"In New York City's war on crime, the worst criminal offenders are pursued by the detectives of the Major Case Squad." "These are their stories." "All I know is she must have gotten my name and she must have talked about me to my PO." "No, I don't think he knows anything." "Okay, okay, I get it." "I'm gonna take care of everything for you." "Just don't worry." "The fillers for the lineup were Hispanic men like the defendant, they had mustaches like the defendant, glasses like the defendant." "They outweighed him by about 50 pounds each." "Only because his client went on a crash diet after he committed his crime." "We chose fillers for the lineup who matched Mr. Villanueva's appearance at the time he held up the bodega, which is entirely proper." "It is if I say it is, Mr. Carver." "I'll give you my decision tomorrow." "How does this work for my calendar, Ms. Trudeau?" "9:00 am, Judge." "Good. 9:00 then." "And if you're late, bring a toothbrush, because I will hold you in contempt." "Say hi to Cindy." "Bye." "Okay." "I've been in the john half the night." "Got to be the onion rings." "Give me that flight number again?" "Yeah," "I got it." "Look, if my plumbing acts up again," "I'll call in." "I've got a timecertain call on Greenwald's part." "Can we administratively adjourn this?" "Blakemore's never late." "Can we wait a minute?" "Is he in chambers?" "There's no answer." "He's got to be on his way down." "Ron, thanks for coming." "This is Jess Litton, my attorney." "Ron Carver from the District Attorney's office." "I don't know if Mrs. Lewin told you, but we also called the police." "They should be here any minute." "Do you want to wait for them?" "Uh, no." "It's in here." "It's Emily Trudeau." "Judge Blakemore's clerk." "ºó¼¾Æ® µµ³ëÇÁ¸®¿À (·Î¹öÆ® °í·" Çü"ç æµ)" "Ä³¾²¸° ¾îºê (¾Ë·º"êµå¶ó ÀÓ½º Çü"ç æµ)" "Á¦ÀÌ¹Ì ½¦¸®´ø (Á¦ÀÓ½º µðÅ²½º °æ°¨ æµ)" "ÄÚÆ®´Ï B. ¹ê½º (·Ð Ä"¹ö °Ë"çº¸ æµ)" "Law  Order CI 1x15 Semi-Professional" "ORIGINAL AIR DATE ON NBC: 2002/03/10" "Blakemore is in his study." "We can start whenever you're ready." "You see something?" "Is his investigative style always so sociable?" "Yeah, sure." "The killer wrapped her head in the towel before slamming it twice into the corner of the counter." "Minimize blood spatter?" "Maybe." "But it doesn't match the other kitchen towels." "He brought it with him." "Yeah, and he left it behind." "But he took something else with him." "The trash?" "There's no liner bag." "But there's... smell." "Vomit." "He threw up in there after killing her." "Why she was here is unimportant." "The point is, she was going home." "Her diaphragm was washed." "It's still wet." "That's completely irrelevant to the issue of who killed her." "At this point, Judge, what's relevant isn't your call." "We do need you to be candid, Your Honor." "Were we having an affair?" "Yes." "There's nothing more to it than that." " For how long... the affair?" " Long enough." "Why don't you focus instead on who did this?" "We are." "How often did your wife visit your daughter out in Connecticut?" "Every other weekend." "She always leaves on a Thursday?" "Yes. / So why wasn't Ms. Trudeau spending the night here?" "Emily lives with her mother, who has Parkinson's." "She's uncomfortable leaving her alone all night." "Are we nearly finished here?" "No." "Did your wife know about her?" "Absolutely not." "I know what you're insinuating." "Nothing of the sort happened." "There's only one explanation for this..." "Emily was surprised by a burglar." "A burglar?" "Did you hear a burglar?" "No, I didn't hear anything." "Well, didn't you walk her downstairs when she was leaving?" "No, I was in bed, asleep." "Well, that's a..." " did you two have a fight?" " No." "You let her find her own way out in the dark?" "You know, I find the tone of your questions completely gratuitous." "I'm done here." "You deal with them." "I've got to call my wife." "Just one last thing." "What did you have to eat last night?" "This investigation will be run by the book." "I don't care whose ass needs kissing, you tell Mrs. Lewin," "I'm not putting up with any crap from the DA's office." "I didn't suggest you should." "But Judge Blakemore is a wellrespected jurist, contributes regularly to legal journals and is a candidate for the Appellate Court." "And he was banging his law clerk." "This is a press case." "Good cops lose their pensions 'cause of press cases." "I don't plan on losing mine because of Judge Blakemore." "I'll relay your concerns to Mrs. Lewin." "Anything