Wild justice 2000, p.17
Wild Justice (2000), page 17
"We brew this specially for defense attorneys."
Amanda took a big bite out of her maple bar to cut the taste of the coffee.
"What do you say to some form of release for Dr. Castle?"
Greene shook his head. "Can't do it."
"C'mon, Mike. She's a doctor. She has patients to tend to."
"That's regrettable, but you have no idea what's going on here."
"Tell me."
Greene looked at DeVore. The detective nodded. Greene leaned back in his chair.
"Your client's been using the farmhouse as a torture chamber."
Greene waited for Amanda to react. When she didn't, he continued.
"We found a man in the basement." Greene shook his head and the pleasant smile disappeared. "Count yourself lucky that you'll only have to look at the photos. What makes it even more evil is the journal."
"What journal?"
"Your client has kidnapped other victims. The journal is an account of her torture sessions with each of them. She kept them in pain for days. It takes a lot to get to me, but I could not read the journal straight through."
"Is the journal in Dr. Castle's handwriting?"
Greene shook his head. "No, the pages were generated by a computer. Her name's not in it, either. It would have made our job easier if Dr. Castle had signed it, but she didn't."
"So how can you be sure she wrote it?"
"We found a section of the journal in Castle's house when we executed a search warrant, earlier this evening. It contains a graphic description of what she did to the poor bastard we found in the basement. A copy will be included in your discovery. I'd wait a few hours after you eat to read it.
"By the way, the medical examiner's preliminary finding is that our John Doe committed suicide by chewing through the veins in his wrist. When you read the journal entry you'll see why he killed himself. Can you imagine how desperate and how terrified a person has to be to kill themselves like that?"
The blood drained from Amanda's face.
"Did anything else at the crime scene connect Dr. Castle to the murder?" she asked quietly.
"You'll get our reports when they're ready."
"Dr. Castle believes that she's been set up."
"Does she have a suspect in mind?" Greene asked skeptically.
"Actually, we both do. You told Justine that the cops came to the farmhouse in response to an anonymous nine-one-one call. The farmhouse is a quarter mile from the road, isn't it? How did this anonymous caller get close enough to hear screams?"
"Good question. I'm sure you'll ask the jury to consider it."
"Come on, Mike. Doesn't this sound like a setup to you? The police just happen to get a call that sends them to a murder scene at the precise moment that the killer rushes out."
"You can argue that, too."
Amanda hesitated before plunging in.
"You've found more victims at the farm, haven't you?"
DeVore had been half listening, but the question got his attention. Mike's eyebrows went up.
"Did you get that from your client?"
"So I'm right."
"How did you know?"
"I'll tell you that if you'll tell me whether you arrested Justine Castle because you found items with her fingerprints in the house."
The detective and the DA exchanged looks again.
"Yes," Greene answered.
"What items?"
"A scalpel with the victim's blood and a mug half filled with coffee."
Amanda controlled her excitement. "Was the mug found in the kitchen?"
"How did you know that?" DeVore asked.
She ignored the question. "Was there anything else with trace evidence on it?"
"We found a surgical gown, cap and booties in a closet in the bedroom. They're at the lab and the technicians are going over them for hair and fibers. Now it's your turn to answer a few questions. How did you know about the other bodies and where we found the mug?"
Amanda took a sip of her coffee while she thought about the best way to answer Greene's question.
"Do you know anything about the Cardoni case?"
Mike Greene looked blank.
"The guy in Milton County with the hand," DeVore said.
Amanda nodded. "This was about four and a half years ago, Mike, before you moved up here. Dr. Vincent Cardoni was a surgeon at St. Francis, and he was married to Justine Castle."
"That's right!" DeVore exclaimed.
"A Portland vice cop named Bobby Vasquez got an anonymous tip that Cardoni was storing cocaine in a home in the mountains in Milton County. He couldn't corroborate the tip, so he broke into the house. Guess what he found?"
