No good deed, p.26

No Good Deed, page 26

 part  #4 of  Destiny Saga Series

 

No Good Deed
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  Those thoughts were quickly pushed aside as we began going over the presentation, spending the rest of the day making small refinements.

  By the time the girls called and said they were ready to knock off for the day, my mind had been wrung out. While the repetition of going through a major presentation is a good idea, it can become draining after a while.

  They had the SUV we’d driven down in, dropping Emily, Jawarski, and I off at the offices earlier that morning, so we had to wait as they got waved through the security gate and pulled up to the office building to pick us up.

  “I want to go by the new house before we head home,” I said when they pulled up.

  “Why? It’s barely started,” Vicki said.

  “I know, I just want to see it.”

  She shrugged and got out of the driver's seat so Jawarski could take over. She’d declared some time back that she wasn’t going to trust her life to any punk teenagers, no matter how superhuman they may be, and that she’d drive whenever we went anywhere.

  Emily and I piled into the back with Zoe and Vicki, with Tami up front. It was a modest size SUV, but it was still just a five-seater, making the back seat cozy. Not that I minded much, considering who the other occupants were.

  Vicki hadn’t been wrong. The house was only in the beginning stages, and couldn’t even be called a house yet. Rather, it was a giant hole in the ground, with concrete going down as they built out the underground portions of the house, which were more accurately called a bunker.

  Still, seeing what was essentially the footprint of the house in person, was much different than just looking at the blueprints. While it was clear the house would be fairly massive in size, seeing the giant hole in the ground brought home how big this thing would be.

  I had a moment of embarrassment, if only internally, as I considered how absurd it was that my new house was going to be so huge. But it was only a moment, since I also realized just how many people would be living there every day, and that didn’t count the security people who would be around all the time. Jawarski had already started interviewing new staff, specifically to guard the house.

  We didn’t spend long looking it over since everyone was tired, but I was glad we’d stopped at seeing it.

  “Now that that’s done, we had an idea we wanted to float past you,” Zoe said once we were all back in the car and headed home.

  “You don’t have to float anything by me, you know. Next Step is your baby, I’m just the money.”

  “Yeah, but after talking to some of the people at the center, we’ve started to realize a big area we’ve ignored.”

  “Which is?”

  “Legal help,” Vicki said. “You’d be surprised how much something as simple as a speeding ticket or a ticket for out of date registration can destroy a family living hand to mouth. And once they get into the cycle of trying to clear up the first ticket which has started getting added fines and fees. It can quickly become a massive problem. That doesn’t count people who're family members make poor choices, usually drugs, and end up bankrupting the whole family in the process. We also met a man who’d taken out everything he had to buy a new car from a guy but was pulled over in a not so great neighborhood, and the money was taken from him in a civil forfeiture.”

  “I’ve seen some of that on the news before, but how does that intersect with the center?”

  “Because some of these people are really being affected by it, and they can’t afford any kind of legal help. Landlord disputes where people don’t have hot water or electricity, people who were scammed out of money, all these things require lawyers, and they can’t afford them. Sometimes it pushes people out on the street.”

  “I can see how it’s something we could use. If not actually legal help, maybe some form of counseling, but you should probably talk to Jonathan about that.”

  “I actually called him. He said he’d talk to us about the idea, but also suggested you talk to the Judge of yours. The one from the CPS investigation you changed. He said that guy was probably looking for a way to make restitution, and also there was a good chance he was bored in the apartment you stashed him in. Besides all that, he’ll have a very different view of what people do or don’t need than Jonathan said he did and would be a good judge of what we should be looking at doing.”

  “That’s not a bad idea. I needed to go by there sometime this week and follow up on some of the stuff we’d copied from the stuff Damion got for us. I’ll go by tomorrow and talk to him.”

  Something between a grunt and a snarl came from the front seat, drawing my attention.

  “You made your opinion very clear,” I said to Jawarski, who glanced at me through the rearview mirror. “I know you think it’s a bad idea from safety. I can even see why that’s probably true, but if we don’t find a way to take these guys down, we’ll spend the rest of our lives dealing with safety concerns. I can’t do that bundled up inside a house.”

  “You’re the boss, do whatever the hell you want to do. What do I know about protecting people anyways,” she said in a voice dripping with sarcasm.

  “Don’t be like that. I’ve been trying to listen to you more about this stuff, but you know I’m right.”

  “I know you’re something alright,” she muttered under her breath.

  Over the last several months I’d figured out how to read Jawarski’s responses, since everything was being filtered through her genetic annoyance at me. I was happy that thanks to the shots Mom and Alex had devised, it had thankfully dropped from genetic hatred to genetic annoyance at least. But that annoyance was still very strong, and I’d been forced to learn to interpret it.

