Law & Order (1990) s04e10 Episode Script

The Pursuit of Happiness

In the criminal justice system the people are represented by two separate yet equally important groups: the police who investigate crime and the district attorneys who prosecute the offenders.
These are their stories.
On a school night, she did that? What am I gonna do? Don't let her out.
Well, she says if I lock her in the bedroom she's going out the window.
You ever seen those clubs they go to? Fifteen years old.
Your hell years are just beginning.
Cooper's already in? Not on a Wednesday, he ain't.
Hey, Billy? Cooper? Hey, Coop.
Oh, man What the hell happened in here? Coop! Billy! Oh, man Look at that.
Practically singed the buttons off.
Couple of feet away at the most.
Yeah, two in the chest at close range.
Somebody wasn't taking any chances.
Cooper, William.
56.
Owned the place.
Jimmied open.
Some crackhead didn't expect to find anybody home.
Right.
So they struggled, and the crackhead shot him.
I hope Officer Kenney isn't taking the Sergeant's Exam real soon.
Tough going on the spatial relations test.
I'm good at geometry.
Yeah? Well, you got an overturned file cabinet here lot of papers on the floor but nothing much in the middle.
So, what did they do, have a fight take a break for a snack and then switch to the other side here? Then, when the bell rang at the end of round one, they walked into the back office.
I guess maybe there was no fight.
It's worth thinking about.
Outside.
CSU thinks he used it to pry the door.
Oh, let me see that.
I love it.
He breaks in, shoots the guy then he goes outside and breaks in again.
Guy was in a hurry.
In the back alley.
Gets better by the minute.
Kills for petty cash, tosses a $500 gun.
Get this to Forensics.
Any other brilliant theories, let us know.
You keep pictures around of your daughter like that? It's not his daughter.
Unless he's into incest.
Mister and Missus.
Who? I mean, who would kill William? Well, did your husband have any problems with his employees? I mean, anyone who was angry at him? Why did he go down there? People work for him.
Why does he do it himself? What about friends? Could he have possibly gone to see a friend? I know of no one like this.
I don't know William's friends.
Maybe if we could see his phone list, datebook I look for this, okay? We were going to have our second anniversary soon.
I came here to be safe they kill my husband.
Well, Mrs.
Cooper, I'm sorry to do this to you but I'm going to have to ask you where you were last night.
Me? Mrs.
Cooper I understand.
In Moscow, they ask where were you, it's certain you'll next go to jail.
No, no, we're not arresting you.
Now, please, just tell us where you were.
I was home.
Like always.
Waiting for William.
Okay.
Were you home all night? Yes Well, no.
I went out to get pastry for his breakfast.
I can bake for him, but he likes it better from the market.
I told him, "For God's sake, don't go down there alone.
" The dumb son of a bitch.
Phil, he's dead.
Getting angry isn't going to help.
You saw Irina? She's okay? Poor broad.
You know, she was the best thing ever happened to him.
Vacation in Russia.
We all think he's nuts, till he comes back with her.
Well, she said he had some paperwork.
Yeah, weekend orders.
We're restaurant trade.
I could've done them tonight.
It'll be like Grand Central Station down there, getting ready for the rush.
Well, then he must've had some reason for going there last night.
Well, him and Irina had plans tonight, for their anniversary.
What are you asking? Why he was there? It was a break-in, right? You were close to Mr.
Cooper, weren't you? Close enough.
Mr.
Guardino this is a murder investigation.
You think Billy wasn't clean? The meat business has an odor all its own, not always from the cattle.
Billy was the guy who stood against the wall at the junior prom.
Forget enemies, the guy didn't have friends.
Mr.
Excitement.
Did he happen to own a gun? Yeah.
A Browning.
He kept it next to his desk.
Why? Fifteen million hand guns, most of them don't stray far from home.
Killed with his own gun.
Big surprise.
No employees with yellow sheets or O.
C.
connections no prints on the gun or the screwdriver.
And a phony struggle.
The shooter knew him, or knew he was there.
Or not.