DeVore was sitting up, and Amanda could see that he was remembering more and more about the Cardoni case.
"What are you getting at?" the homicide detective asked.
"There was a graveyard in the woods near the house with nine victims. Most of them had been tortured. There was an operating room in the basement and a bloody scalpel with Cardoni's prints on it. Cardoni's prints were also found in the kitchen on a coffee mug. A videotape that showed one of the victims being tortured was found in Cardoni's house. Is this starting to sound familiar?"
"Are you suggesting that Cardoni killed the people at the farmhouse?" Greene asked.
Before she could answer, DeVore said, "He couldn't. Cardoni is dead."
"We don't know that," Amanda said to the detective before turning back to Greene. "Not for sure."
"You guys are going too fast for me," Greene said.
"My father represented Dr. Cardoni. There was a motion to suppress. Vasquez lied under oath to cover up his illegal entry, and Dad proved that he perjured himself. The state lost all its evidence, and Cardoni was released from jail. A week or so later Cardoni called me at home, at night, and said that he had to meet me at the house in Milton County."
"I remember now," DeVore said. "You found it!"
"Found what?" Greene asked.
"Cardoni's right hand. It was on the operating table. Someone cut it off."
"Who?" Greene asked.
"No one knows."
"So it's an unsolved murder?"
"Maybe, maybe not," Amanda said. "Cardoni's body was never found. If he cut off his own hand, it wouldn't be a murder, would it?"
38
By the time Amanda staggered home to her loft it was almost five in the morning. Her eyes were bloodshot, and her head felt as though it were stuffed with cotton. Amanda would have given anything to dive under the covers, but there was too much to do, so she tried to fool her body into believing that she had slept by following her morning routine. She doubted that she would have been able to sleep, anyway. Her head was spinning with ideas for Justine's defense, and the possibility that Vincent Cardoni was back made her skin crawl.
After twenty minutes of calisthenics and an ice-cold shower, Amanda donned one of her dark blue court suits and walked two blocks to a hole-in-the-wall cafe that had been in the neighborhood since the fifties. It was still pitch black outside, and the raw, biting wind helped her stay awake. So did the flapjack breakfast she ate hunkered down in one of the cafe's red vinyl booths. As a swimmer, Amanda always stoked up on carbohydrates the night before a big race. Swimming distance and trying cases were a lot alike. You stored up as much energy as you could, then you dove in and kept driving.
During breakfast, Amanda could not stop thinking about Cardoni. What if he was alive? What if he was lurking in the dark, killing again? The idea terrified her, but it also thrilled her. If Cardoni was back from the dead--if Justine was an innocent woman, falsely accused--this case would make her reputation and bring her out of her father's shadow.
The moment that thought intruded Amanda felt guilty. She focused on the torment Cardoni's victims had to have experienced and forced herself to remember what she'd seen on the Mary Sandowski tape, but she could not suppress the excitement she felt when a secret part of her whispered about a future in which she would be as acclaimed and sought after as Frank Jaffe.
Amanda fought down these thoughts. She told herself that she was ambitious but that she also cared more for her clients than she did for success. Saving Justine Castle was her first, and only, priority. Fame might follow, but she knew that it was wrong to take a case for the notoriety it would bring. Still, the idea of her name in headlines was tough to ignore.
Then a disturbing thought occurred to her. Her father would be back from his vacation in a week. What would she do if he tried to grab her case? Could she stop Frank from moving her aside? She was only an associate at Jaffe, Katz, Lehane and Brindisi. Frank was a senior partner. If Frank wanted the Castle case, Amanda could not stop him from taking over. Maybe Justine would insist on Frank's being lead counsel. When Justine phoned from the Justice Center she had asked for Frank Jaffe, not his daughter.
Amanda chastised herself for thinking this way. She was putting her needs ahead of her client's. If Justine wanted her father to represent her, she would step aside. Right now she shouldn't even be thinking about anything but getting Justine out of jail.
