"This is a staff meeting, Mr Shore." "I realize that." "–Why are you in a Santa suit?" "–It's after Thanksgiving." "Surely you're not suggesting I still dress as a pilgrim." "And who is this?" "She's my elf." "Sometimes, especially after Santa's been drinking, he needs a little helper." "Have you been drinking today?" "No." "Today, I just brought her for amusement." "My doctors are concerned these staff meetings could cause me to lapse into a coma." "I see." "Well, since privileged information is exchanged during these staff meetings, your helper will have to leave." "Would you wait in my office, dear?" "Sure." "Actually, there is that walk-in." "He's waiting in reception." "Maybe Alan should take that." "Perhaps you're right." "A wrongful termination, a guy was fired as a department store Santa." "I mean, since you seem to have such a connection with the subject matter. —I'll do it." "I've always wanted a Santa case." "Oh, this is much more right for Alan." "I said I'll do it." "Where is he?" "Uh, in reception." "Gil Furnald?" "That's me." "No, it isn't. —Yes, it is." "No, it isn't." "Ho ho ho." "Deal with it." "Alan. —Tara." "What's with the woman?" "What woman?" "What woman?" "The one you brought to the staff meeting." "She's my elf, Tara." "I thought I was quite clear on that." "Yes, very amusing." "Why is she here?" "Well, it seems I've put on a few pounds since last year." "So she brought me my new suit." "I do some work with the salvation army." "We work as a team, actually." "Is there a problem?" "Not at all. —But... not that I've been doing background checks, but I have a friend who evidently knows an old friend of yours, and..." "And?" "You once cohabited with a little person." "Two lovely years." "I lived with her for three." "Do you have a thing... for little women?" "I have a thing for women." "You've never fallen for someone shorter than you?" "Well, I believe I'm involved with one now." "Either you're mistaken, or I'm jealous." "Boston Legal 1x08 Loose Lips" "." "." "." "." "." "." "." "." "." "ORIGINAL AIR DATE ON ABC: 2004/11/28" "It's just very difficult to reconcile being drawn to a person I consider... well, repugnant." "What, you think you're the first good girl to fall for a bad boy?" "Is my problem annoying you?" "No." "I'm sorry." "I..." "I just meant to convey it's very common for women to be attracted to men they don't admire." "What could be at play here, there are qualities in yourself you don't like, or qualities about Alan Shore you wish you had. —That isn't it." "I like myself just fine." "I saw that." "Uh..." "Look, this is not a great day for me." "Perhaps we should reschedule?" "Okay." "Is everything okay?" "Yeah." "Could I speak to you as a lawyer?" "Uh, sure." "But you're gonna have to face the little clock towards me." "This is all privileged, right?" "Lawyer, client?" "Of course." "Look, I, I have a patient who's been with me for almost four years now." "And he, um, he habitually speaks of fantasies, things he plans to do." "They're typically idle ruminations," "I suppose, to make him feel better." "Lately, he's been talking about murdering his ex-wife." "And at first, I thought, harmless chatter again." "But there seems to be such a resolve." "Lori, I can't be sure that it isn't real this time." "This man may very well be planning to kill his ex-wife, and I'm just not sure what to do." "I just like wearing women's clothes sometimes." "It's not a sexual turn-on." "Well, it just feels right sometimes." "So, basically, you're a sicko." "I'm not sick." "Lighten, my man." "So, what, you got caught in a skirt, and that was it?" "My employer found out, and, yes, I got fired." "They asked me a lot of questions, like whether I'm gay." "Are you?" "Not that there's anything wrong with it." "Yes." "But that does not make me an unfit Santa." "Criminal record?" "—No." "No, no, no, no, no." "And there's never been any incident." "I have been a good Santa for eight years." "A great Santa." "I can show you the letters." "There are kids and families who have specifically come back for me." "And I thought, this is wrong." "I should not lose my job because of how I like to dress." "Does he know you taped him?" "No, I'm just full of ethical violations." "It's important that I do it with my hands." "I don't know why." "You could probably tell me why." "But, see, the thing is," "I don't want to shoot her or, uh, poison her or hit her with a car." "No." "It needs to be by strangulation." "Do you have any guess as to why?" "Well, for one," "I actually want to feel the life going out of her," "I mean, with my hands." "I want to feel