Someone shows up, doesn't look threatening, he lets them in.
Yeah, the wife wouldn't look too threatening wrapped in one of those furs.
Come on, man.
She said she was a student in Russia, not an actress.
Hey, I can cry at a traffic ticket.
I mean, two cops.
She could work up some tears.
You know, the back security door of her apartment building leads directly to the street.
Now, she could have gone out without the doorman ever seeing.
Wives always shoot husbands? Do you happen to have a motive? He's 56, she's 26.
He's rich, she's gorgeous.
I gotta be a genius? How rich was he? Do we know what he was worth? Bloomingdale's was $2,000 a month, up until three months ago.
Then it just stops short.
Like maybe he cut up her charge card? Not for lack of cash.
$190,000 in a money market.
Would you kill for that? If you can live on $6,000 a year in interest.
Two years ago $10,000 to the Russian-American Friendship League.
He must've really loved her mother country.
Russian-America We got that.
That $10,000 wasn't out of generosity.
Magda, age 20.
Svetlana, 22 and looking for a considerate American gentleman.
All that's missing is the appliance section.
This is a Sears catalogue for wives.
Cooper A week at the Hotel Metropol, met with several women fell for Irina.
The first Mrs.
Cooper.
How about you fellas? You still cheek-by-jowl with your blushing brides? Two priors, no conviction.
You run a lovely business.
Cooper wanted what a lot of guys want, and bitch they aren't getting.
Hot meals and no migraines when you blow in her ear.
What about Irina? I guess all she cared about was the bulge in his wallet, huh? How do girls like her feel after they get their citizenship? When you're on your first coffee break, Ivan and Boris are on their third vodkas.
Cooper would look good to you, too.
Maybe it isn't love, but what is? Whatever it is, you're not gonna find it in a catalogue.
So Cooper wanted a wife and didn't know how to do it.
Who are you to smile down your nose? Who, me? I'm the kind of guy who thinks you don't buy women like groceries.
About the citizenship papers.
When does Mrs.
Cooper get hers? Normally two years.
Irina had another eight weeks.
How easy is it? All right, I'll wait.
Buys his wife from a catalogue.
Whatever happened to long stems and chocolates? Hey, the guy was a middle-aged nerd.
You gotta feel sorry for him.
I feel sorry for her.
What, two lonely people in the night? Wait till you get to be 55.
I don't care how lonely he was.
Hey, you want to hang out with someone, you want to get to know them you talk to them, maybe they come home with you.
You don't have to buy some desperate kid from Russia.
Excuse me, Robert Redford.
Yeah? All right.
Thanks, Eddie.
Boy, the INS really believes in marriage.
You get divorced before two years, you don't get to salute the flag.
And if you're still married when your sponsor stops a bullet? Then they call it special circumstances, and Irina gets her papers without Billy.
All right, it's only a motive if he was getting divorced, which he wasn't.
Maybe.
Look, the marriage broker said that Cooper stayed in touch with another couple he arranged.
You're new here, maybe you talk to other people in the same boat, huh? Come on.
I'll drive.
It's been at least a year.
This Cooper fellow, he was pardon me, not so big in the socializing department.
How about the wife? Well, we really didn't know her that well.
Irina and Billy nice people.
Very nice, very happy.
Like me.
I give her whatever she wants, so she's happy.
Well, Mr.
Berman your wife just said how happy the Coopers were.
You just said you hadn't talked to them in a year.
So how would she know? What's this about? Mrs.
Berman did Irina have any problems at home? Irina, she wants to be out of the house.
She wanted a separation? No, to be out.
To have, you know, own life.
She gets job to have own money.
William is not happy.
So, the hot meals and the housework weren't quite enough for her? My wife made a friend.
I didn't like Cooper.
I wouldn't have him in for cocktails.
Irina is some kind of lab technician.
I'll get you her number.
Irene worked three afternoons a week.
I told her to take a few days off.
Irene? I guess she was more American here than at home.
She does excellent work.
I don't know how you judge people, but that's enough for me.
