The phone rang at 6:30 a.m. Steve sleepily reached for it.
“Good morning, young man,” Booger said dryly. “What momentous piece of information arose in the wee hours of last night that required this morning’s urgent phone call?”
Steve quickly explained what happened the previous night with Emily.
Booger said, “Okay, I’m on my way.”
After they met up and Steve had shown the investigator the contents of the zip drive Emily had given him, Booger said, “Well, we definitely got someone’s attention. Too bad all of our suspects live within a few miles of each other.”
“True. What do you think our next move should be?” Steve said.
“I think we definitely keep it our secret for now. Can you trust Dr. Babbage not to tell any of her friends at the district attorney’s office?”
“Yes, I think so. I will ask her to keep this on the down low. I do think the threats might help us in getting the police file though. I would like to prepare a second motion to the court including this information.”
“Good idea, just make sure you get the court’s authority to file it under seal in order to keep it out of the public realm. You know that, otherwise, everything you file can be found online from the court’s website,” Booger said.
“Yeah, I know,” Steve said, nodding. “I will definitely ask the court to let me file the motion and exhibits under seal. That is the only way to let the judge know what is going on, but make sure no one else knows what we know.”
“Damn lucky you were on a date with a computer forensics expert
when you got this threat,” Booger said with a chuckle.
“Yeah. Especially since they sent it via Snapchat. Not sure if you know this, but once you watch the video twice, it’s gone forever, and it’s gone in twenty-four hours even if you don’t watch it twice. I doubt many people would have even believed I got this message if not for Emily’s quick thinking and expertise.”
“True.” Booger paused, then said with a grin, “I don’t suppose you want to give me five numbers between one and thirty-six and your favorite number? I’m thinking a dollar for the purchase of a lottery ticket might be in order.”
After Booger left to work on some cars, Steve hunkered down to prepare his motions. First the motion to seal and then his addendum to the motion to see Blackburn’s police file. He asked the judge to move up the hearing. He used the threat to support his argument that he needed the file as soon as possible for his own safety, as well as for the fact he now strongly believed an innocent man was sitting on death row.
Steve persuasively told the court that since there was no possible way Scottie sent the threat, someone else must be worried about the investigation. He further alleged that the unknown someone could be the person who actually killed Ashley Pinkerton. There was no other logical reason for anyone to be concerned enough about their investigation to issue a death threat. Moreover, that unknown someone might kill Steve if he or she wasn’t apprehended quickly.
Steve finished the brief by late Saturday evening; he then filed everything that day using the court’s online filing system. As he clicked through the process, Steve thought about how frustrating it must have been to be an attorney in the past. Less than ten years
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ago, he would have had to wait until Monday morning and taken copies in person to the court clerk’s office to file his motion. Now, thanks to technology, he could relax for the rest of the weekend, work on other cases, and wait to see what Judge Henry had to say about his motion on Monday morning.
Early that morning, Steve was in the office, trying to occupy himself with work that needed to be completed on his other files. He had caught up on the majority of them Sunday but still wasn’t comfortable with where he was on a few of them. Mostly though, he wanted to stay busy to keep his mind off the motion he filed Saturday evening and what response he thought it might garner from the judge. Shortly after 11:00 a.m., Carol buzzed his intercom. “Judge Henry’s office on line three, big shot.”
Steve picked up the phone. “Hello, this is Steve Hanson.”
“Hello, Steve. Gail from Judge Henry’s office. The judge reviewed your motion to seal, your motion to obtain the police file and your application for emergency hearing that you filed over the weekend. He is granting your request to keep the second motion under seal. He is also granting an expedited hearing on your motion requesting access to the police file. He is going to stay through
lunch and hear your case tomorrow at noon.”
“Thank you, Gail. I will see you tomorrow.”
“See you then.” Before Gail hung up, she said under her breath, “One more thing, Steve… Stay safe. You know we are all fans of yours around here. We wouldn’t want anything to happen to our favorite young attorney.”
“Thanks,” Steve said. “Will do.”
As soon as he hung up with Gail, Steve called Booger.
“We are set for a hearing tomorrow at noon,” Steve said. “Noon?” Booger asked.
“Yes. I guess that threat got the judge’s attention. He often skips lunch when he has a matter he wants heard quickly but can’t find any open time slot on his docket otherwise. Also, we still have our trip to McAlester on Wednesday to visit Scottie. Hopefully, we will have some good news for him.”
“Well, that worked out mighty nicely. I think I am definitely going to run to the corner market and buy that lottery ticket. Can you give me the numbers to pick?
“In all seriousness,” Booger continued after they’d shared a laugh, “it sounds like you have a lot of work to do in the next twenty-four hours. You know the state is not going to just roll over and let you get that police file without a fight. This threat may have gotten you a quick hearing, but the state won’t care. They will still fight you tooth and nail on this one. They don’t like turning over investigative files in any case, let alone a murder investigation.”
“Yes, I know. See you tomorrow at the courthouse.”
Steve had a divorce mediation set that afternoon and some DUIs set for plea the next morning. He was able to move them to a later date by telling the state court judges he had just been informed that Judge Henry, a federal judge, had set an expedited hearing the next day, and he needed to prepare. It was common for state court judges to defer to federal court judges when it came to conflicting schedules. Steve went home to his war room, which until the Scottie appointment had merely been his dining room. He spent the rest of the day preparing for the hearing.
First, he printed copies of the relevant case law he wanted to use in support of his arguments. He had done all of the necessary research while preparing the motion, so it was easy to find the
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cases. Next, he highlighted and tabbed the specific sections of those cases he wanted to read to the court.
Having read numerous briefs while working for judges, Steve knew that, oftentimes, rather than making up the wording of your entire argument from scratch and citing cases, the most effective way to persuade the court was to use direct quotes from a similar case or situation, especially when the case had come from a judge who was superior in the judicial system to the judge you were appearing in front of. Luckily, Steve had already found a few cases that he thought fit squarely behind his position.
He finished his oral argument preparation by outlining his thoughts and organizing the quoted material in conjunction with his outline. He did this so he could easily shift from the specifics of his case to the quoted material in support without delay.
Once he had his argument in focus, he put an empty box on his dining room table. He arranged his notes and copies on it to simulate the lectern he would be standing behind in the courtroom. He practiced over and over until he essentially had the entire argument memorized.
Steve did not usually practice this much for a simple motion hearing, but he knew the police file contained the key to finding the true killer. If he and Booger were not allowed to see the file, all would be lost. It would be almost impossible to investigate the murder seven years later without knowing everything that had been discovered when the investigation was still fresh.
If you don’t win this case, your client will die. This was the thought that kept popping up in the back of Steve’s mind; this was the thought that drove him to work as hard as he could. He had to win tomorrow.