her body go limp." "Also, I want her to experience it." "I want her to know that she's dying, and I want to see her eyes as I do it." "And how do you know that this isn't just talk?" "I keep telling you, I don't know." "I mean, he's often fantasized." "Last year, he spoke of blowing up his boss." "But his demeanor here, as I said, there's a certain resolve that really concerns me." "Have you shown this to any other therapists or..." "No, no, no, I am the only one who can make that call." "And your call is it's possible he's going to do it." "Do I tell the ex-wife?" "Well, I'm sure you know the law on this as well as I do." "I mean, you have a duty to warn the victim if you're reasonably certain she's in physical danger." "But falling short of being certain..." "You honor doctor-patient privilege." "This just seems crazy to me." "I mean, which side is better to err on?" "A trial today?" "Well, it's not exactly a trial." "It's an evidentiary hearing." "But I'd need to testify?" "It's the only way you can get a restraining order." "We'll lose the dress, by the way." "Coat and tie." "Alan, excellent!" "Alan, Gil Furnald..." "Alan Shore." "Turns out that my Santa Claus is a sort of cross-dressing sicko." "He's more you." "He is absolutely more me, Denny, but unfortunately, my schedule..." "Alan." "I have trouble with this sort of subject matter." "–You're homophobic." "–It's not that." "What is it then?" "It's my father." "Sometimes he wore dresses." "He called it a kilt and sang all those scottish songs, but we knew." "Please." "The hearing's at 2:00." "Hello." "Hello." "Sally, could I trouble you to do a quick background check?" "I realize we haven't spoken much since we stopped having sex," "And, frankly, I'm dismayed by that." "But what I need to know is everything you can find out about my new client." "Here's his name, address, and social security..." "Is it true you're taking over the Santa case?" "Yes, I am, Bradley." "Is it of interest to you?" "No, but it could be... if we say, bet on it?" "Another wager." "Why not?" "And would you already have stakes in mind?" "I keep thinking about your elf." "How about if you win, I become your elf for the day, but if you lose, you become mine?" "Complete with the costume, of course." "–And bells." "–Can't leave out the bells." "Alan, hey, can I steal you for a second?" "A second?" "A minute I could maybe do, but a second would be pushing it." "Would you like me to push it?" "You are so disgustingly vulgar." "It's important." "This is Dr Königsberg." "Alan Shore. —Hello." "Oh, Alan Shore." "Uh, Dr Königsberg has a patient who talks about killing his ex-wife and could be serious about it." ""Could" is the operative word." "I can't be sure." "Obviously, there are some exposure problems." "I mean, if the guy does do it, and it was learned that Dr Königsberg knew of the risks beforehand..." "The first thing I'd check is his malpractice policy." "You don't want to do anything to void coverage." "I've done that already." "What's your specialty?" "Couples counseling." "I first saw the client and his wife together." "Since their divorce, I've been working with him alone." "So they came to you to improve their relationship, and now one wants to kill the other." "Not your best work, was it, doctor?" "And you're seeing Dr Königsberg for what?" "Uh, just to deal with... as a lawyer, he hired me." "He's a very mischievous man." "Look, can we stick to the case, folks?" "Since the proposed victim was or is a patient, you've got real duty problems." "If the threat is real and you don't tell her... but I can't be sure it's real, which means my duty is to the patient." "Can you have another therapist meet with him, perhaps, get an objective opinion?" "I've tried." "No therapist will go near it for fear of potential liability." "Well, if it were me, I'd meet with him myself, pretending to be one of your colleagues." "That's hardly an option." "Why?" "You need objectivity..." "You can't go there pretending to be a doctor." "Of course I can't because I'm in trial, but you can do it." "Oh, sure, and get disbarred?" "I'd likely lose my license." "Oh, well, silly me." "I was thinking about the ex-wife." "If it's merely a bar card and a medical license you're looking to preserve, you first opine to Lori that you're not at all convinced the man intends to follow through on his threats, then you draft an opinion letter to the doctor" "telling him he need not disclose." "Your respective asses will be covered, and everybody's happy, assuming you like your asses covered." "Personally, I love the feel of a stiff breeze against my rosy