Her husband must use a different kind of yardstick.
We heard he didn't want her out of the house.
If you're suggesting that- Hey, really, that's crazy.
Excuse me.
I have to check on some blood tests.
They've become friends.
Maybe you can tell us what she's keeping locked up in her test tube.
Cooper was here one night.
The only night she ever worked late.
And he wanted her to come home.
Nothing major.
You were here the night her husband stopped by, right? Do you know why Cooper went to Russia? These guys want women to clean the house, raise the kids and then prance around in a teddy when they get home.
Well, Miss Farrell, are we talking about Irina Cooper's problems or yours? Her husband was a jerk.
Irina has a son in Russia, six years old.
Cooper wouldn't bring him over.
Maybe she felt she deserved better.
I deserve better from this company.
Doesn't mean I'm gonna kill my boss.
The lady's got a point.
Every disgruntled wife kills her husband, they'd be lined up to Poughkeepsie.
Hey, disgruntled is when they're picking your underwear up off the floor.
I mean, Irina travels 10,000 miles to get a new life and Billy boy slips a piston every time she looks out the window.
Plus, he leaves her kid stranded in Moscow.
Is that motive? Well, he cut off her charge cards.
I mean, he promised her the dream and he gave her dreck.
And if he says "divorce," she goes back to Russia.
That's motive.
Prove it, I'd be convinced.
Mike? I don't know.
Yeah, she probably knew he had the gun.
I just don't see this particular woman going down there, popping him and crying three hours later when we walk in.
I don't see that.
Wait a minute.
Cooper was down there alone that night because they had plans for the next night.
The night he was supposed to go into the office.
Now, what I want to know is, who made the plan? Thursday night, "Irene," followed by a question mark.
Now, this guy made a note to himself every time he hiccupped.
How come he didn't know what kind of plans she had? Does that matter? Yeah, it matters if she didn't have any plan.
If she was just trying to get him down there alone.
Your husband wasn't happy about your working.
William understands.
I have education, I want to work.
You have a son in Russia.
Mr.
Cooper didn't want him to come over here.
Oh, no, no.
William just wanted to wait until we have child together.
Mrs.
Cooper, your husband worked that night because you both made plans for the next night, right? Can you tell us what those plans were? It was William's idea.
He likes Broadway musicals, so we had tickets.
Well, you wouldn't have gone to the theater the night after your husband died.
So, do you happen to have those tickets? This is not right, what you are doing.
You think I wanted my husband to be shot? You call my friends, go where I work So, you don't have the tickets? If I do not? You think I lied to William so I could kill him? William would've liked to go.
Maybe you can trade them in.
Take your wife.
Thursday night.
$65 a piece.
Guys and Dolls.
It's possible.
The tickets keep him out of the office Thursday when it's busy, get him in when it's deserted.
Listen to what we're saying.
She didn't have the tickets, we nail her.
She did have the tickets, we still nail her.
The only way she wins is if she's in a sauna with six witnesses.
Mike, she did know he was there alone.
That's right.
Oh, yeah? Well, if she's so smart how come she didn't make that phony break-in look real? You know what I think? She reminds you of some kind of wife you don't like.
Okay, so I'm not crazy about her.
From what I hear, I'm not crazy about her late husband, either.
Look, I listened to her, I looked at her.
You can call it instinct, you can call it whatever you want.
No way she pulled the trigger.
Maybe she had help.
Maybe.
I could buy she's involved.
Say she was home when he got hit.
She went out.
Maybe she was waiting for a phone call.
Yeah.
Job's done, honey.
Then she goes and meets somebody, and they get their stories straight.
But not over the phone.
The doorman said Danish from a Korean market.
Get a picture of the lady.
Take a stroll.
This is eight.
How many more of these delis are we gonna do? Wait, you don't think this is worthwhile? Listen, Cooper wanted her home.
Midnight.
Shouldn't she have already bought the Danish and be home waiting for him? Unless she knew he wasn't coming home.
Thank you.
Let's keep going.
Yeah The Russian fox.
