
This told me I had just saved Barnett Woodson’s life.
“The defense has no objection,” I told the judge.
Three
After the jury filed out of the box, I returned to the defense table as the courtroom deputy was moving in to cuff my client and take him back to the courtroom holding cell.
“That guy’s a lying sack of shit,” Woodson whispered to me. “I didn’t kill two black guys. They were white.”
My hope was that the deputy hadn’t heard that.
“Why don’t you shut the fuck up?” I whispered right back. “And next time you see that lying sack of shit in lockup, you ought to shake his hand. Because of his lies the prosecutor’s about to come off of the death penalty and float a deal. I’ll be back there to tell you about it as soon as I get it.”
Woodson shook his head dramatically.
“Yeah, well, maybe I don’t want no deal now. They put a goddamn liar on the stand, man. This whole case should go down the toilet. We can win this motherfucker, Haller. Don’t take no deal.”
I stared at Woodson for a moment. I had just saved his life but he wanted more. He felt entitled because the state hadn’t played fair – never mind responsibility for the two kids he had just admitted to killing.
“Don’t get greedy, Barnett,” I told him. “I’ll be back with the news as soon as I get it.”
The deputy took him through the steel door that led to the holding cells attached to the courtroom. I watched him go. I had no false conceptions about Barnett Woodson. I had never directly asked him but I knew he had killed those two Westside boys. That wasn’t my concern. My job was to test the state’s case against him with the best of my skills – that’s how the system worked. I had done that and had been given the blade. I would now use it to improve his situation significantly, but Woodson’s dream of walking away from those two bodies that had turned black in the water was not in the cards. He might not have understood this but his underpaid and underappreciated public defender certainly did.
