Madriani - 02 - Prime Witness

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Madriani - 02 - Prime Witness Page 30

by Steve Martini


  With this I come up out of my chair.

  “No. No. Now sit down,” he says. “I want you to hear this out. I know this is sensitive. I also know that you weren’t told. Roland has informed me of this.”

  “Then he’s told you more than he has me. Maybe he can explain to me what he’s doing discussing a case for which he has absolutely no responsibility, or authority,” I say.

  Overroy starts to open his mouth, but Ingel cuts him off.

  “I don’t think that would be productive,” he says. “Not now. For the time being,” he says, “I think we can just say that he was operating under my auspices. To see if maybe we could bring this thing to a conclusion short of a long and costly trial,” says Ingel. “Something that I think you would agree is in everyone’s best interest.”

  I am stunned by the duplicity and boldness of this, the brazen manner in which it is announced.

  “I assured him that you would take no reprisals for his actions in this regard.” Ingel’s talking about Overroy, who now sits on the couch next to Chambers, his head seeming to float like shit in high cotton, an insolent grin planted on his face. Roland now sees himself beyond my reach, a diplomat on my turf, but with immunity. With this, there will be no end to his mischief.

  “Roland,” says Ingel, “and Mr. Chambers have had several meetings, and with time running out on us, nearing trial,” he says, “they have narrowed the issues. We thought maybe it was time to talk settlement, a possible plea.”

  “If Mr. Chambers wanted to talk plea bargains he should have approached me, not one of my deputies assigned to other cases.”

  “Agreed,” says Ingel. “It was not done entirely according to Hoyle, but then no one planned it,” he says.

  He expects me to accept this. Assurances from on high.

  “Since he’s taken it upon himself to negotiate for my office without authority, all I can say is that I hope that Roland’s been hard-nosed on behalf of the people,” I tell him.

  “He’s done a good job,” says Ingel.

  Roland beams.

  “Then can I assume that the defendant’s ready to stipulate to the death penalty?”

  “I told you.” Chambers is moving to get up. “I warned you that this would be a waste of time. There’s no talking to the man,” he says. “Let’s forget it.”

  He’s up off the couch, briefcase in hand, all the maneuvers of a well-drilled routine. If I were alone, this is where I would wait to see if he would actually leave, cross the threshold and slam the door, or whether he would continue to carp over my desk a litany about justice and the clogged courts.

  As it is, we’ll never know. Ingel pleads with him to sit down.

  “We’ve come a long way,” he says. “Let’s not lose it now.”

  He makes this sound as if there’s already some done deal.

  Grudging, looking at me cross-eyed, Chambers slowly settles back into the couch.

  To all of this Esterhauss is a silent audience. Lawyer talk and a lot of bile. I think he is intimidated, and more than a little embarrassed at what is shaping up to be the ugly marketplace of justice.

  “Mr. Madriani,” says Ingel. “There’s a great deal at stake here. I wouldn’t want your ego to get in the way. You should consider very seriously the terms and conditions that have been discussed. I will expect you to.”

  Chambers gives just the slightest perception of a smile.

  The message is clear, the trial judge is demanding that at a minimum I entertain this offer, however absurd.

  I have from the inception not seen this as a case susceptible to settlement by plea bargain. There are no minor players here, co-conspirators for whose testimony we might offer some deal. From what we know, Iganovich acted alone to commit multiple murders, calculated in separate acts, not something that lends itself to theories of mitigating circumstances. The hideous repetition leaves little middle ground. These crimes are not some blind act of passion, at least not in the way a normal mind could comprehend, that might justify anything less than the maximum penalty.

  “It appears I’m a captive audience,” I tell Ingel.

  He gives me a look that could scorch paper.

  “Mr. Overroy, maybe you or Mr. Chambers.” He motions them to fill me in on the details.