I guess you know her pretty well.
She's in a lot.
What'd she do? You see her Wednesday night, She was She was here late once.
I don't remember the night.
Buying stuff with her husband, lucky guy.
Yeah, 50s, a little overweight, right? What are you talking about? He was in his 30s looks kind of like you, but shorter.
I really need to know which night.
Ma.
Wednesday night.
Some kid spilled soda on my chemistry book.
All right, now the guy with the Russian fox did you get a good look at him? Sort of.
He was He was hanging around outside.
Kept looking in to hurry her.
Here's my card.
I'm gonna be calling you, okay? All right.
Thanks a lot.
I was wrong.
Oh? We got enough to get a warrant to go to her apartment? Judge Beck'll think so.
We'll wake him up in the morning.
I'll bring him some Danish.
I do not have a boyfriend.
Who were you with that night, the dog-walker? Oh, the clerk.
He always looks at me.
He wants to dream about me.
Your boyfriend was 10 feet away.
I don't think the clerk was dreaming.
Hey, Mike.
"Submitted to Federal Insurance Company by William Cooper.
"A bill from the Westside Women's Clinic.
"Services for Irina Cooper.
"D and C, vacuum suction.
Outpatient elective "abortion.
" It was a medical problem.
We were sorry to lose the child.
It says elective abortion.
What made you decide? I might remember her.
I might not.
I wouldn't tell you if I did.
Come on, Doc, we know the rules.
Then you know patients have the absolute right to confidentiality.
Yeah, that's as far as medical records.
We don't care about her blood test.
We just want to know what her husband said.
Is that under patient privilege? Doc, I'm gonna break our rules.
Now, we're not supposed to talk about an ongoing investigation but would it stir your memory if I told you that her husband's dead and we think she killed him? No.
Not this couple.
The guy adored her.
He'd have held her hand through the procedure if we let him.
He was about 5'9", in his 30s, right? Well, I didn't notice his height, but, yeah good-looking Puerto Rican guy.
I didn't ask who the father was.
I was helping a friend.
Well, if she was about to have a tanned wavy-haired baby, I'd say you're more than friends.
What happen, her husband find out about you? The abortion was his idea, wasn't it? He didn't want to play Russian roulette, in case the kid wasn't his.
I did a friend a favor.
Yeah, you're quite a friend.
Even went with her to buy Danish for her husband.
I don't know what you're talking about.
Well, let us make it easy for you, Mr.
Nunez.
You and Mrs.
Cooper, Wednesday, midnight, Third Avenue.
The night her husband was killed, I was working here.
All night.
Alone.
Well, the medical log says you checked out at 10:15.
I have work to do.
Excuse me.
We do have a witness who saw you with her.
No, sir.
I went out for a walk, I came back 15 minutes later.
I must've forgotten to sign in.
Now, if there's nothing else You notice those lab gloves? Yeah.
You don't want to leave prints There's talc on those gloves.
Could've left some on the gun.
Oh, terrific.
CSU uses the same gloves.
Same kind of gloves, yes.
But are they identical? In the garbage.
I think that means I didn't steal them.
You probably think it's easy, finding talc on a gun.
I had a girlfriend who loved the stuff.
Stayed on her body forever.
Yeah, I bet you never dusted her for prints.
Never mind.
I don't want to know.
Dusting contaminates the surface so we took apart the butt casing.
VoilĂ , talc.
The bad news is, the talc in CSU's gloves and Mr.
Nunez's is identical.
I hope that means there's good news.
The anti-caking agent.
Nunez's brand uses microcrystallines.
Does the job, bad for the environment.
CSU switched to a brand with organic dehydroxants.
The environment's not on my mind today.
What about the gun? Mr.
Nunez's talc.
Give me two hours, and I'll sign my name to it.
Well, the D.
A.
's gonna want to know why the boyfriend went along.
Hey, the jury takes one look at her, it's not such a big leap.
Talc on a gun? We'll have the parade of the expert chemists.
A witness puts him with her the night Cooper was killed.
Circumstantial.