By six-forty-five Amanda was in the basement of the Stockman Building looking through the firm's storage area. The files in State v. Cardoni filled three dusty, cobweb-covered cartons. There would have been many more boxes if the case had gone to trial. Loading the boxes on a dolly while keeping her suit clean was not easy, but Amanda managed. As soon as she rolled the boxes into her office she stripped off her suit jacket and started piling their contents on her desk.
Frank's case files were always well organized. One three-ring binder was for memos discussing legal issues that might be raised in the case. After each memo there were photocopies of the cases and statutes that supported each argument. Another binder contained police reports arranged chronologically. A third binder held reports generated by the defense investigation. A fourth binder was set up alphabetically for potential witnesses and contained copies of every report generated by either side that made any reference to the witness. A typed sheet with potential direct or cross-examination questions and areas of investigation that needed to be pursued preceded the reports. A final binder contained press clippings about the case.
Amanda opened the binder that had been compiled for the motion to suppress. It contained an inventory of the items found at the Milton County house. There was also an envelope with photographs of the crime scene. Amanda spread the photos across her desk and referred to the report. It took her only a moment to find the coffee mug and scalpel in the inventory and the photographs that showed where each item had been found in the house. Mike Greene had promised to give Amanda a set of crime scene photographs this afternoon at Justine's arraignment. She was willing to bet that those photographs would be similar to the photos spread across her desk.
At eight o'clock Amanda sent her secretary to the district attorney's office to get the keys to Justine Castle's house so that she could select clothes for Justine's court appearance. At eleven-thirty she wolfed down a sandwich and drank more coffee at her desk. By the time Amanda headed to the Justice Center at one o'clock for Justine's arraignment, she was exhausted but up to speed on Vincent Cardoni's case.
Amanda made it through the glass-vaulted lobby of the Justice Center and up the curving marble stairs to the third floor before someone from KGW-TV called her by name; instantly she became the focus of a mob of shouting reporters. An attractive brunette from KPDX asked Amanda if she was a stand-in for her famous father, and a short, disheveled reporter from the Oregonian wanted to know if there was a connection between the murders at the farmhouse and the infamous Cardoni case. Amanda ducked to avoid the mikes and the glare of the TV lights while repeating "No comment" to each question. When the doors of the arraignment court closed behind her, sealing her off from the press, she sighed with relief.
The courtroom was packed. Attorneys sat with their clients. Anxious wives bounced children on their knee, trying desperately to keep them quiet so the guard would not expel them before their husbands were brought out of the holding area. Mothers and fathers held hands, watching nervously for a child who had gone wrong. Girlfriends and gang members shifted in their seats while they enjoyed the excitement of seeing someone they knew in court, just like on TV.
A row of chairs inside the bar of the court was reserved for lawyers from the public defender's office, private attorneys who were waiting for court appointments and retained counsel. Amanda took a seat in this section and waited for Justine's case to be called. Arraignment, a defendant's first court appearance, was the time when the judge informed the accused about the nature of the charges filed against him and his right to counsel. If the defendant was indigent, counsel was appointed at the arraignment. Release decisions were sometimes made. Amanda had been to arraignments many times, and they were all the same. She paid attention to the first few cases because it gave her something to do, but she soon lost interest and glanced back at the spectator section out of boredom.
Amanda was about to return her attention to the front of the room when she sensed someone watching her. She scanned the crowd and was ready to chalk up the incident to her imagination when she noticed a large, muscular man with close-cropped blond hair. The man sat with hunched shoulders and his hands folded tightly in his lap, giving the impression that he was uncomfortable being in court. He wore a flannel shirt buttoned to the neck, khakis and a stained trench coat. Something about him was vaguely familiar, but Amanda had no idea where, or if, she had seen him before.
The door to the hall opened, and Mike Greene fought his way past the reporters. Once inside, he used his height to scan the room and spotted Amanda. Greene was still dressed in the brown tweed sports coat, rumpled white shirt and gray slacks that he had been wearing at three in the morning.