to this burglary theory?" "No forced entry, and the only thing stolen was the trash." "The killer threw up in the trash." "We found splatter on the floor." "It's being analyzed." "The judge?" " Could be, but the attack was planned and orderly." "The killer brought a towel with him to wrap around Ms. Trudeau's head when he brained her against the counter." "Professional." "Yes... and no." "He could've covered her face to keep her from looking at him, to increase his own comfort level." "And the fact that he vomited indicates that he doesn't have the stomach to be a pro." "A semi-professional hit man?" "As a matter of fact, yes." "There's a profile in the literature." "These boys don't derive their entire income on contract killing." "They hold regular jobs." "They're less impulsive than amateurs, but they score high on psychopathy with a history of prior violence." "Street fights, barroom brawls, domestic violence." "Someone a jealous wife might hire in a pinch to whack her husband's mistress." "Come in." "I've met Diane Blakemore." "She's strictly Colony Club." "She wouldn't know where to find a hit man." "These are Emily Trudeau's cell phone records for the last couple of months." "She and Blakemore kept their phone traffic pretty lowkey, maybe one afterhours phone call every few days, if that." "But during the last week, she was calling Blakemore at home three or four times a night." "Apartment Of Emily Trudeau Brooklyn, New york Saturday, February 11" "I don't know what those calls would've been about." "Did she talk about her relationship with the judge?" "She knew I didn't approve, but she was in love with him ever since she started working for him 10 years ago." "A long time to be somebody's mistress." "She took it all on his terms." "Is this Emily's?" "Yes." " May I?" " Please." "Could she have wanted more from the relationship, maybe issued an ultimatum?" "She knew he would never leave his wife." "Emily knew that." "Summa cum laude at NYU." "And "Law Review."" "She was an editor." "Clerking for Blakemore was just supposed to be a stepping stone." "She wrote very well." "She was so bright." "Emily has a docking station for a laptop, but I don't see it." "She took it to work every day." "It wasn't at her office." "And we didn't see it at Blakemore's." "I have to be at Andrea's in 15 minutes." " This'll be done in no time." " It's your daughter's baby shower." "What's so important you got to pick it up this minute?" "I can't tell you." " Arnie!" " You don't want me to lie to you, right?" "So I can't tell you." "But it's all good, you'll see." "It's all on here." "What do you want me to do with the rest of it?" "Sell it for parts." "Just make sure that it can't be traced." "Yeah, okay." "I'm burning copies of the new Jackie Chan movie, you want one?" "No." "Dawn and me, we like romantic movies." "Thanks." "Harland finished his search of Trudeau's office." "No computer." "Lab results of the puke sample..." "no DNA, no blood type." "But they found traces of tuna salad on rye." "Emily Trudeau's greatest hits?" ""Free Speech and the Fair Use Doctrine:" "The First Amendment and Encryption Software."" "Stop it, you're making me hot." "Maybe Emily Trudeau's "Law Review" articles are exactly what got Blakemore hot." "Can you call Carver, see if he can get us in to see Blakemore?" "Where are you going?" "The law library." "Chambers Of Peter Blakemore Wednesday, February 15" "I hope you can appreciate" "I had to recalendar two suppression hearings for this." "We appreciate it a lot, Your Honor." "A few questions came up when we were looking into your background." "You checked his background?" "To assess any threats against him." "Threats?" "This was a botched burglary, wasn't it?" "No." "We heard you're up for a seat on the Appellate Court." "That's right." "The fact that you're being considered is a tribute to you as a jurist and a legal scholar." "Yes." "I suppose it is." "What is your question?" " You went to Yale?" " Yale and Columbia." "I graduated from both." "You were "Law Review"?" "No." "Or that other award that they give to the top 10% of the class?" "Order of the Coif?" "No. / That's because you had a 2.0 average." "What do they call that?" "I don't know." "Gentlemen's C's, isn't that it?" "If you came here to denigrate my client's record..." "We like his record." "We like the fact that he's a... a late bloomer." "All the articles that you've published over these last few years... like this one." ""Intellectual