Claire, the boyfriend took her to get an abortion but the husband filed the insurance claim.
Is that circumstantial? What if it was the boyfriend's baby? That's reason to abort, not to kill her husband.
Her husband probably forced her to have the abortion.
I mean, how would you feel? Lose the baby, sweetheart, or go back to Russia? Meanwhile, she's got a kid over there he won't bring over.
I'd want to kill the guy.
We're not indicting you.
Cooper divorces her, she's on the next plane to Moscow.
You know what Immigration thinks of green card marriages.
She could wait five years for another chance Yeah.
This broad's had a taste of Zabar's.
There's no way she's gonna go back to waiting in line for day-old borscht.
I don't know where they are now.
Unless you have some kind of warrant, this is private property.
Excuse me.
Now you'll take me to jail.
That's right, Mrs.
Cooper.
Now we will take you to jail.
Alex Nunez, Irina Cooper, you're under arrest for the murder of William Cooper.
Okay, let's go.
You have the right to remain silent.
Anything you do say can and will be used against you "Docket number 680821.
"People of the State of New York v.
Irina Cooper and Alejandro Nunez.
"Charges are murder in the second degree and conspiracy in the second degree.
" Mr.
Morrison, your client have a plea? Not guilty.
Mr.
Feldman? Not guilty.
Life is beautiful, all God's children are innocent.
Let's talk bail.
Your Honor, Mr.
Nunez has relatives in Puerto Rico.
The People feel flight is a risk.
We ask both defendants be held without bail.
Your Honor last time I looked, Puerto Rico was a Commonwealth of the United States.
And, I doubt they'll be running off to Russia.
I don't want them running anywhere.
Mrs.
Cooper isn't a citizen, she has motive to flee, no bail for her.
$200,000 for Mr.
Nunez, cash or bond.
Next.
Come on, Ben, I mean, circumstantial isn't the word for it.
What word would you like? Greed? Adultery? Either of them spells premeditation.
They also spell "if" and "maybe.
" Now, granted, you might have a case.
These people were caught in a terrible trap.
They're hardly cold-blooded killers.
It was an accident.
Both of your clients conspired to get Mr.
Cooper into that office so Mr.
Nunez could shoot him.
Was it your idea, sir? Or did she persuade you to do it? She didn't persuade me to do anything.
Is there an offer on the table? If Mrs.
Cooper pleads to man one and Mr.
Nunez takes murder two we can talk about a sentencing recommendation.
Plead them both down, or no deals.
Mr.
Nunez gets man one, three-to-nine.
Mrs.
Cooper doesn't serve a day.
Mr.
Nunez, are you gonna take the whole rap because you love her? Doesn't matter what you do to me, as long as Irina doesn't go to jail.
You're facing Now, if she talked you into doing this- You heard him.
They're in this together.
Fine.
Then they go to trial together.
Alex.
Oh, I guess you're sure that the gun makes your case.
Yeah, it better.
I wouldn't count on your eyewitness.
You think he's bluffing? Tom Morrison? He couldn't bluff if he was holding an ace-high straight flush.
The Korean grocer has no record.
He has 20/20 eyesight, and picked Nunez out of a line-up.
He's a perfect witness.
Yeah.
Trial Lesson Number 12.
A perfect witness always has dirt under his nails.
So, what's the argument, Counselor? The victim buys a bride, and he treats her like property.
She has an affair.
He finds out about it, and the fact that she's pregnant with God-knows-whose child.
And he forces her to have an abortion.
He threatens to send her back to Russia.
She tells her lover he'll be alone at the office, take care of it.
Convict the boyfriend.
You don't prove that they had an affair the mail-order bride gets her postage back.
That won't be easy.
The doorman at Cooper's building never saw Nunez.
Nunez lives in a brownstone basement.
His neighbors never saw Irina.
We checked credit card receipts.
No hotels.
Go through the credit cards again.
They weren't invisible.
And this affair wasn't carried on in the back room at work.
Somebody knows something.
I told the police, if they were having an affair, I didn't see it.