"I see you went home," Mike said when he was seated beside Amanda.
"I've got on new duds, but I never got to sleep."
"That makes two of us. The sleep part, that is."
Mike handed Amanda a thick manila envelope.
"The complaint, some of the police reports and a set of the crime scene photographs. Don't say I never gave you anything."
"Thanks for not being a hard-ass."
Mike smiled. "It's the least I can do after making you drink that foul sludge the homicide dicks call coffee."
"Have you given any more thought to release?"
"Can't do it. Too many bodies, too much evidence."
"State v. Justine Elizabeth Castle," the bailiff called out.
Mike Greene walked to a long table at which another assistant district attorney sat. Its top was almost obscured by three gray metal tubs filled with case files. While Greene took out Justine's file, Amanda went to the other side of the room. A guard led Justine out of the holding area. Her client had on no makeup, but she looked good in her dark suit and silk shirt.
The arraignment moved swiftly. Amanda entered her name as attorney of record and waived a reading of the complaint. While the judge conferred with his clerk about a date for a bail hearing, Amanda explained what was going on. Justine listened carefully and nodded in the appropriate places, but Amanda had the impression that her client was barely holding herself together.
"Are you okay?" Amanda asked.
"No, but I won't break. You do your best to get me out as fast as you can."
The judge ended Justine's arraignment, and the guard started to lead her away.
"I'm working on your case full time," Amanda told her client. "I won't see you again today, but I'll be by tomorrow. Don't lose faith."
Justine held her head high as she walked through the door that led to the elevator that would transport her back to jail. Amanda wondered if she'd be able to carry herself with that much dignity if she was in Dr. Castle's shoes.
The reporters swarmed around Amanda in the corridor outside the courtroom. She refused to comment and fought through the crowd to the street. The rain had stopped but it was still cold and blustery. Amanda hunched her shoulders and crossed the street to Lownsdale Park, hurrying past the war memorial and the empty benches. While she waited for the light at Fourth and Salmon to change she cast a glance behind her and thought she saw movement near the small red-brick rest room on the edge of the park. The light changed and Amanda crossed the street, heading down Fourth toward her office. She had the sense that someone was behind her. Could one of the reporters be following her? Amanda stopped and turned around. A man in a trench coat ducked into the entrance of the office building across the way. Amanda stared at the entrance. She even walked back up the block a few steps for a better view. Two women walked out of the building. Amanda stared at the door they exited, but no one else came out. Suddenly a wave of fatigue hit her, and she leaned against a parking meter. She closed her eyes for a moment and still felt a little dizzy when she opened them. She chalked up her feeling of being followed to exhaustion, took a deep breath to clear her head and walked down Fourth to the Stockman Building.
39
Mike Greene grew up in Los Angeles, married his high school sweetheart and graduated from the law school at UCLA. Everything was going wonderfully, his life was perfectly on course. Then one day in his fourth year as a prosecutor for the Los Angeles district attorney's office Mike ate a bad burrito for lunch. When court resumed he was too sick to go on, so the judge recessed for the day. Mike thought about calling his wife, Debbie, but he didn't want to worry her, so he rested for an hour and drove home.
Mike walked through the door of his split-level three hours earlier than usual and found Debbie astride his next-door neighbor. He stood in the bedroom doorway, too stunned to speak. While the guilty couple scrambled for their clothes, he turned without a word and left.
Greene moved in with a fellow DA until he found a gloomy furnished apartment. He'd loved his wife so much that he blamed himself for her betrayal. The divorce was over in a flash. Debbie got the house, most of their savings and everything else she wanted because Mike would not fight. After the divorce, Mike tried to concentrate on his job, but he was so depressed that his work suffered. His supervisor recommended a leave of absence. Mike had never been out of California except for his honeymoon in Hawaii and a vacation or two in Mexico. He sold his car and bought a ticket to London.