Property Rights in the New Millennium."" "What about it?" ""Conflicts between First Amendment rights and intellectual property rights have traditionally been resolved in favor of the expansion of intellectual property rights."" "It's clear, concise." "Did Junger v. Daley really hold that the First Amendment doesn't protect software?" "Yes, it did." "I don't see what this..." "Wait." "No." "Daley's a landmark case precisely because it held the First Amendment does protect software." "You read one article and you think you're an expert." "I've been researching this field for years." "10 years." "Ever since Emily Trudeau went to work for you." "Emily Trudeau graduated summa cum laude," "Order of the Coif, "Law Review."" "What the hell are you insinuating?" ""Conflicts between First Amendment rights and intellectual property rights have traditionally been resolved in favor of..."" "Well, you know the rest." "It's from "Free Speech and the Fair Use Doctrine,"" "written by Emily Trudeau." "Two years before she became your clerk." "Either you stole her article or she wrote it for you." "It's ridiculous, it's defamatory!" "It's goodbye to the Appellate Court if anybody finds out." "What did Emily do, Judge, threaten to go public?" " Don't answer that." " No!" "Unless you, what, left your wife, gave her money?" "The proof was on her computer, which is why you waited to call the police... so you could get rid of it." "Computer?" "She had her computer with her!" "No, not with her." "Not in her office, not in her home." "You really don't know where that computer is, do you?" "But you're terrified because of what's on it." "First you call him a plagiarist, then a murderer." "Now you've changed your mind." "This is no way to treat a Justice of the New York Court." "He still is a plagiarist, except somebody else killed Emily Trudeau... killed her for her computer." "The evidence she was ghostwriting his articles was on that computer." "If somebody wants to destroy Blakemore's rep, ruin his chances with the Appellate Court..." "Question is... who wanted Blakemore disqualified?" "We could always ask whoever chooses Appellate Court judges." "This I'll handle." "I'll talk to the bipartisan nominating committee and I'll let you know what I find out." "You want to know how it really works," "I got just the guy for you." "Gordon's Steakhouse 58 East 55th Street Friday, February 17" "His first job, it was bellhop at the Biltmore, wasn't it, Jimmy?" "My mom marched me down to Democratic Headquarters herself." "Said I was a "hooligan in the making"" "and if anybody could set me straight it was Mac McNeil." "I need to get home." "Fill them in, Mac." "So what can I tell you about the Honorable "Dutch" Blakemore?" "Let's start with people who'd want to keep him off the Appellate Court." "Like?" " He might be the swing vote on an important case." "Or he rubs a special interest group the wrong way." "Everybody loves Dutch Blakemore." "He didn't strike us as very lovable." "When you've raised $10 million for the party's candidates in the last election, people will overlook your shortcomings." "So that's what counts here, fundraising for the right party." "Where did you think Appellate Court judges came from?" "Any other judges in the running?" "Four..." "Rasmussen, Fuller, Sabatelli and Zimmer." "But Dutch is the front runner by a long mile." "Because everybody loves Dutch." "Ask the Bar Association." "They hold public hearings on the candidates." "We looked at Judge Blakemore's record pretty closely and I don't recall that he ever took a stand on any controversial issue." "What about pending appeals he might be facing on the Appellate Court... organized crime cases, drug cases?" "Nothing of any consequence." "Anything come up in the public hearings?" "Maybe a personal gripe?" " I don't recall." " Can you check?" "There's always a personal gripe of some kind... coop neighbors who don't think the nominee pays his dues on time." "Here, there was one name on the witness list." " But she was a noshow." " Her name?" "Duval." "Marie Duval." "Doesn't say what her complaint was." "In hindsight, maybe I was wrong to back out." "But I'm up for partner next year." "Why should I be the next Anita Hill?" "Blakemore sexually harassed you?" "I was his clerk back in the '80s." "During a sexual battery case, he told me he liked watching SM scenes in pornos." "Was it ever anything more than talk?" "He never laid a hand on me." "On anyone else, I can't vouch for." "He harassed