cheeks." "In any event, pardon my misunderstanding." "I thought it was potentially human life at stake." "Sylvia." "What do you want now?" "Why do you always think I want something?" "Why couldn't it be that I just want to see the smiling face of the prettiest girl in the clerk's office?" "What do you want, Brad?" "I need a small favor, tiny." "But, first, please can I see that smile?" "God... —If I were 10 years younger..." "Or 10 years older." "What's the favor?" "There's a motion scheduled for this afternoon." "Furnald vs Gordon's department store." "A lawyer named Alan Shore is seeking injunctive relief, unlawful discharge." "I need this case to fall on judge Hingham's docket." "Judge Hingham?" "Why would you want him?" "Because he's just right for this one." "Exactly what kind of case is this?" "A homosexual?" "That's where we're at now?" "Santa Clauses being played by homosexuals." "I believe "homosexual" is one word, judge." "But to avoid confusion, let's say "gay."" "Let's say "transvestite."" "because that was the stated reason..." "Well, if dress code is the issue, my client promises to comply with..." "A homosexual transvestite... you want me to allow children to sit in his lap?" "Exactly. —Oh, boy." "Gordon's department store certainly supports" "Mr Furnald's right to choose who or what..." "That's a lie." "You fired him as soon as he told you he was gay." "No, we fired him for cross-dressing, which is considered a fetish." "He's played Santa for eight years without incident." "In fact, he's received glowing praise from both parents and employers." "Would you sit in his lap?" "Sure." "Why not?" "And he hasn't gone homo erectus on me if that was your fear." "You're making entendres." "Disgusting, sick innuendo entendres." "I'm not going to put an innocent child in the lap of an unnatural Santa Claus who dresses in female attire." "There is a sanctity to the tradition of Christmas." "It is perhaps the most sanctimonious holiday there is." "Then clearly you should be its poster boy." "Motion for T.R.O. denied." "I'd at least like an evidentiary hearing, so that I may present... —Denied!" "Denied, denied, denied." "Why did you do that?" "You antagonized him." "Actually, he antagonized me." "This job means something to me, Mr Shore." "Your honor." "I have made my ruling." "Yes, based on what you think my client is or what the defense has presented him to be." "I ask you to at least hear from him before you take away his livelihood." "10 minutes, as to why he'd make a good Santa." "Please." "I'll give you 10 minutes." "Five for direct, five for cross." "I don't understand why she's here." "I explained it, Brian." "When a patient makes a credible threat to commit violence, my colleague is here to observe because I may need counsel." "Why?" "You should've told me this before." "Brian, would you tell Dr Harper why you want to kill your ex-wife?" "I have no intention of killing her." "You don't?" "—Of course not." "Murder is illegal in Massachusetts." "So when you were saying these things to Dr Königsberg..." "I never said them." "Dr Königsberg is mistaken." "I also have absolutely no intention of paying for two therapists." "Goodbye." "Clearly he's a little hostile." "Well, he's angry over you being here, and I, I can't say that I blame him." "I don't know if there's enough to go to the police, but I think you should at least tell his ex-wife." "Will you go with me?" "Me?" "—Lori, I'm about to break privilege, and I could very well be sued for it." "This is treacherous ground, and I would like my lawyer present." "So please do this with me." "I'm afraid my words are having little impact." "Yours will have to." "Okay." "You said this job means something to you, and you seemed rather impassioned." "I am." "You have a college education, Mr Furnald." "You do well in your computer job." "Why is this part-time employment so important?" "I don't know." "Yes, you do." "I suppose, as a kid, a gay kid, who liked to wear dresses... that club is very small, by the way." "Most cross-dressers are heterosexual." "Anyway, um, as a kid who... felt like he didn't belong anywhere," "I would throw myself into all the make-believe that goes with Christmas." "As safe retreats go," "I suppose it helped me survive." "And it still does." "Should I say that tomorrow?" "Say all of it." "Would you tell?" "I don't know." "I mean, if it's a fantasy..." "What if it's not?" "The benefit of the doubt has to go to privilege." "Even when the downside is death?" "I'm not saying that it's an easy call." "He got a hearing." "Sorry?" "Shore, the cross-dressing Santa Claus." "He actually