  Overroy makes the move, his eyes not on me, but Esterhauss. He sees this no doubt as the close in his pitch to replace Mario on a permanent basis. A prosecutor with his eye fixed firmly on the fiscal bottom line, someone the county fathers could embrace, pragmatic and politically malleable as plastic.

  “It’s straightforward,” he says, “no mysteries. We’ve worked out a plea of guilty,” he says, “to multiple counts of first-degree murder. Mr. Chambers has already discussed this with his client, explained to him the risks of going to trial.”

  This risk, of course, is a death sentence, something that Roland proposes to deal away. It is the only basis for a deal, and his only bargaining chit.

  He’s talking around me, trying to convince Ingel and Esterhauss of the wisdom of this move. He talks about the evidence, conversant, as if perhaps he’s been rifling our files at night. To listen to Roland, the case for the state is at best a toss-up, a possible loser on the circumstantial evidence.

  I cut him off before he can get deeply into details.

  “If our case is so weak,” I say, “why would you want to cop a plea?” I put this to Chambers.

  “Maybe you should discuss that privately with your own deputy.” He’s talking about Overroy and his assessment of our case.

  “Why would I want to question the monkey, when I can talk to the organ grinder?” I say.

  Mean slits from Roland, though Esterhauss laughs, unable to keep it in.

  Overroy tries to ignore this, rolls with the punch and keeps going.

  “Mr. Iganovich has consented, generally, to the terms discussed,” he says.

  “Is this true?” Ingel asks Chambers.

  “More or less,” says Adrian.

  “In return for what?” I say. This forces Roland back to me.

  Here he sucks a little air, how to couch it without appearing to give away the store.

  “A guarantee that the man will be put away forever,” he says, “that society will be protected.”

  “You mean that he will not be executed?” I say.

  “Yes.”

  Roland sits up a little, sticks out his chest.

  “What we propose is an L-WOP,” he says. This is lawyer slang, shorthand for a term of “life without possibility of parole.”

  Before I can say a word, Overroy anticipates. “We tell the community, the families of the victims that the defendant will spend his entire life behind bars, never to be released. In some ways, this is more punitive than death.”

  I would like to see him sell this to Kim Park.

  He minimizes the political fallout, tortures the truth, a good day’s work for Roland.

  Life without possibility of parole is a euphemism in this state. As long as there are courts and judges to administer them, parole is always possible. The people sitting in this room know there is only one irrevocable sentence in the law.

  “Forget the assurances of public safety,” I say, “what’s the legal basis for such a plea?”

  Overroy looks at me doe-eyed.

  “The codes,” he says, “it’s in the codes.” He means that such a sentence is mentioned in the statutes, which of course we all know. No doubt if I handed him the books he would look in the index under “L-WOP,” such is Roland’s depth of legal research.

  I continue to look at him, like try again.

  “Life without possibility of parole,” he says, “is a recognized sentence. I’m sure of it,” though his voice is now quivering with questions. He still does not get it.

  “He means,” says Chambers, “how do you justify the sentence under the statutes.” Unlike Overroy, Adrian comprehends where I am going.

  Under the law of this state in a capital case, a life term
without possibility of parole is permissible only where mitigating circumstances outweigh other aggravating factors. It is a balancing test on the scales of justice.

  I do not see much cause for compassion here. Four kids staked to the ground and brutally murdered is not exactly a prescription for clemency. I tell them this.

  “Aggravation and mitigation are only factors to be considered by the jury in the penalty phase of a trial,” says Chambers. He means that this would be a plea bargain without trial.

  “The court,” he says, “has broader latitude. The parties can effect a settlement for tactical reasons, irrespective of the evidence.” He cites case law, People v. West. Adrian has clearly come prepared to this meeting.

  I turn to Ingel. Time to put his toes in the flames.

  “Are you prepared to condone this?” I say. “To sanction a settlement on these terms?” In a felony, the court must approve any plea.

  He dances around it, makes a few faces. He would prefer that I commit myself first, then ride on my coattails. After all I will be long gone by the next election, when he would be free to blame any fallout on me, like this deal was driven by an imprudent prosecutor who is now gone.

