folded his hands in front of him again, and stood facing the jurors. āIām going to show you how Brittany Harding stole the motor vehicle which belongs to Dr. Madison, and then used it to kill two pedestrians, leaving one of them, a single parent, to die slowly in the street on a cold, rainy, winter evening.
āAnd Iām going to show you that following the hit-and-run, Brittany Harding then planted evidence in the vehicleāthose Millstone Premium Draft beer cans that sheād purchased in the market a few days earlierāwith the intention of fooling the police into thinking that Dr. Madison had, in a drunken state, run those two people over.ā
Denton began strolling slowly in front of the jurors. āFor a while the police were fooled. They did think Dr. Madison was the guilty party. After all, it was his car. In fact, Iāll freely admit to you that I was ready to go to trial against the good doctor until we discovered two additional pieces of evidence. Two things that convinced me that Brittany Harding had committed these murders...two things that will convince you that she committed these murders: her motive, and the physical evidence that proves the beer cans belonged to her.
āNow, before I tell you how Iām going to prove that Brittany Harding had a motive, letās first discuss what motive means. In a legal sense, motive is that idea, belief, or emotion that leads the mind to indulge in a criminal act.ā He stopped, allowing the definition to sink in. āItās the cause or reason that moves the will and induces criminal action on the part of the accused.
āThrough the testimony of several witnesses, youāll hear what kind of person Brittany Harding is, what type of relationship she had with Dr. Madison, and, just as importantly, how she threatened revenge against him in public. When she screamed āIāll get you for this! Youāll pay,ā she telegraphed her actions loud and clear. She announced what she was going to do, and then she acted upon her promise. We donāt have to guess what was in her mind because she told everyone who was in earshot what she intended to do.
āAnd that makes it really quite simple. If you agree that Brittany Hardingās emotions led her to commit a criminal act, then the rest is easy. Everything else will then fall into place for you. Itāll look black and white, and a verdict of āguiltyā will merely be a logical conclusion.
āI will do everything I can to make this case as clear-cut and black-and-white as possible. But in general, a jurorās job is always difficult, because the defendantās attorney will try and cloud the issues, throw up roadblocks and smoke screens, and try to confuse you. Donāt be fooled. Donāt let him deceive you.
āOnce you hear all the evidence, youāll then have to decide which of it is significant. Which facts are important, and which are not. Who is telling the truth, and who is not. Ultimately, youāll have to ask yourself if a person like Brittany Harding, who was capable of extortion on two occasions, who was capable of lying to the police about a rape that never occurred, is someone you can believe when she says she is innocent of murder.
āItās important that each and every one of you work hard until youāve accomplished your task. Because there was a real crime committed, ladies and gentlemen. Two real victims, and a whole lot of pain. Itās your job to determine if the defendant is going to pay for the crime that was committed. The prosecution is confident it will make its case against Brittany Harding; otherwise, I wouldnāt be standing here before you, taking up your valuable time, the judgeās time, my time, and the stateās resourcesāto present this case.
āNo. If you look at the facts as presented and listen to the witnesses I will bring, youāll see that there is only one truth. That Brittany Harding committed murder in order to carry out an act of revenge. And for that she must be held accountable. Thank you.ā
Denton sat down, a bit lightheaded, the perspiration under his armpits disguised by the cover of his suit coat.
Judge Calvino nodded to the defense table.
Wendell Warwick, the public defender, removed his reading glasses. Tall and thin, with a sharp nose and small, beady eyes that appeared to be constantly squinting, he smiled at the jury as he arose and buttoned his suit coat. āāDonāt be fooled. Donāt let the defendantās attorney deceive you,āā he said mockingly. He stopped and smiled again, extended both of his lanky arms out in front of him, palms up, his back arched slightly backward. āDo I look like Iām here to deceive you, ladies and gentlemen?
āIām not. Iām here for the same reason as the prosecutor: for justice to be served. But thatās where the similarity ends. Mr. Denton wants you to find my client guilty. To him, that is justice. To me, justice means that you will not find an innocent woman guilty and send her to prison for a crime she did not commit. But there is one other very important difference between Mr. Denton and myself. The prosecutor has to prove his case against my client. If he fails to
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