got a hearing." "Don't you think you're taking this bet thing a little too far?" "I'm not making a big deal about this." "I'm just making conversation here." "Brad, you don't like Alan, do you?" "I don't give the guy a thought one way or the other." "Can I say something to you as a friend?" "You've seemed kind of knotted up ever since he got here." "It might help you if you just let your feelings out a little." "Come on, it's late at night, you're having a beer with a buddy." "Tell me how you feel about Alan Shore." "I don't like him." "You can go deeper than that." "What do you feel, Brad?" "I hate him." "He mocks me." "Deeper?" "—He mocks our commander in chief." "Deeper. —He's got a putty ass and a flabby body, and I can't understand why women would rather sleep with him than me." "There, it's out." "And that includes you, by the way." "First of all, I don't sleep with colleagues." "–You're ducking the issue." "–I am not." "I have no interest in ducking either one of you." "We've gone deep enough." "I really need to win this bet." "According to employees at Gordon's," "Gil Furnald gets nothing but raves as Santa." "Oh, come on, would you sit his lap?" "Why does everybody keep asking me that?" "Tough break drawing judge Hingham." "Who'd ever imagine that?" "Brad, did you have something to do with my drawing judge Hingham?" "That would be dirty pool." "I actually want to feel the life going out of her." "I mean, with my hands." "I want to feel her body go limp." "Also, I want her to experience it." "I want her to know that she's dying." "And I don't want it to be instant." "I want her to actually have the thought," ""My God, he's killing me."" "And I wanna see her eyes as I do it." "What's happened to him?" "Let me reiterate." "He's talked like this before without ever going through with it, obviously." "Many people fantasize..." "For him to even speak this way, this is not Brian." "He is docile person." "I realize that." "This might also simply be talk, safe talk that allows him to feel strong." "Sometimes the weaker the person's constitution..." "Is he going to kill me?" "Mary, I'm here because I don't know." "I really don't think so, but you are the one person that knows him better than I do." "I've never heard him talk like this, ever." "Did you tell the police?" "It's tricky, Mrs Stevens." "This is doctor-patient privileged stuff." "We shouldn't even be telling you this." "He plans to kill me, for God's sake." "Which is why we are telling you," "–on the possibility that these threats..." "–I'm calling the police." "I'm not sure that they could do anything at this point." "I mean, they certainly can't arrest him for things he told a therapist in confidence." "What I would suggest, let Dr Königsberg continue to monitor the situation." "He's seeing your ex-husband every day." "If things progress further, we will call the police." "In the meantime, maybe you could stay with a friend..." "I have animals, I can't..." "Or get a friend to stay with you." "I've been sitting in that chair as Santa for eight years, and I have been an exemplary Santa." "People will tell you, even if they don't shop at Gordon's, they come to see me." "For how many of those eight years have you been dressing as a woman?" "All of them." "And in all this time, had your cross-dressing ever been an issue at work?" "No, I was always in the Santa costume." "People never even knew." "It was always my intention to keep my worlds separate." "So, it's been my secret." "But your secret got out." "Last week I had a boy in my lap, 8 years old." "I asked him what he wanted for Christmas." "He said, "Santa, please make me normal."" "He was starting to cry as he said it." "–He said, "make me normal." –Yes, he said, um, he said he was sick." "He said that he liked to wear girls' clothes, and he was sure he'd go to hell." "And I said," ""son, you're not alone." "And you're not sick."" "And I told him about me." "Thank you, sir." "So, while on the job, you told an 8-year-old boy that Santa is a cross-dresser?" "Yes." "Did the judge rule?" "No, miraculously, I persuaded him to let me give a final statement, though I have no idea what to say." "The fact that he told a child he's a cross-dresser..." "I never should have put him on the stand." "I've got to somehow make this a gay issue." "Personally, I think you'll look very sexy in the elf outfit." "I have no doubt, yet I don't wanna lose." "I've grown attached to this Santa." "Brad seems pretty happy." "Does he have reason?" "Denny, you said if I ever had another hail mary emergency, you'd make the call. —Really." "Are you sure?" "I need you