The Good Wife s06e11 Episode Script

Hail Mary

Four hundred, 500, 600, That's $5000.
The bank bag.
Where's the bank bag? Sign here.
Are you the one going to prison? - No.
- Then, what the hell you doing? Good.
Pay for the hotel room, room service and my dry cleaning.
Six hours of consultation, which starts now.
You can go.
- I was staying.
- No.
You weren't staying.
No women.
- I'll call you.
- Yeah, he'll call you.
Like his first day of school.
Dad, Dad, calm down.
We're on our way.
- So four years? - Yeah.
Two with good behavior.
You go for three weeks to Statesville first.
It's a maximum security prison.
That's where D.
O.
C.
Will classify you either as minimum, medium or maximum.
Well, I'll end up in minimum, right? Maybe.
There's overcrowding these days so some minimum inmates end up in maximum.
You need to prepare for maximum.
- You've done time? - Ahem.
A week in County.
A week where the guys are waiting for their mommies to bail them out? Prison is different.
Half the inmates are never going home.
Now, tell me, Mr.
Agos.
Do you think guys like that are gonna hesitate to beat you for looking at them the wrong way? Look, you don't need to scare me straight.
I get it.
I just need tips on what to do.
Sure.
You want a tip? I got one.
Here, put it on.
Because if you don't start paying attention your cellies are gonna make you their prom queen.
- Okay.
- No.
Not okay.
Shut up and listen.
What are you gonna do to protect yourself, Mr.
Agos? Any family or friends doing time? No.
No one who could vouch for you on the inside? No.
That's your tip, okay? Find a friend, a white guy.
There's no such thing as a post-racial lockup.
Someone jumps off on your block you gotta run with your own because if something happens to you white defends white and black defends black.
Got it? - I got it.
- Good.
Now, let's find you a white friend.
- Yeah? - Kalinda, I need your help.
- I'm on my way to you.
- No.
The prison consultant is advising me to find a convict inside.
- Someone I can trust.
- In Statesville? Yeah.
And one other thing, he's suggesting it be someone Caucasian.
Right.
I get it.
Anyone in mind? I'll call you back, okay? Is that your girlfriend? Yeah.
But it's complicated.
You're gonna wanna uncomplicate that today.
I'm serious.
This isn't about me.
This is about Cary.
A lot of things about Cary end up being about you, Kalinda.
I know, but, uh, he needs help in Statesville.
For the first three weeks, someone to watch his back.
Kalinda, last time we stood right here, you threatened me.
My mistake.
Even worse than threatening me, you threatened my son.
I'm sorry, sir.
But that had nothing to do with Cary.
You know, he has never wavered once in his support for you, sir.
All he asks is that you help him find someone on the inside.
That's all.
Someone, uh, white.
You're gonna get a call in a few hours.
Or A few days.
I need you to take it.
From? Someone.
You're asking for a favor, Kalinda.
I'm asking for one in return.
You want Cary to have a friend? Say yes.
Yeah.
Hello? Yeah, this is Ray.
Who's the guy coming in? Cary Agos.
Oh, yeah.
He's the lawyer caught with Trey Wagner.
- Yes.
Yes, that's right.
- With the export train? When's his self-surrender date? Uh, his sentencing is at 5 today.
Sorry, what did you just say? That'll get him here by 8 a.
m.
The next day.
- I can meet his transport.
- Yeah, no, you said something about Trey's export train.
The $1.
3 million in heroin.
You mean import, right? No, Trey and his buddies were trying to get into their own business.
Selling to someone in Toronto.
Cary was accused of conspiring with Bishop's crew to get the drugs into the city.
But he couldn't have.
Why? What do you mean? The drugs were already here.
- Who said that? - Someone arrested with Trey Wagner.
He said the drugs were being readied for export, but Cary was charged with giving advice on how to import drugs, not export them.
Yes, to be guilty of conspiracy Cary's advice had to have been followed.
And it wasn't.
He's innocent.
- Is this enough to get him off? - I don't think so.
- But we could get his plea withdrawn.
- Where are you, Kalinda? - I'm coming to you.
- No.
Uh, go to the courthouse.
I will petition for time with Judge Cuesta - and meet you there.
- Okay.