  Even without being a genetic negative, Jawarski was as stubborn as a mule. I’d already had to intercede between her, Carter and Levi. It hadn’t happened a lot, but sometimes she would dig in and refuse to compromise, despite the arguments being made. So, adding that to the genetic response to me specifically, she couldn’t seem to ever just agree to something I’d said, or even let me get the last word. I’d figured out by now that generally, if she started muttering insults at me, it meant she’d accepted my argument and was prepared to go with it, even if she wouldn’t say that out loud.

  The next day found us heading towards where Jawarski had stashed Davis and his wife. While they weren’t that far from our house, only a mile or so outside of Alice, it took us almost forty-five minutes to get there, as Jawarski doubled and tripled back, checking the mirrors for a tail.

  Eventually, she must have accepted that her maneuvers had been successful since we pulled up to a row of townhouses she’d rented through some third party cutout. I’d asked for more information on how that worked, but she told me to let her do her job, and that I should keep my mind on what I needed to do. She also added in the normal descriptions of my various flaws, but that was just punctuation at this point.

  Davis opened the door and let us in, a surprised look on his face.

  “Caspian,” he said as he shut the door. “I thought we’d only be seeing your intermediaries until this business was resolved.”

  “That was the plan, but something came up I wanted to talk to you about.”

  “More problems?” he said as we sat down on one of the couches in their front room.

  “No, it’s totally separate issue. First, let's talk about what you found in that information we dropped off?”

  “Like I said, I wasn’t actually involved with the organization …”

  I held up a hand stopping him and said, “I know. I just wanted your insight.”

  “I wrote all my notes here,” he said, handing over a small notebook. “Some of the company names I saw mentioned in the ledgers you had, I recognized. They’d had me fix a few cases before I moved over to family court when I was still assigned to civil cases. Those companies were the ones involved. Usually, the cases had to do with accusations of fraud or inconsistencies with their books. I wrote down everything I could remember from those cases. A few of the names also seemed familiar, again from the same cases. People who were listed as principals of the companies under review.”

  Jawarski took the notebook from him, “That will actually help. We’ve been trying to figure out how the syndicate is organized. It's pretty clear they aren’t into traditional criminal venues, at least not in any major way. Everything we can find, is made up of smaller companies gaming the system, or completely twisting the system, to make money; and it looks like a lot of money.”

  “Does that mean you’re ready to do something about them?” Davis said, sounding hopeful.

  “Not yet. We know more about their operation, but we’re not even sure we can do anything about them. We’re still working on options.”

  “Ohh,” he said, deflated.

  “We’re getting there though,” I interjected, seeing his reaction. “We’re closer now, thanks to your help.”

  He gave a wan smile, knowing I was offering more in the way of platitudes than actual hope.

  “Well, that’s all I had on that. What else did you need?”

  “This is completely separate to our dealings with the syndicate. Some of my family have been working on a large charity project, trying to help people who’ve fallen off society's radar.”

  “I remember seeing mentions of some kind of charity work in the papers Mrs. Bell submitted. Considering I’d been ordered to torpedo your case, I honestly didn’t take a look at them though.”

  I frowned at the memory of the load the whole event had put mom under, but I knew he wasn’t ultimately the one to blame. And considering he’d had to basically walk away from a career he’d worked on his whole adult life, he’d paid for his mistakes.

  “Well, we’ve opened a new center near Houston, offering things like free medical checkups, job training and placement assistance, and stuff like that. But it was brought up that another thing we could do, is to offer some sort of legal help for people who can’t afford a decent lawyer.”

  “Whoever told you that is right.”

  “I was hoping I could pick your brain a bit on what’s needed. I’m not sure I understand what the problem we’re trying to solve is.”

  “Well,” he said, leaning back, “the problem is, the current system we have for legal defense is overloaded to the point of being nearly useless. The system itself is well-intentioned but massively underfunded. The government pays out a very small amount for lawyers to act as court-appointed attorneys, meaning very few except the inexperienced looking to get court time, or the occasional true believer, volunteer for the work. Most counties maintain a public defender’s office, funded directly by the state, but again, not very much money is put into that, so their staff is, again, extremely green in most cases. Some states require law firms to put in a set number of hours handling court-appointed cases, but the firms basically use that as a dumping ground for lawyers they can’t get rid of, but don’t want to be involved in their real cases, or to try out some of their more green attorneys.”

  “So the people who work as public defenders are usually not very good at their job?”