to make the call." "–And what's this about?" "–It's extremely delicate." "Though privilege typically extends to the whole firm," "I have assured him that this would go no further than you and me." "Okay." "Meet Brian Stevens." "Brian, this is the attorney I..." "What's going on?" "–This is your client?" "–You're an attorney?" "Um, yes." "You said you were a doctor!" "What the hell is going on?" "Uh, Paul, we have a conflict." "I represent the therapist who was treating Mr Stevens." "She's the one who went to my ex-wife." "She's the one who told Mary I planned on killing her." "She pretended to be a doctor!" "He can see you for about five minutes." "–After that, his day is completely..." "–Five minutes is more than enough." "You can go in." "Thank you." "Thank you so much for agreeing to see me." "My name is Alan Shore, and I..." "Go." "My name is Alan Shore." "Perhaps you'll remember..." "Everyone has a name, son." "I'm not interested in yours." "You have five minutes because you know him." "Bill Clinton?" "Ah, well, you'll remember at the behest of Mr Crane, you made an appearance in one of my cases involving an African American little orphan Annie, and you were extremely effective." ""Give us a black spider-man, give us a black superman who can leap tall buildings"" "all the big icons." "Now I have another case, featuring a gay man who's being discriminated against." "And this one involves the biggest icon of them all, Santa Claus." "My problem is the judge." "His tiny brain has been calcified by intolerance." "However, he's certainly a slave to public opinion, as judges tend to be." "But I can't really move the public." "You can." "Do you understand what I'm asking?" "You want me to be your rabbit." "I want you to be reverend Al Sharpton in all his massive glory." "I want you to charge in there, say "Give us a gay Santa Claus,"" "and button it with three God almighties. —Stop." "I don't do things big." "I'm subtle." "Yes." "Three God almighties." "Look, I've written it all out for you." "Give that a look-see." "I've seen you move mountains, reverend." "I need you to move this one tiny-brain judge." "Please." "Pretty please." "Denny Crane." "–You got Sharpton?" "–I don't know." "He said he'd think about it." "Does he just do this kind of thing now, for lawyers?" "He does it for Denny." "Let's hope he does it for me." "All set?" "You don't want me to miss the ruling, do you?" "Got the costume." "My God, to impersonate a doctor." "I thought a human life was at stake, and I didn't know..." "It doesn't matter, Lori." "You're suddenly gonna start playing Solomon and break rules, sacred rules, whenever you see fit?" "I could be disbarred for this." "You?" "Why?" "For not turning you in." "I'm sorry, Paul, I just..." "I'm sorry." "I think it's this Alan Shore character." "Ever since he got here... —This has nothing to do with Alan Shore." "I'm not influenced by him." "You used to be influenced by me." "Tell me what you want me to do." "I'll resign if... just tell me what you want." "First, I want you to apologize to Mr Stevens." "–I did that." "–Well, you need to do it again, and hope to God he doesn't sue us." "How long have you known this man, Paul?" "Years, only through work." "But he doesn't strike me as being capable of violence, if that's what you're asking." "I'll get him back in here." "And on the chance that he could be violent, when you apologize," "I will be in the room." "And for the sake of humoring me, let's stay completely away from Alan Shore." "What's all the media doing here?" "I have no idea." "All rise." "Uh-oh. —What?" "We're 10 minutes early." "Please be seated." "Mr Phillips, have you got anything to say before I listen to him?" "Mr Furnald was fired mainly because my clients feared he'd share his secret proclivity with a child, which, by his own testimony, is exactly what he did." "I object to that summation." "It was entirely too short." "What?" "—I'm only worried for you, your honor." "If you're inclined to rule against us, he's got to at least give you a good argument to hang your hat on." "So, it looks good to all this media." "Did you notice the media here?" "Are you on drugs?" "You've got 30 seconds." "That's what I was afraid of." "Your honor, the child in question, who my client shared his secret with, that child was in pain." "Being a good Santa Claus," "Gil Furnald sought to relieve that pain." "By telling him he was a homosexual?" "Those three little words again." "He did not tell the boy he was gay." "He only said that he also liked to dress in female attire." "Why does he keep looking back here?" "I have no idea." "He