- I'll meet you too.
- No.
Alicia, Cuesta doesn't like you.
Stay where you are.
No, what are you talking about? Meet who, where? Look, I can't not be involved.
I know, and I'll call you.
Just sit tight.
Alicia, you have a debate tomorrow.
If you don't prep for it, you will lose.
It's that simple.
Okay, I got three journalists and one moderator.
I acted mad about the standing so we got it.
- We got standing.
- They think Alicia wants to sit.
- I need to call Cary.
- No.
You need to debate.
Oh, Adrian.
How are you? I'm good, Mr.
Gold.
It's unfortunate we're inside today.
It's beautiful outside.
Yeah.
Alicia, this is Dr.
Adrian Fluke.
Professor of Renaissance Literature at the University of Chicago.
He'll be playing Frank Prady today.
Yes, in Middle English.
His heed was balled, that shoon as any glas, and eek his face No.
But thanks.
Johnny? We need to have a word with Alicia.
- Would you give us a second? - Sure.
- You are down by two points.
- That's within the margin of error.
But you've settled there.
We've let the Prady team think you're going in sedate and soft.
During the negotiations, we asked that you be seated, it's less aggressive.
We've also leaked campaign memos arguing that voters don't wanna see a woman be aggressive.
- All to catch them with their pants down.
- This only works if you use the debate to take the fight to them.
I just need a second.
- Take her phone.
- What? Take her cell phone.
Hide it.
I'm the body woman.
I'm not You work for this campaign.
When she hangs up, take her phone.
Some inmate rolls up on you, stand up.
Keep your distance.
Okay? Don't square up.
That's aggression.
You're gonna provoke.
- So bring it down a notch? - Yes.
De-escalate.
And the best way to do that is to get him to say yes.
You ever spend time around a toddler? Like, "No, no, no!" It's the same thing with these cons.
Some gangster wants something that belongs to you, get him saying yes and watch the resistance just fall away.
Okay, first question.
Let's start with the personal.
Your law partner recently pleaded guilty to a drug charge.
Mr.
Prady, do you have a question for Alicia about this? I do.
What you need for state's attorney is someone who upholds the moral authority of their office.
Someone who does not have a compromised law partner.
And someone who fights for the law-abiding citizen.
Now, do you really think that you're that person? - Mrs.
Florrick? - Yes? Do you have a response for Mr.
Prady's question? Oh, I thought he was still busy making a statement.
- No snark.
Come on.
- Well, here's the thing.
Um Cary's innocent, my law partner, he didn't do it.
- Why did he plead guilty? - Can he just interrupt like that? That's a Romney move.
Don't referee.
You've gotta get her in the game.
- I'm her body woman, not her fluffer.
- When did you become so crass? No, but it is a pertinent question.
Why did he plead guilty? I didn't think I was debating two people today.
But, um Well, it's important to remember that sometimes innocent people plead guilty.
They Alicia? Diane, how's it going? We're meeting with Cuesta.
Kalinda got an affidavit from Toronto.
- That's great news.
- We may need Peter's help if this doesn't work.
- I know.
I'm ready to call him.
- All right.
Wait.
That's somebody on my other line now.
I'll call you back.
- Hello? - Hello, Diane.
This is Eli.
Eli, I don't have time right now.
Oh, yes, you do.
I need you to stop taking Alicia's calls.
We're trying to prepare her for the debate of her life.
All she's thinking about is Cary.
- Tell her to stop calling me.
- Listen to me.
Alicia can make a difference for Cary and any Cary that comes along - but only if she wins.
- I'll see what I can do.
I gotta go.
Isn't this case over, counselor? I'm afraid not, Your Honor.
My client would like to file a motion - to withdraw his plea.
- Come on.
We have new evidence that shows the prosecution charged my client - with a crime they knew he didn't commit.
- Your Honor, this is not gym class.
- There are no do-overs.
- New evidence? An affidavit from Canadian authorities that show that the drugs at issue were part of a Toronto-based drug operation.
Am I supposed to be impressed? The Toronto detectives noted that the shipment arrived in Chicago on May 11th.
Two full weeks before my client allegedly gave his damning advice.
Your Honor, the prosecution has charged my client with conspiring to import $1.