other women?" "Guys like him can't help themselves." "Do you know who these women are?" "No, but when I didn't appear at the hearing, I got a call... he said he was a concerned citizen." "It was probably some girl's boyfriend or brother." "He said that Blakemore was a fraud, a womanizer, and that it wasn't too late for me to testify." "Did this citizen identify himself?" "No." "He hung up when I asked him his name." "I star69'd him and a dispatcher answered." "It was a car service." ""Smooth Ride."" "Smooth Ride 460 10th Avenue Wednesday, February 22" "Yeah, I remember getting that call." "All the incoming calls get routed to me." "I told that lady I got 102 drivers, 42 cars, each one with a cell phone." "I got no way of knowing who called her." "That's what she said you told her." " Same thing I told the other lady." " What other lady?" "Another lawyer." "She comes down here a week later." "She says she's getting crank calls from one of our numbers." "She said if I didn't help her, her boss is going to put me in contempt." " Her boss was a judge?" " That's what she said." "Yeah, that's the one who showed up here." "I had to pull the logs on every phone till I found one with her number on it." "You still have those records?" "I don't need a judge putting me in contempt." "Who had this phone?" "This day?" "That's just it." "Four different drivers could've used it." "Three calls to Emily's number at the courthouse." "This number here, right after the second call, to the 248 exchange?" "That's the probation office." "You said to shut her up." "She knew my name." "How else am I supposed to shut her up?" "What the hell were you thinking going to his house?" "That was a good thing." "It was good." "What was the good thing about it, Arnie?" "For God's sake, sometimes I think you're dumber than you look." "You didn't see what I got for you." "From her computer." "And don't worry, I got rid of it." "This is pretty good, huh?" "See, I anticipated what you wanted." "I always anticipate." "You want me to get you some water?" "Probation Department 100 Center Street Thursday, February 23" "This one's a cream puff." "Two shoplifting beefs, and one for passing bad checks." "This one's got three assaults." "Arnie Cox." "Was fired from his last two jobs for violent outbursts." "A history of violence." "Sounds like a distinguishing feature of the semiprofessional hit man." "I only look like I'm not paying attention to you." " You need to close ranks." " What're you talking about?" "He's setting up a Seven Stars offense, right?" "What're you, an expert?" "I'm a cop." "So's she." "And you're under arrest." "Your move." "It's not that I don't have counsel." "It's just that he costs me a hundred bucks an hour." "And if I thought I needed him..." "I know you folks are just doing your job." "And anybody that likes Chinese chess can't be all bad." "Where'd you learn, anyways?" "China." "Yeah?" "Me too." "No, I'm just pulling your leg." "Anyways, I never made any calls to Emily Trudeau." "But you heard about her murder?" "Who didn't?" "You were working that night." "Now you see?" "I got an alibi." "That's a little optimistic." "There was plenty of time to do the murder in between your runs to JFK." "I had the trots, from eating too much grease." "Speaking of, what would you say if I told you we found DNA in some vomit on the crime scene?" "I'd say that's a good one, Bobby." "You had DNA, I wouldn't be here." "I'd be sitting in some doctor's office with a courtordered needle in my vein." "That's a good one, Arnie." "You've got quite a career." "Turned over a new leaf." "A judge cut you a break." "Judge Sabatelli." "Isn't he the guy who writes novels in his spare time?" "I don't know." "I just got lucky." "I could've been in front of Judge Susser." "That guy's got a broomstick up his ass." "Something just occurred to me." "Sabatelli's up for the Appellate Court." "Oh, yeah?" "You didn't know?" "Why would I?" "Your favorite judge." "You know what, Bobby?" "I'm done talking today." "Raoul Sabatelli?" " That's where it's going." " Or where you're taking it." "Every time Sabatelli's name came up, Arnie's pulse went up 20 clicks." "Right along with mine." "Look," "I know Sabatelli's a little rough around the edges..." " Golden Gloves, right?" " Forget about Sabatelli for a second, worry about this mutt." "You think he stole the girl's computer, right?" "Get a search warrant." "You care who we ask?" "Chambers Of Raoul Sabatelli Friday, February 24" "You're