  Before Ingel can speak, Chambers saves him.

  “There are ample mitigating circumstances in this case, your honor, of which you should be aware. In the defendant’s past.” He calls Iganovich’s childhood a life of deprivation and abuse which he says he can document.

  Ingel smiles. The hook he needs to hang his hat.

  “I think I can live with it,” says Ingel.

  Of course all of these things, the Russian’s childhood, his early history, are matters which we cannot corroborate, not in the time available to us and in the chaos that is the Russian’s homeland.

  “Your honor, for the state it’s a particularly good deal,” says Roland. “The defendant has agreed,” he says, “to enter a similar plea, guilty to murder in the first degree on the two other charges.”

  Frosting on the cake. Overroy’s talking about the Scofield murders, wiping the slate clean.

  I cast a quick glance at Esterhauss and catch the glint in his eye. The prospect of a quick plea bargain that will bury everything in a single fell swoop, no trial, and an end to the perpetual publicity. To Esterhauss and the other doyens of this county, this scenario must be a political wet dream.

  I remind them all that the Scofield cases aren’t even charged.

  “So we get an indictment,” says Overroy. “How difficult can it be?”

  “We have multiple murders,” I say. “Life without possibility,” I tell him, “is ridiculous. Even if I wanted to, I could not in good conscience.”

  “And the Scofield thing.” I turn to Chambers. “Your client is ready to enter a plea, to factually acknowledge that he committed these crimes, in open court?”

  “He will enter a West plea,” he says, “for tactical reasons.”

  What he means is that Iganovich will not state in open court that he has committed these murders, but instead enter a plea for purposes of legal strategy. Decisional law, cases laid down by the courts of this state permit this, though I for one think it is bad public policy.

  “Why is this so necessary?” I say. “To join Scofield in a plea at all?”

  I am concerned that to charge these crimes to the Russian may result in the closure of a serious case without finding the real perpetrator.

  Chambers explains that unless we wash the Scofield cases through this deal, he cannot go forward. It seems he has thought this through.

  “Without a trial, Kellett would no longer apply,” he says. He’s referring to the case which he cited in court to Fisher.

  “Unless we include Scofield, what are we gaining?” he says. “We enter a plea on the four college students and the state is still free to charge Mr. Iganovich with Scofield. With pleas then entered to four counts of first-degree murder, a conviction in Scofield brings the death penalty,” he says. “Not a scenario I find helpful.”

  As a tactical matter, Chambers is right. To eliminate any possibility that his client would face death, he must include a plea on the Scofield killings as part of the bargain. The Rubik’s Cube of the law.

  Overroy, ever helpful, suggests that we could confer immunity on the Russian for the Scofield murders.

  The specter of this causes even Ingel to wince.

  “No,” I say. “I can’t do it.”

  “OK,” says Roland, “no immunity. We charge him instead.”

  Overroy it seems is still operating on another wavelength from the rest of us in this room.

  “No. I mean no deal. No plea bargain,” I say.

  Ingel is out of his chair, sallying forth around the desk, cajoling, telling me to look at the facts of the case, something which he himself has not done. He pitches me on the circumstantial loose ends, that I could lose it all in trial.

  “I’ll take my chances,” I say.

  “On a multi-million-dollar trial,” says Ingel. “That’s rich. That’s generous.”

  Now it is getting ugly. Soon he will kneel on my throat. The man is hearing the strings of Hawaiian guitars, feeling warm sands of Waikiki under his ass.

  There’s a deep sigh from Chambers, like maybe he wanted this more than I know. Perhaps his defenses are not as sure as he makes out.

  The judge starts to lean on me heavily, veiled threats that I will not be getting the benefit of any doubt in trial.

  I wonder what has happened to Ingel’s blood oath to Armando Acosta, the man at the judicial backdoor—how he would explain a plea bargain that spares the killer of the Coconut’s own niece?