3 million worth of heroin into the country.
That charge is inconsistent with what, in fact, occurred.
But your client pled to those facts.
- Because he was being framed.
- Framed by who? Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
Counselor, where is the evidence that the prosecution knew about this? Because the only way I'm rescinding the plea is if you can show that the prosecution withheld exculpatory evidence.
- But my client pled - I don't care what he pled to.
I only care if he pled because the prosecution lied.
Now, do you have proof that the prosecution knew that the drugs arrived on May 11th? No.
Well, then there's nothing I can do.
We only ask for our day in court.
And you can have it if you can show proof of a Brady violation and bring it to me before the sentencing hearing at 5 p.
m.
- That's not much time.
- Six hours.
We've had worse.
We have been given a task.
Probably the most important task we will face this year or any year.
Two days ago, Cary Agos accepted a plea bargain on drug charges and will spend four years in prison unless Unless we can find a Brady violation in the state's attorney's work.
We have six Five hours and 36 minutes before Cary is taken into custody.
- Kalinda.
- Okay, so the drugs at issue in this case were imported two weeks before Cary allegedly committed conspiracy.
And the Canadian authorities knew this.
That's the exculpatory evidence you think they buried? - Yes, but any buried evidence will do.
- All right, we will break up in groups.
- Carey Zepps, you focus on discovery.
- Evidence boxes are here.
Check to see if the SA's office had any involvement with border agents.
Homeland Security, anything.
Brian, you do the same thing with Chicago P.
D.
Uh, someone should contact Mexico See if they knew about the shipment.
Kalinda? No, I'm gonna stay with the Canadian side.
I have friends up there.
Uh, okay.
Let's regroup in two hours for a progress report.
Remember, Cary is counting on us.
Kalinda.
Cary called me.
Should we tell him? He'll wanna know what we have.
I know, but we have nothing.
And Cary's preparing to go to prison tomorrow.
We should let him prepare.
I think you're right.
Okay.
This time it's Alicia.
Wait.
Hi, Alicia.
Cuesta needs a Brady violation or he won't vacate the plea.
We have until 5.
No, Alicia, listen to me.
- Uh, no.
- Diane, I can leave right now.
No, we have everybody on this.
We don't need you.
- And, Alicia, I need you to stop calling.
- What? Yeah, I don't mean to be rude, but we need to focus here.
Um, I'll call you at 5 after the sentencing.
Good-bye.
Good.
Can we continue? I'll hold that for you.
Do you want some milk? No.
What? I don't like milk.
Why not? It's good for you.
Let's go.
Let's do it.
What's this about, ma'am? You're with the Ontario Division, is that right, inspector? It is.
O Division, Narcotics.
And you were tracking the shipment of heroin coming in from Chicago? Yes, ma'am.
We were following a gang out of Rexdale.
And you believed their heroin was being transported through Chicago? Yes, but when I reached out to Detective Prima - I made sure - Wait a minute.
Excuse me, inspector, but did you say you contacted - Detective Prima? - Yes, I I e-mailed him an official request for information.
Why? - Do you still have that e-mail, Inspector? - Yes.
Certainly.
Can you send it to me? Yes, if I knew what this was about.
The Chicago police believe that 1.
3 million in heroin was being imported into the States.
But you wrote to them that it was being exported into Ontario, correct? - Yes.
- And what did Detective Prima say? Well, I don't mind saying I was a little disappointed he didn't have the courtesy to, uh, respond.
Diane.
- We need to subpoena Prima now.
- You found the Brady violation? Yeah.
Anyone you trust out here? Uh, yeah.
Who? Family? No.
Sounds like my life.
Girlfriend? Friend? Wife? A friend and a girlfriend.
Who's the friend? - Alicia.
- The girl that was here, right? - Right.
- Give her your power of attorney.
Everything you need done, everything you need sent.
Do not trust the girlfriend.
Things change when you go inside.
Go ahead, call her.
Call Alicia.
One of the reasons I'm running, if not the prime reason, is that I saw how a marauding state's attorney ruins people's lives.
Not just the life of my partner, but the lives of widows and orphans whose loved ones have been murdered in the recent gun violence.
Yay.
Do you have a response to that, Mr.