a little light on probable cause here." "You were a Golden Gloves Champ in '59?" "Why?" "You want to go a few rounds?" "The phone calls..." "there's no certainty he made them." "Isn't that why they call it probable cause, Your Honor?" "Don't get smart with me." "You knew this defendant?" "Yeah, he's made a few appearances in my part." "You think murder's out of his reach?" "My years on the bench have taught me that anybody is capable of anything." "Isn't that a line from one of your books?" "My first book, "The Serpent's Tooth."" "Look at this." "Is this a French edition?" "My books have been translated into nine different languages." "That's the latest." ""La Ville Sanglante." "Bloody City."" "This is very cool." "This one I haven't seen before." ""West Side Danny."" "That's out of print." "I'd love to read it." "Could I buy it from you?" "Just go ahead." "It's on me." "Thank you." "Your Honor, the search warrant?" "Yeah, okay, what the hell." "You want to go fishing, be my guest." "Since you're signing things, do you mind?" "We don't have any computers here." "We don't even know how to work the video." "They won't break anything, will they?" "They know not to." " It's Judge Sabatelli." " That belongs to my husband." "Why do you have it?" "He think very highly of the judge." "He's from very humble circumstances, like Arnie." "He gave Arnie a break when he didn't have to." "It's from the newspaper." "One of the papers did an article on the judge." "Arnie clipped it out." "This is from a newspaper, too." "That was two years ago." "The judge hired Arnie to drive him to some fancy political thing." "The judge throw a lot of work his way?" "On occasion." "So Arnie has all of Sabatelli's novels." "Looks like he's read them a few times." "They came like that." "He bought them at the flea market." "Arnie's locker at the limo company was clean." "No computer, nothing to connect him to the murder." "You underline the dirty parts?" "The sex is pretty robust." "It's Jimmy Breslin meets Daphne DuMaurier." ""Judge Wakefield was the worst kind of American aristocrat, the kind who was born on third base and thought he hit a triple."" "Wakefield's one of his recurring characters." ""Wakefield majored in drinking at Yale and whored his way through Columbia." "That and marrying the granddaughter of a New York Supreme Court Justice was the sum total of his legal education."" ""Wakefield sat in silence, to all appearances in deep meditation on the grave Constitutional issue before him." "But Wakefield wasn't meditating on anything." "He didn't have an opinion on the matter." "So he did what he usually did when he had no opinion." "He borrowed one."" "Wakefield is Blakemore." "Watercrest press 49 West 56th Street Monday, February 27" "In the first edition of Sabatelli's second book," "Wakefield's wife was named Diane, which happens to be the same name as Blakemore's wife." "But the name was changed in subsequent editions." "Yeah, that was a creative decision." "Inspired by the threat of a lawsuit?" "Raoul was not happy." "In the right light, you can see where we plastered over the hole he made with his fist." "What's his beef with Blakemore?" "We know they both went to Columbia." "Ah, yes." "Raoul went on scholarship." "Blakemore went on his father's dime." "Raoul got the straight A's, but Blakemore got the invitations to the faculty club." "Ron." "Yes, Judge." "You need to be straight with me." "Where are they going with this?" "Where is who going with what?" "The Blakemore case." "The detectives are investigating me." "I wasn't aware." "You point the finger at Blakemore and everyone says, "Not him." "It couldn't be him."" "Point the finger at Sabatelli and they say," ""What do you expect from some punk from the streets?"" " Nobody is saying..." " If they point the finger at you, Ron, what would they say?" "You know exactly what they'd say." "Sabatelli hates Blakemore." "He hates Zimmer, he hates Rasmussen, he hates Lewin, he hates McCoy." "He hates everybody equally." "He doesn't seem to hate you." "We served on committees together." "I admire him as a maverick, a man who lifted himself up from the streets." "He doesn't see me as a threat." "That's how he sees Blakemore!" " He's paranoid, pathological." " Is that police code for "hot blooded"?" "Well, don't put words in my mouth, or some kind of attitude." "If he's involved, why on earth would he sign a search warrant for Mr. Cox?" " He knew we wouldn't find anything." " That's paranoid." "We