  “I don’t want to make it sound like they’re bad lawyers, some of them are very smart. But when it comes to criminal defense and dealing with prosecutors, experience counts for a whole lot. That’s not the biggest problem, though.”

  “What is the biggest problem?”

  “The volume of cases. Most of the cases get assigned to state-run public defenders offices. Even in very large jurisdictions, these offices do not have very many lawyers, and each is usually dealing with dozens of open cases at a time. I’ve even seen some instances of a public defender actively working on more than a hundred cases. They just don’t have the time to do the work needed for most trials. Which leads us to the problem of the current plea bargain system.”

  “What’s the problem, people admit what they did and save the courts money, and get lower sentences, right?”

  Jawarski snorted at me, but I ignored it.

  “That’s the idea of plea bargains, and in theory, they’re a good idea; but that’s not how they work out in practice.”

  “Then how does it actually work out?”

  “Most prosecutors don’t want to go to trial. There’s a chance they could lose, something no prosecutor wants, and trials take a lot of work. They’d rather save their time for the high profile cases, and get some good press, and not have to focus on the smaller cases that make up the bulk of our criminal system. Keep in mind prosecutors are elected, so the prosecutorial record is very important to them.”

  “Okay.”

  “So they generally find it in their best interest to get cases to plead out and never go to court. To make sure that happens, most prosecutors tend to significantly overcharge, in hopes of scaring a defendant into agreeing with something lower. They stack up the charges, many of which couldn’t actually hold up through trial, and tell the defendant they are looking at two lifetimes of jail, or whatever. Then they tell them they would settle for two years if they plead guilty. A guilty plea saves the prosecutor from having to find evidence, prepare witnesses, and so on.”

  “Doesn’t the public defender point out most of the charges wouldn’t stick in court?”

  “Sometimes, but usually they don’t know which charges are the weak charges. Remember, they have so many cases. Usually, they only have time to look at the facts briefly. Also, keep in mind these guys defend both the people being railroaded into charges and the actual bad guys who deserve that kind of treatment, and both groups always maintain their innocence. It’s hard to tell which client is someone who made a mistake, but isn’t a bad guy from the real scum that our system was meant to catch up.”

  “I can see how that would be a problem.”

  “Also, our justice system handles a lot of people not able to assist in their own defense. Our courts and jails have become the main venue to deal with people suffering from major mental illnesses, and police and lawyers their main caretakers. Which makes cases no one has time for, often even more complex.”

  “So what can be done to make it better?”

  “Aside from some better state funding of the public defender's system or a law taking the burden of mental health off the courts, not a lot. There are the people who are generally innocent but railroaded into pleading guilty. It’s not that common, but it happens more than you’d think. There are a lot of people who make mistakes, small amounts of drugs, fights that get out of hand, that are generally not bad people. They could use a real defense with the time to look at their case and push back against overcharging. I’m not talking about keeping people from paying for their crimes but making sure they’re only paying for the crimes they actually committed. That would take money and a process for weeding out the bad apples looking to get a good, free defense, but who will be back in trouble the minute they get out.”

  “What if someone was willing to find the money to do that? Maybe not for everyone, but for some people? What if they could find a dependable way to weed out the bad apples? Could someone like that make a difference?”

  “Maybe, if it was handled right. Honestly, I’m not sure anyone really tried so I couldn’t say.”

  “What if I said we wanted to do something like that, we were willing to put up serious money, but we needed to find someone who knew the legal system, and was willing to do what it took to make it work?”

  “I’d say whoever you found would be in for a hell of a big job.”

  “How would you feel about taking on a big job like that?”

  “Me?” he said, surprised.

  “Why not you? You definitely know the legal system.”

  “But, I mean, after what I did. Why would you want me? Hell, I might even have to spend some time in jail myself, for what I did.”

  “Maybe, but Jonathan said he didn’t think so, considering the situation. I know you aren’t a bad person, and what you did wasn’t what you wanted. I just want you to think about it. You have a lot of knowledge about something we know very little about. Considering everything, we have every reason to trust you, now. Also, I’m afraid even if you don’t go to jail, you won’t be able to be a judge again.”

  “I don’t …”

  “Think about it. I need to talk to the people actually in charge of the charity, but the more I think about this, the better of an idea I think it is. You don’t have to decide now. We can’t let you come out of hiding or have a whole lot of contact with the outside world until after everything is settled, so you have some time. Once it is decided, though, I think it’s an excellent idea.

  “Well, we have to get going, but think about it,” I said, standing up.

  “It’s something to think about,” he said with a distracted expression.

  We said our goodbyes and left a somewhat flummoxed Judge Davis in our wake.

 

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