Prady? My response to? To what Alicia said about the state's attorney's office.
Um, ahem What the hell? I'm sorry.
I'm sorry, that was totally inappropriate on my part.
She just looked so serious staring at me.
Uh, what do I think of the state's attorney's office? I, uh I just - Okay, well, this was a great idea.
- Mr.
Fluke, what are you doing? Dr.
Fluke.
Thank you very much, okay? And nothing.
I'm not doing anything.
- He's high.
- High? No, I'm not high.
I - I'm pleasant.
- We need a new sparring partner.
Come on, guys.
This is medical marijuana for my glaucoma, okay? I'm functioning here, I really am.
You need to get laid.
You gotta start creating memories now.
What's your girlfriend's name? Kalinda.
Give me your phone.
You're going two to four years without a moment of affection or comfort.
So give me the phone.
Maybe that's her.
Hi, Alicia.
No.
Why? - What? - Where are we on overturning the plea? I can't get ahold of Diane.
What do you mean? Your plea.
The Brady violation.
What? It, um Okay, I Let me call you back.
Your Honor, we would like to subpoena the backup drives of the C.
P.
D.
's Fourth District.
This is completely unnecessary, Your Honor.
Detective Prima stated on record he never received an e-mail from Toronto.
He shouldn't mind us taking a look.
You know you only have four hours left, counselor? I do, Your Honor.
It's very dramatic.
Objection.
The defense is manipulating your affection for the dramatic, Your Honor.
I know she is, Madam A.
S.
A.
And yet, I do love the dramatic.
Subpoena approved.
And if I were you, Ms.
Lockhart, I would race out of this court now.
Thank you, Your Honor.
Oh, we're in.
That's C.
P.
D.
's server.
Okay, good.
Now, can you access the individual e-mail archives? I can access anything, Kalinda.
Good, because I need positive proof that he received this e-mail.
Nope, he did not.
- What? - He didn't receive that e-mail.
- You know that already? - I do.
There.
Wait.
Couldn't it have been deleted? Ah.
That's the question, isn't it? - Howell.
- Yeah, time for the metadata.
You delete an e-mail, it's still gonna show up in the metadata.
Metadata don't lie.
- Hello? - Are you the girlfriend? - Who is this? - It's the damn tooth fairy.
Are you his girlfriend? Is this the Bishop call? It's the prison consultant.
Your boy's throwing up in the bathroom.
If I were you, I'd get your ass here and do your job.
My job? What's my job? It's your boyfriend's last four hours of freedom.
You need to screw his brains out.
Look, I'm a little bit busy right now, okay? He's going away for four years.
Four years.
What else you have to do that's more important than that? Okay, almost there.
I'm getting him a hooker.
You don't get down here, I'm getting on the phone with five hookers I know.
Because he's a nice kid and he deserves a memory.
- Yeah, look, I'll get back to you, all right? - Okay, here we go.
- Metadata.
- And wear something sexy.
- What? - Bad news.
I went to his spam folder and he has it set up to automatically delete at the end of every week.
Couldn't he have read it first? No, the metadata says he never opened it.
Sorry, K.
It's a dead end.
- Hi.
- Good.
You came to your senses.
Okay, I approve.
I'm gonna leave you two alone for a minute.
Not too long.
We got work to do.
Treat me like an adult and tell me everything! It was a Hail Mary pass.
And you needed to focus on getting ready for prison.
I don't care how far-fetched it is.
If there's chance of me beating - There isn't.
- What do you mean? Alicia said We were trying to find a Brady violation.
And there isn't one.
I'm sorry, Cary.
Okay.
Hey, I got to live in hope for an hour.
That's something, I guess.
Less talking, more sex.
So, Eli, is there anything you want me to focus on? Just one thing.
Bury her.
- Bury her? - Don't let up.
Go for the jugular.
- Like you would if it were a real debate.
- Okay.
Character.
Character is the central issue in this campaign.
The SA must be above ethical reproach - and that is where my opponent falters.
- Excuse me The company that we keep matters.
Mrs.
Florrick has represented the biggest drug dealer in Chicago.
She has represented the wife-killer Colin Sweeney.
Governor Florrick We're all acquainted with Florrick's record.
As a candidate for this office, Mr.