could throw Sabatelli another hot potato, see how he handles it." "Arnie Cox made harassing calls to Emily Trudeau." "You charge him with violating his probation." "Since he was Sabatelli's defendant, it'll end up in Sabatelli's lap." "If Sabatelli revokes his probation," "Arnie goes back to prison for 5 to 10." "If you're right about Sabatelli, he won't want to alienate Mr. Cox." "And if you're right about him, then he won't have a problem locking him up." "Very slick, Detective." "It's a damn trap, Henry." "It's only a trap if Arnie Cox can hurt you." "Be straight with me, Raoul." "As your attorney I need to know." "I don't like surprises." "He's a nothing little mouse." "But you see what's happening?" "They're all closing ranks around Blakemore." "Raoul." "The fact that I'm even a suspect... you have any idea what that does to my chances for the Appellate Court, Henry?" "I am this close, and they can't stand it!" " Well, you're right about that." " Yeah." "Because I don't fill their coffers," "I don't kiss ass." "I've just worked hard my whole life!" "Raoul, if Arnie Cox really can't hurt you, all you'd be doing is locking up a defendant on a probation violation." "No big deal." "Right, Raoul?" "Super Court Part 37 thursday, March 2" "The defendant placed harassing phone calls to Ms. Trudeau only days before her murder." "They can't prove the calls were harassing without a complaining witness." "She's dead, your Honor." "which is exactly our point." "There's no other explanation for the calls." "All right." "Mr. Gruber," "I have bent over backward to give your client second, third and fourth chances." "But it seems he took advantage of my generous nature." "I'm finding him in violation of his probation and remanding him to the custody of the Department of Corrections to serve out the balance of his sentence." "Come." "Case closed." "It ain't like he had much choice." "After everything you've done for him, he's supposed to take care of you." "Your lawyer's not here, so you should just listen." "You know, think things over." "Sabatelli gave me this." "See?" "He signed it." "Your copies are all secondhand." "Not one of them is signed." "Yeah, so what?" "Have you read his latest book?" "I haven't gotten to it yet." "You should, you're in it." ""Donnie was a smalltime crook who embellished his criminal past and bragged about being a bigtime robber."" "That ain't me." "He just made that up." ""Donnie was like one of those silly little terriers, always in tune to his master's moods, always eager to please, and that made him useful."" "Look, I told you, that ain't me." ""As a kid, Donnie was a bedwetter, and his old man beat the crap out of him for it until Child Welfare sent him to live with his alcoholic grandmother." "The night of his first arrest, he pissed himself." "He was 17."" "None of that stuff matters, baby." "You're my guy and I love you." " Your family loves you." " I can't just flip on him." " I can't." " I know it's hard for you." "You never turned on anybody." "But this time it's different." "It's him or you." "I can't." "I only did what he wanted me to do." "For once can't you do what I want?" "Please, baby, I can't lose you forever." "A deal?" "In return for what?" "What's he offering?" "He said Sabatelli told him to do what he had to to get proof of Blakemore's plagiarism." "When Emily Trudeau found out Arnie was calling her," "Sabatelli got worried the trail would lead to him, so he told Arnie to shut her up." "Arnie had the bright idea of killing her in Blakemore's house to embarrass him." "Getting the computer was a bonus." "What happened to the computer?" "Arnie made a copy of the computer disk and gave it to Sabatelli." "He made a copy for himself as insurance." "What's on it?" "Drafts of articles she was ghostwriting for Blakemore, emails discussing the articles." "I can't believe Sabatelli would do this." "Of all the foolish, arrogant..." "Granting this is all true, he's only liable for conspiracy." "I can't convict him solely on the testimony of his coconspirators." "I need corroboration." "If Sabatelli still had a copy of the disk, and if we could find it?" "That would do it." "But at this point, what are the chances he still has it?" "Is it enough to prove that he knows what's on the disk?" "What are you suggesting, a pop quiz?" "Or an opportunity that he can't resist." "I've been rethinking our case, Counselor." "We were right the first time." "If anyone had the motive to kill Emily Trudeau... and destroy