You saw them leave together often.
You knew Irina was getting an abortion.
Why did she ask Mr.
Nunez to go with her? She needed moral support.
Wouldn't you? If I needed moral support, I'd probably ask somebody I cared very deeply for.
You're not stupid.
A good-looking guy, a beautiful woman with an older husband.
Alex Nunez saw what he wanted, and he went for it.
If you don't testify, he gets away with it.
You've got some nerve.
Where'd you go to school? Radcliff? Vassar? One of those places? Alex worked his way through City College.
He's no gold digger.
He is not like that.
I'm not questioning his motive, only the result.
Look, Alex wanted to help her.
He was going to pay to bring her son over.
All Cooper wanted was a housekeeper during the day and a hooker at night.
You make me testify you won't get what you need.
We can make them look guilty.
They'll also look sympathetic.
They also killed her husband.
The men on the jury won't be weeping for her.
The women will.
And any witness we use makes Cooper look bad.
He did buy a bride.
Sympathy is not our only problem.
It's whose version of the truth the jury'll believe.
Now, if they agree with us that Nunez killed Cooper "I only went there to talk with him.
He pulled a gun "we struggled.
I didn't intend to kill him.
" Maybe that was part of the truth.
If they had said that in the first place.
But they wrecked the office after the killing make it look like a burglary.
And how did Nunez know that Cooper would be there? They can sell it as coincidence.
Irina Cooper could walk.
So? Call Stan Feldman.
If I say it was Alex? No.
It wasn't his fault.
Whose fault was it, Mrs.
Cooper? It's nobody's.
Mrs.
Cooper.
Mrs.
Cooper.
You lied.
You cheated on your husband.
You arranged to have him in his office.
What do you think a jury will do with that? William took me from Russia.
I loved him for that.
He was not a bad man.
Only very simple.
He was like- he was like a child.
Irina.
No! I say nothing about Alex! He was giving Irina a tour of the office, right after she came over.
He took the gun out and he showed it to her.
How did Mrs.
Cooper respond to the gun? She talked about some Russian gun a Tokev, Tokarev, something.
And she said it was just as nice and that she'd used it in the Russian Army.
Thank you.
Your witness.
Mr.
Guardino you testified that Mr.
Cooper liked to brag about his gun.
What did you mean? He waved it at just about everybody who came in the place.
He told them he took lessons, he was a good shot.
So, many people knew he had the gun.
Anybody could have come in and shot him, is that right? Objection.
Calls for a conclusion.
Sustained.
Mr.
Guardino was your boss well-liked? I wouldn't say he was well-liked, no.
Billy, Mr.
Cooper, didn't do real good with people.
He said that's what he had me for.
Isn't it true that no one in all the nearby businesses had a decent word to say for him? That he'd angered many of them by being rude and hostile? Yeah, you could say that was true.
And isn't it also true that several employees quit because they felt Mr.
Cooper had cheated them on their hours? Yeah, they did.
What a surprise he got shot.
Thank you.
No more questions.
I knew where they were going.
It doesn't prove anything.
That her lover went with her to an abortion, that doesn't prove anything? She needed company.
So, they were having an affair.
I didn't say that.
Your Honor, permission to treat the witness as hostile.
You may do so.
Miss Farrell did Mr.
Nunez give Mrs.
Cooper presents at the office? Didn't he give her a silver compact from Tiffany's? And didn't you, in fact, select it for him and watch him charge it to his credit card? How would you know that? The salesperson remembers you.
Now, did what I just describe in fact happen? Yes.
Were these presents given as a friend or as a lover? Weren't they, in fact, more than friends? I guess they were.
Now, Miss Farrell, didn't you dislike William Cooper? He was a bully.
Nobody liked him.
But didn't you advise Mrs.
Cooper and encourage her to have her affair with Mr.
Nunez? Well, I told her that- Told her what? That American women don't have to put up with the likes of William Cooper? I only wanted to help her.