Prady should understand the importance of judging people on their own merits.
Instead of engaging in guilt by association.
The cynicism is beneath him.
Better.
So that was a memory? Hey.
Again? Sure.
I won't disappear on you.
Four years is a long time.
Two years with good behavior.
Yeah.
I'll be here.
Good.
So rotated the tires? How hard would it be to fake the metadata of Prima's account? What do you mean, Kalinda? How hard would it be to make it look like he read the e-mail from Canada? You know that's illegal, right? Yes, but I'm asking hypothetically.
It wouldn't be that hard.
But you hack someone, you pray there are no cops on the other end.
This is all cops? - Kalinda, anything? - Not yet.
But I'm working on something.
Let me know as soon as you can.
We've got two hours.
Okay, look, uh, here's the thing.
You show me, in theory, how one would do it.
Then, you leave.
You don't contact me, I don't contact you.
And if this gets more serious you tell the truth.
I asked you how to hack into an account.
- But you had nothing to do with it.
- Kalinda.
I love you.
I'll do what you ask.
But you can get in some real trouble with this.
I know.
Show me.
Like this.
Always like this, not because someone's gonna steal your food.
It's because someone might slip a piece of glass into it.
Now, eat.
I'm not hungry.
Three squares a day.
Food's lousy, but you gotta keep your strength up.
Look, you got a misconception about all this from Oz and Shawshank.
Where you're going, it's not like that.
You're gonna be fine.
Your first few months and your last few months are the hardest.
Anyone ever ask you about taking off? - Yeah.
- What do you tell them? Problematic.
Why? Where do you go? - Two years goes faster than you think.
- Four years.
You ever been to Spain? They have extradition.
Look, you do what you want.
But you're not built to be an outlaw.
My whole life, I wanted to be one thing.
A lawyer.
And I had it.
I had it.
I had it figured out.
Get to the top, take the cases I wanted, help the people I wanted.
Now I can't.
I can't.
I can't figure anything out.
Look at me.
Don't do it.
So it can't be used to investigate you, your husband or your partners.
- Now, that is the height of cynicism.
- Let's talk cynicism.
The cynicism of a lifelong Republican switching parties in advance of his candidacy.
- Mr.
Governor.
- Hi.
Sorry.
- I had an hour.
I thought I'd take a peek.
- You can't stay away.
I'll just sit over here, out of the way.
This is what I would do.
Scroll back up.
That shows the e-mail went directly to the detective's spam folder.
Now, that shows that it was deleted unread.
If one were to do this, that's what one would change.
Now correct the date.
Move it out of spam and change it to "read.
" Easy.
Now you have to do it here.
Make it match.
Congrats.
He officially read the e-mail the day he got it.
Hey, um, do you have a minute? - Yeah.
One sec.
- I'll talk to you, K.
Thanks.
Um, I found something.
I was thinking over our interview with Prima.
He kept saying "we.
" "We never heard the name Inspector Frazier.
" - Who's "we?" - Well - He means the police.
- I don't think so.
Check this out.
This is a transcript of Prima's interrogation of Wagner, when they got him to wear the wire.
Now, it's just Prima and Trey, but it's weird.
Read that.
"'I'm gonna see what I can do to help you, Trey, but you gotta help me too.
' 'I don't know anything.
' 'Shut up, you lying piece of crap.
"' You see? It's like good cop, bad cop.
Only he's doing both.
Someone else was there.
- Kevin Rodriguez.
- That's Prima's former partner.
All the paperwork right up to Trey's arrest has both their signatures Rodriguez and Prima, until the day of the interrogation.
After that, it's just Prima.
Now, maybe he retired or got relocated or Or maybe he wanted off the case.
Very smart.
Hey, when I apply myself.
Now, my guess is if they're hiding him, Rodriguez might have something to say.
We only have an hour.
Diane? Look, I think we may have something.
I'll meet you at court, but, if you can, delay Cuesta.
I may need more time.
The problem starts with guns.
The SA's office should aggressively pursue weapons violations Except that the office doesn't have the resources to do so.
- No, that's not true.
- Sorry? The SA has the resources.
They just choose to allocate them elsewhere.
- Thanks for the clarification.