encouraged the boy not to feel that he was sick." "He urged him not to feel alone." "It was a one-time occurrence strictly intended to speak to the heart of this one child." "There is no evidence that this man has committed any wrongdoing, nor is there any compelling evidence that cross-dressers are inherently lascivious, and the defendant knows that." "Cross-dressing is but a pretext that the defendant has hung its hat on to disguise the fact that Gil Furnald was terminated because he is gay." "Last time I checked, it was not a firing offense for a civilian to be either ho, mo, or sexual." "All right, already, I've heard enough." "–I'm going to rule on this." "–You can't rule yet." "Why not?" "I don't know." "Well, what if, say, some big celebrity were to come charging through the door?" "Sorry I'm late, judge, I'll make this quick." "and subtle." "Who the hell are you?" "The image of Santa Claus has been crafted for hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of years." "We're supposed to be in a different day." "Give the world a black Santa Claus." "Let the people have an African American come down the chimney bearing joy and good will." "Gay, not black." "The prejudice against gay people must stop." "We all say we're for gay rights, we all say we accept homosexuality." "But give a gay man a hug," "–sit in his lap..." "–Who is this man?" "Let the bells of tolerance ring out this Christmas." "Let people open their minds as they open their presents underneath the tree." "We need your mind, judge, today." "Let the gay man be my brother, be your brother, be the school teacher, be the construction worker." "Give the world a gay Santa Claus," "God almighty, God almighty, God almighty." "Leave out the cookies and the milk this Christmas eve for a holly jolly homosexual, God almighty." "And cut." "I threw in one extra." "Thank you." "One of the reasons why I've been such an even-tempered business man is because I've been able to find an outlet, a safe confidential outlet with my therapist." "But you must admit, threatening to kill your ex-wife like this, it is..." "Ms Colson, I've been in therapy since I was 16." "I spent most of those sessions planning on how to kill my father." "They're rants." "They help me get the anger out." "This is gonna ruin me." "Mary acts on hysteria." "She's gonna panic, and this is going to get out." "They're rants." "They help me get the anger out." "This is gonna ruin me." "Mary acts on hysteria." "She's gonna panic, and this is going to get out." "Let us talk to Mary." "Perhaps we can settle her down." "I'll lose my job if this goes public." "Let us try to unring this bell a little." "Okay." "We need to fix this." "How?" "We go to the wife, and we explain that you overreacted." "She saw the tape for herself, Paul." "It's not gonna... we further explain that people say things to their therapists that sometimes..." "We did that." "Well, we'll do it again." "–Where does she live?" "–Weston." "We'll leave here at 5:00." "I don't wanna talk about it." "You won?" "Judge Hingham, horror that he is, bowed to public sentiment and reinstated Gil as Santa." "And, if you don't mind," "I would like to get back to work as soon as I can." "Could I steal you for just a minute in private?" "Sure." "Listen, um, thank you, not just for getting my job back, but, well, it's not often that you meet a lawyer with a soft spot for cross-dressers." "Well, now you have, Mr Furnald." "It wasn't that so much." "It's just from everything I've heard, you are a magnificent Santa Claus." "Thank you." "You're quite welcome." "I guess you should take the lead with her since you know her." "I also know her lawyer." "All I can say is I hope she hasn't contacted him yet." "Because if he should get a hold of this..." "What the..." "Dear God, no." "What happened?" "Homicide." "The ex-husband just showed up, and..." "Where is he?" "He's represented." "I don't think a lawyer's gonna help him, counsel." "I want to speak with him." "I don't think that's gonna happen, either." "He's over there." "What, what happened?" "He showed up." "She says he came here to kill her, said she fired in self-defense." "Mary..." "Am I gonna need a lawyer?" "What happened?" "He showed up, said we needed to talk." "I didn't trust it, you know, after what I saw on that tape." "I got the gun out of the drawer, told him to leave." "He said he just wanted to talk." "I told him, "get out."" "And then he started walking toward me." "And you shot him." "He was gonna kill me, right?" "You told me." "He was gonna strangle me." "Promise me I had to do it." "Promise me." "." "." "."