I didn't know this would end up- With her husband dead? You don't understand! What is it that we do not understand, Miss Farrell? She missed her son! She wanted to bring him over, and he wouldn't let her.
He made her have an abortion! He told her he'd divorce her.
He'd have her deported! She didn't have any choice! Any choice but to kill her husband? Was that her only choice? Why did she have to cry? She didn't want to say they were having an affair.
At least Ben got her to admit it.
That jury hears any more about the dead Mr.
Cooper they'll wish they'd killed him.
They can hear that he was mean and domineering, and they can call it grounds for divorce but I won't let them accept it as a defense for murder.
Since when do they accept that these two murdered him? They have to accept it when they hear about the gun.
You better nail that boyfriend.
They're sure not gonna believe that she put him up to it.
If they don't believe that he did it any reasonable doubt all this crying will get them both acquitted.
He was hanging around outside.
He was in a real hurry.
Is the man who called to Mrs.
Cooper from the street is he in the courtroom today? Yes, he's right over there.
Let the record please indicate that the witness pointed to the defendant, Alejandro Nunez.
The record will so indicate.
Thank you.
No further questions.
So the defendant is the man you saw? The one I pointed to.
And he wore a suit and tie, is that right? That's what I said.
Can you see those three men in suits in the back of the courtroom? Your Honor, objection.
Counsel will approach, now.
What are you doing? That's what I want to know.
What kind of theatrical crap are you pulling in my courtroom? The witness is Korean.
I want to see if he can identify non-Asians.
What the hell are you talking about? I have case law on point.
I hope to God you do, Tom.
I'll see you in chambers now.
Recess.
We'll be back.
Don't go away.
The case is People v.
Lawson.
Criminal Term, Part 48.
It was last February.
The eyewitness is Japanese, the defendant's Hispanic.
The court allowed expert testimony on cross-racial identification.
Mainly that Japanese can't identify people of other races.
And what he's doing with it, Your Honor is legalized racism- I'm sorry, but there's a long history- I know the history- A long history in the New York courts.
In Lawson the witness was from Japan, Your Honor.
And in all those cases, the witnesses were from foreign countries had no contact with other ethnic groups.
My witness, however grew up on East 28th Street, New York City.
That's a hair I'm not willing to split.
I'll split it.
I don't like it any more than you do, Ben, but there's a lot of cases here.
What I won't allow is that stunt you just pulled.
You have an expert witness? I do, Judge.
A psychologist.
Why didn't we hear about this witness before trial? Gee, Ben, I'm sorry.
I was a little late with my legal research.
You knew about this weeks ago.
You warned me that this witness would be a problem.
I don't recall that, Ben.
Off the record, please.
I can't prove this, Tom, but I think you're lying.
Your Honor, really Don't play dumb with me.
You didn't want Ben to know where you were going.
I'll let you have your witness.
One of these days you'll get caught, you're gonna get disbarred and I'll be there to applaud.
Court's back in session.
Ben was that necessary? You better brush up on your dumb act.
You almost lost a career back there.
My obligation is to get my client acquitted.
At any price? Set any precedent? Relax, Ben.
I don't see any reporters around.
Think this through with me, okay? All blacks are to be excluded from identifying whites, and vice versa? That's a license for interracial homicide.
Excuse me, Lorenzo de' Medici.
You know, who made you the great arbiter of justice? A Chinese guy could blow you away and get off scot-free because of cross-racial identification.
And that's the most comforting thought I've had all day.
It's a common phenomenon.
It's not about racism.
Well, what is it about, Dr.
Holtz? Well, we tend to see people's faces in terms of our own race.
But facial structures are different.
If an Asian, for example tried to see a Hispanic's cheekbones as if the person were Asian he wouldn't make the correct distinctions.
So, can we make this more specific? Are there statistics in the field? Well, my studies show that people identifying those of another race make four times as many mistakes as they do with members of their own race.
Four times as much? That's a lot, isn't it? Eyewitness identification is risky enough.
Cross-racial identification simply can't be trusted.
Thank you.
No further questions.