the contents on her computer, it's Judge Blakemore." "You want to arrest Blakemore?" "Well... arrest would... would be an understatement." "Ron." "Ron." "Is it true what they say?" "Blakemore's the guy?" "So it appears." "I told you your concerns were premature." "Blakemore is a big fish." "This is good for you, Ron." "If it doesn't turn into a threering circus." "Lewin wants everything by the book." "I'm thinking of having someone from the Judicial Committee of the Bar observe the interrogation." "I serve on that committee." "Really?" "This is asinine." "Emily never said anything to me about this Arnie Cox." "She told you about the phone calls she got." "Yes, but... / Judge." " Look at him." " Emily was a liability." "He probably never sat on the wrong side of an interrogation before." "You have?" "When I was a kid." "In my neighborhood, getting pinched was part of puberty." "This is crazy!" "You're not denying she was writing those articles for you, are you?" "She was not." "He's lying." "He's never had an original thought in his life." "We found drafts of articles in her home, correspondence... here, this copy of an email she sent you last December." ""I'm almost finished with the final draft, and I'm pretty sure the 'Georgetown Law Review' will be interested in it." "It'll be quite a feather in your cap."" "That could mean anything." "It means you'd be out of the running for the Appellate Court." "You were worried those other guys would get the job..." "Rasmussen, Fuller or Sabatelli." "Sabatelli?" "He's a thug." "They put his name in the race just to make it look fair." "What about the email, Judge?" "We found that article in the "Georgetown Law Review,"" "published last spring under your name." "You mean, "The Constitutionalization of the Internet"?" "Detective, I know what I wrote." "You'll never get him this way." "He's not an idiot." "Use the actual articles against him." "You were worried your secret was out." "Oh, please." "This is crazy!" "Judge Sabatelli thinks we should test Blakemore on the contents of the articles." "Take it from a writer... if they're his, he'll know them inside out." "He might have written some of them." "That'll be the day." "Ask him about the one of software encryption." ""Intellectual Property and the Shifting Paradigm"?" "Yeah." "Yeah, that's the one." "He didn't write that." "I know he didn't." "It's almost two years old." "I have a hard time remembering briefs I wrote two months ago." "It won't convince a jury." "Then use something recent. / The last "Law Review" we have is six months old." "Didn't you say you found drafts of articles in the girl's home?" "I don't have dates on those." "Try "The Role of the Judicial Review in the... in the Digital Copyright Act."" "That's very recent." "Some of these don't have titles." "It starts," ""Traditionally, the oversight role of the judiciary in the area..."" ""...in the area of the Constitutional limits of database protection"?" "Yes, that's it." "You found it." "Yes, it's right here." "How do you know this article so well?" "Because I read it." "Where?" "Because, funny thing is, it hasn't been published yet." "Emily Trudeau was still polishing it." "Well, if you found drafts of the article..." "I'm sure there were other copies circulating." "I probably read one of those." "Well..." "No." "There are no copies." "We found this the same place you did, on a disk from her computer." "A disk Arnie Cox gave us." "Identical to the one he gave you." "No." "No, that is not right!" "Mr. Cox told us everything." "What does he know?" "It's Blakemore!" "You don't really believe that." "Yes, yes, he killed her with his own bare hands!" "You know he's not capable of it." "You don't know what the hell you're talking about!" ""Of all the crimes that paraded through his courtroom... the one Wakefield never understood was murder." "Murder required passion, guts..." "And in his heart," "Wakefield knew he had neither."" "But you, on the other hand... you have plenty of both." "You ... sons of bitches!" "He put you up to this." "You trapped me." "And I thought I could trust you, Ron!" "I thought I could trust you, Judge." "Raoul Sabatelli, you're under arrest for conspiracy to commit murder." "Marie Duval told us how much you like the rough stuff, Judge." "No, don't let it get to you." "Should we break the news to him?" " Let him sweat a little more." " Sabatelli and Blakemore... violated the first rule you learn in law school." "Never commit anything to paper."