  Ingel is no doubt pressured by the county for this result. Faced with a decision between a colleague of the cloth and the vagaries of politics, he has apparently made his choice. He comes at me again, assures me that if I make even the slightest slip he will see that I carry the mark of it on my career for life.

  “The courts in this part of the state,” he says, “are a finite universe, a small world. A word of advice.” He pulls up close in my ear. “Always make certain that you can sleep in your bed before you make it.”

  I glance at Esterhauss, who chooses to look away. It seems this has all left a little taste with him.

  Ingel has now moved to where he is standing behind my chair, boring a hole in the back of my head with his eyes.

  I get up, turn to look at him.

  “We can all thank God for little favors,” I say.

  “What’s that?” says the judge.

  “That the founders saw benefit in a separation among the powers. If you don’t mind,” I say, “I’ll bring the charges, and you can try them.”

  He looks at me with an acid gaze.

  With that I am out the door, closing it quietly behind me, listening to the receding din of voices, the wailing and gnashing of teeth.

  Chapter Thirty

  While I may be on the outs with the city’s power structure, at least today I have the admiring eye of Claude Dusalt. In the way that only happens in a small town, word has now filtered to the organs of law enforcement concerning my meeting with Ingel, the news that I’ve rejected a proposed plea bargain to spare the Russian’s life.

  “How did you find out so fast?” I ask him. “I mean we didn’t finish the meeting till late yesterday afternoon.”

  “If the judge doesn’t want things to get around,” he says, “he shouldn’t talk in front of his people.”

  In Davenport County the Sheriff’s Department staffs the courts for security.

  “Ingel’s bailiff,” I say.

  Claude won’t say. But the answer is clear.

  This news is probably all over the city by now. Dirt in the average cop shop travels faster than telepathy, and is generally more accurate than CNN.

  “I thought such people took blood oaths,” I say, “I mean to work in the courts?” This is generally considered privileged duty.

  “Working for Derek Ingel is not considered a choice assignmen
t,” he tells me. “My source drew the short straw.”

  From the inception Claude has been scrupulous in his dealings with me, tireless in his efforts to pursue every item of evidence I have requested. But there has also been a certain reserve in his attitude toward me, something more than the mere deference paid to a prosecutor. In his cop’s eyes, I think, I was marked by the sign of Cain; after all, I came from the criminal defense side of the bar. Nothing was ever said, but in his eyes, the subtle gestures of conversation, Claude revealed doubts concerning my commitment, whether I would go the last mile in this case.

  My meeting with Ingel and Chambers, telling the judge to put his deal where the sun don’t shine, has put an end to Claude’s qualms.

  He sits behind the wheel of his unmarked police unit, doing nearly seventy, on the ribbon of highway that rolls from the foothills down toward Capital City and Davenport beyond.

  This morning’s errand was not one either of us much enjoyed. We have deposited Nikki and Sarah in what Claude now ridicules as our “safe house,” not his choice, but a compromise made necessary by Nikki’s continuing anger.

  This morning she was fingerprinted at the Sheriff’s Department, a procedure required to eliminate her prints on the threatening letter, envelope and photo deposited in our mailbox. Still the cops found only one other set of latents when they dusted, my own, placed on the letter before I realized its contents.

  Nikki feels violated, forced to be printed in the little room at the jail next to junkies and other collars waiting to be booked. She knows this is necessary, but still she wonders how and why she and Sarah have been ensnared in all of this. She is being forced to burn limited vacation time from her job until the trial is over. Her employer says he will carry her, off-salary, once all paid leave is consumed. This was time she’d been saving for an extended vacation for the family. Now it will be gone.

  Nikki has exacted a price for all of this. “If I’m on vacation,” she told us, “then I’m going to stay in a resort.”

  It is fortunate for me that my wife’s sense of high living is a small bed and breakfast in the little town of Coloma, the place where Sutter found gold and started the stampede to this state that has never ended.

 

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