Sir are you telling this courtroom that, white Americans, for example cannot identify black Americans? I didn't say that.
I said they're more likely to make mistakes.
Do they always make mistakes? Well, no.
Of course not.
Now, sir, this is a police report about a line-up.
Do you recognize it? Yes, Mr.
Morrison showed it to me.
Yes, would you please read Section 3 out loud? The line-up consisted of six Hispanic men all between 5'6" and 5'9".
The witness, Richard Kim picked suspect Nunez as the man he saw with suspect Cooper.
Six men all the same race all the same height yet the witness, a Korean-American picked the defendant.
That's not a 1-in-4 chance, sir, that's 1-in-6.
And he picked the only person personally connected to both the victim and the co-defendant.
Is that a coincidence? Well statistically, I mean, one could argue the witness simply made a mistake.
Yes, but couldn't one argue that he is a normal American citizen who is able to recognize his fellow citizens and he picked the right man? Yes.
Fine.
Thank you.
Quick, lock the doors.
Somebody might walk in with a case we can win.
Come on, Adam.
The jury didn't buy it.
Cross-racial identification? I wouldn't count your chickens.
Your omelet just hit the fan.
We still have motive.
They were having an affair.
Lots of women have affairs.
They don't kill their husbands.
You could hear "not guilty" twice.
We should be looking for a deal.
I think they'll convict on Nunez.
And Miss Moscow will be out winning beauty contests.
Maybe not.
What if I drop the murder charge on her and only go with conspiracy? You're gonna do what? Stan, let's be honest.
I know that Mrs.
Cooper could walk on murder two.
You know that with only the lower charge, they'll convict.
Maybe.
If they convict, guaranteed, she gets out of prison, she goes back to Russia.
Unless she turns on Mr.
Nunez.
Right.
If she does, she doesn't get deported.
Okay.
Why do I get the feeling you've already talked to Immigration? than 8-to-25.
If she's convicted, we'll fight for the max.
Meet me at Rikers in two hours.
My client won't leave her cell.
She's not interested.
Did you tell her what would happen if she was convicted? The truth? I don't think she cares, one way or the other.
Not that I believe in such things, but I think she loves Mr.
Nunez.
Excuse me.
Maybe he doesn't love her quite as much.
But then maybe he does.
We say nothing.
Mr.
Nunez feels differently.
Irina, listen - No, you're not going to prison.
Irina, you could both go to prison.
I did it.
You can't blame her.
Alex not another word.
Did you do it alone? Who told you that Mr.
Cooper would be in his office? Can we get an offer on the table? Mr.
Nunez pleads to man one, he does the max.
Mrs.
Cooper, accessory, 3-to-9 she does not get deported.
Stop it! Listen to the lawyer.
Don't tell them anything! Irina, if we lose, you go to jail.
You want to go back? Why did we do this? So you could stay, so you could have your son.
You talk too much! I talk too much? You don't get it.
They look at me, they see a greedy spic! They look at you they see a whore.
You see this beautiful woman? You know how dumb she is? She didn't know that going out with a Puerto Rican was supposed to be such a lousy catch.
Tell them, Irina.
Tell them! William William treats me like a cow.
I am a woman.
He promised me he would bring my son, and then he said no.
I do not want to fall in love with Alex but I do.
William sees us at work.
He knows.
He said I must have an abortion.
He doesn't want Alex's child.
We didn't know what to do.
We didn't know if it was mine and he wanted to get rid of it.
Like like it was some dirty shirt.
And then he said maybe I'm going back to Russia.
And he said it again, and again, and again.
I told Alex he would be there.
I begged him.
I said, stick it out just two more months, then let her go.
You're saying you didn't plan to kill him? You did wear plastic gloves.
Yes.
I knew I could do it, if he said no.
Irina told me where the gun was.
I just didn't want her to go back.
She comes from Russia, ends up in a cell at Bedford for three years.
Nunez wanted to save her, he ends up killing a guy, and goes away for 15.
I think she might wait for him.
She came for the American dream, waited all her life for it.
Maybe she'll wait for him.

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