- My point is that this office's apathy of charging gun crimes sends the wrong message.
I agree.
Further scrutiny of this office's charging policies is warranted.
Wait a minute.
Is that it? - Sorry? - "Further scrutiny.
" Now, she just made a good point.
Guns are a problem, but violent crime is a bigger problem - so choices have to be made.
- You know what? Why don't we take a few minutes here? - Thanks, guys.
- Okay.
Finn, you can't leave.
Eli, I am obviously intruding in there.
You're not intruding.
Let me talk to him.
It's just that there are Alicia, something A client thing came up.
I have to get back to work.
- I understand.
Thanks for pitching in.
- You're gonna do great.
- You were kicking my butt in there.
- I think you kicked mine too.
So we need to find a new Prady.
Hey, we should let Eli mix up the order of the questions.
- That way, it makes you pivot on the fly.
- Sounds good.
Peter.
You know I respect the line, the line between husband and governor, but I need to cross it and ask you a favor.
- Okay.
- Cary.
I'm not asking you to consider a pardon.
I'd never go there.
I just want him safe.
You want me to speak to the D.
O.
C.
And get him into a minimum security facility.
I don't want him to look over his shoulder for the next two years.
This won't have any political blowback.
This isn't Bill Clinton helping Marc Rich.
I can't do that.
And you know why.
You're right.
Sorry I asked.
You don't think I wanna help Cary? He worked for me, for God's sakes.
Let's just start this thing.
It's Diane.
Have you heard anything from Kalinda? No, not yet.
Cuesta's running behind, thank God.
Call me the second you hear from her.
The Illinois Supreme Court? - Me? - Yes, sir.
Things are moving fast.
I have been asked by the justices to gauge your interest.
Well, yes, of course, I'm honored.
I'm flattered.
Let me walk you through how this'll play out.
James Castro is corrupt and he's going down.
Especially if Alicia Florrick becomes the new state's attorney so if you conspired with him, obstructed justice Whoa, whoa, whoa.
I did nothing wrong.
I wouldn't play ball with Castro so they took me off the case.
And what about your partner? He seemed to have no problem.
He's the senior detective.
What am I supposed to do? All I care is what you do now.
Listen to me.
Castro is a lame duck.
He can't hurt you anymore.
Don't you wanna look good in front of the new SA? What happened in that interrogation? Why did they take your name off the transcript? Well, I'll certainly be ready.
I'm just I thought Flaherty or Dominguez were a shoo-in for the next spot.
Well, sir, you have fans.
Chief Justice Ryvlan called you an inspired choice.
He thinks you would bring fresh gusto to the justices' deliberations.
And when are you meeting with Flaherty and Dominguez? Well, there's no plan to.
Not yet.
You are our man.
- Really? - You sound surprised.
Well, you've been Peter Florrick's man for years.
And Peter Florrick wouldn't cross the street to stop me from choking.
So, yeah, I guess I am surprised.
- Things change.
- No, they don't.
And you keep checking your watch, sir.
The governor just called to see if I'm still stuck in this meeting instead of presiding in court on a case involving his wife's firm.
Okay, this was good.
You tell the governor next time he calls, go to hell.
He was the most corrupt SA this county has ever seen.
And now he's the most corrupt governor.
- And that's saying something.
No.
No.
- Why don't you sit down? I'd much rather destroy his wife's firm in court.
Even though I've been successfully stalled for two hours.
- Why are you doing this? - Can you be specific? It's the most fundamental question any candidate has to answer, Mrs.
Florrick.
Why're you running for office? Why do you wanna be state's attorney? I'm running because I believe there is a failure in leadership in the state's attorney's office.
No.
You're setting up a straw man.
Mr.
Castro is not in this race.
I'm not just blaming Castro.
Cook County has a history of prosecutors with serious ethical shortcomings.
- There it is.
- I think there is a difference - between unethical and controversial.
- I know it well.
- My husband, unfortunately, was both.
- Your husband - is not in this race, either.
- But he is.
What he did as SA, what he's doing now as governor, - informs voters' perception of me.
- For better or worse.
Absolutely, but I think it is critical that people understand I am not my husband.
And that they can expect more of me in office.
More accountability, more responsibility.
- Uh-oh.
- You're never happy.
She's kicking ass.
I don't want a career in politics.
I'm simply a lawyer.
By training and by temperament.
And what that means is I have the character to put the demands of this job before my own self-interests and the discipline to ensure that winning cases does not become more important than seeing justice done.
Based on your past, Mr.
Prady, I don't think you can say the same.
This is a good time for a break.
What the hell? You just graduated.
That was amazing.
It's finally going good for her, and you go and do that? - They needed a break.
- They did not need a break.
- Your boy needed a break.
- You have a problem with me? You were worried about your candidate's ego.
- Do you want me to leave? - I'm worried about a marriage.
- You should be too.
- That's crap, and you know it.
Think of the long term, Elfman.
Are you doing this for some little SA's race? - No, I'm doing it because I wanna win.
- I am too.
They win if they're married.
Come on, Eli.
Don't try to save your boy at my girl's expense.
- I'm not.
They're tied at the waist.
- That's what you're doing.
- I'm not trying to save one.
- She was kicking ass.
You pulled the plug.
- I've worked with them for five years.
- You don't know anything.
I know them better than you.
Why don't you work in the trenches before you say? Why don't you get the hell off of my campaign? This is not your campaign.
This is by far the lowest trick I've seen in all my years on the bench.
- Your Honor? - Don't you dare feign ignorance with me, Ms.
Lockhart.
The fact that you conspired to waste this court's time is not only personally offensive.
- It's actionable.
- I have no idea what It shows poor judgment, tremendous disrespect and will deservedly color every interaction both of you have in this court and every court in the jurisdiction.
Where is your client? Where the hell is Cary Agos? I'm here, Your Honor.
Good.
Get your ass up here for sentencing.
Your Honor.
We have found the Brady violation.
- And we ask - Oh, yes.
You have your Brady violation because you delayed me.
Your Honor, with respect, I did nothing of the kind.
And we insist that you see this Brady violation.
What did you get? Kalinda got it.
I just pulled it down from her computer.
Your Honor.
I ask leave to approach? With great caution, counselor.
As you would a lion in a cage.
Good job.
They're looking at it now.
- Looking at what? - What you found.
Diane pulled it off your computer.
This is metadata from Detective Prima's account proving that he saw the Canadian e-mail.
That is your Brady violation.
That's a flat-out lie! We have proof, Your Honor, that Detective Prima buried evidence! - Diane.
- Not once have I buried evidence! Let me handle this.
This is ridiculous.
How can she go and smear my name? Is this Morse code? - What am I looking at here? - It is a metadata report taken from Detective Prima's computer proving that he was in receipt of information from the Canadian police.
Geneva, help me out here.
This isn't true.
Yes, Geneva, help us out here.
Because from where I sit, it looks like the state's attorney's office and the Chicago P.
D.
Are playing fast and loose with the facts.
The state has new evidence to submit.
- Uh, Your Honor - I just received a statement from Detective Rodriguez.
Mr.
Agos may have been a victim of entrapment.
Okay.
Everybody, bring their evidence up here.
Now.
- You okay? - Yeah.
Sit down, Ms.
Pine.
Now.
If your office spent this much time working within the confines of the law the streets would be free of criminals.
We move that we be allowed to retry this, Your Honor.
Excuse me, but we move for an immediate dismissal, Your Honor.
This is not just a matter of a cover-up of the original investigation.
But the police detective - who received that e-mail lied to the court.
- I did nothing of the kind.
- Sit, and stop your lying.
- I did nothing wrong.
This shows you did something.
Now, sit down or I'll hold you in contempt.
Okay.
Here's how we're doing this.
Mr.
Agos.
Please, accept my apologies on behalf of this court for the egregious and overzealous prosecution you've suffered.
I know these words don't make up for the last six months of your life.
No words ever can.
But they're all I have.
And so, I will use them now.
- This case is dismissed with prejudice.
- Your Honor No, leave the poor guy alone.
You're free to go, Mr.
Agos.
With our apologies.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you, Kalinda.
Thank you.
Hello.
Yeah, Diane, what happened? I Thank you.
Thank you.
No, I'm Oh, my God, I'm good.
I'm good.
I Okay.
No.
I'll talk to you.
Alicia.
You all right?
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