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In the criminal
justice system,
sexually based offenses are
considered especially heinous.
In New York City,
the dedicated detectives who
investigate these vicious felonies
are members of an elite squad
known as the Special Victims Unit.
These are their stories.
Next.
The morning after pill.
I'm sorry.
Could you speak up, please?
I need the
morning after pill.
Have you talked to your doctor
about emergency contraception?
Well, I thought I didn't need
a prescription.
You don't.
But it's best if you see your
physician.
Just give me the pill.
Have you considered adoption?
What the hell is wrong with you?
Okay.
Don't use that
tone with me.
Please.
I need it.
Let go of me.
Security! I need it.
No,
I can't have his baby.
Then you shouldn't have
let him get into your pants.
No.
Please, no.
Come on.
Please don't do this! Don't
do this! Get her out of here.
No! No, you don't
understand!
I was ***.
Mia? I'm Detective Benson, and this
is my partner, Detective Stabler.
Are you taking
me to jail?
You cuffed
a *** victim?
She created a disturbance.
It's store policy.
Unhook her.
She assaulted me.
Unhook her.
Now.
Fine.
Quickly.
Mia, we're going to
get you to the hospital.
I'm
pressing charges.
Don't press your luck.
Is Mia doing okay?
Yeah.
She's resting.
But she's
pretty shaken up.
*** really
worked her over.
And so did
that pharmacist.
You know, too many of them
think they have the right
to push their beliefs
on their patients.
Maybe if they'd been ***,
they'd be more compassionate.
Mia up to talking? Yeah.
Find him fast,
will you, Detective?
I don't want to see any
more of his handiwork.
It was getting light.
I went out for bagels.
And I was on 97th Street when
he grabbed me from behind.
It's okay, Mia.
You're doing
great.
Just take a breath.
He had a knife.
And he said that if I
screamed, he'd slit my throat.
Then, he dragged me
into the alley,
and I tried to run, but
then he knocked me down.
And he started punching me
and kicking me in the stomach.
And I must have
passed out,
because the next thing I
remember, he was on top of me.
Inside me.
Can you describe him?
He was tall,
white and big.
But he told me
not to look at him.
All I could think is that my husband
and I are trying to get pregnant,
and I'm ovulating.
I saw the pharmacy
and I ran in.
I don't want to
have his baby.
About time
you showed up.
Oh, you're
busting our balls?
Where's your team?
Come and gone.
You already processed the
crime scene? I didn't have to.
I just set up the tape
and sent everybody home.
What's going on?
Someone dumped motor
oil in that dumpster.
It leaked out, gave the
pavement a lube job.
Nothing's better for trapping prints
and fibers than a little grease,
but there's not even
a shoe print.
So, if Mia was on her back, there
would be smudges, signs of a struggle.
Yeah.
And there would be
oil all over her clothes.
Your victim lied to you.
Well, not about being ***.
I mean, someone beat
the crap out of her.
We saw photos
of her injuries.
Which all happened to be in
places covered by clothes.
So the bruises
wouldn't show.
Classic DV.
Our perp's her husband.
Mia! It's
Detective Benson calling!
Um, now's not
really a good time.
Is your husband home?
No, Brent's still at work.
Well, why?
You know why.
Mia, you were assaulted, but it
didn't happen the way you said it did.
Are you saying
I'm a liar?
I'm saying that
you're a victim,
and I can't help you unless
you tell me the truth.
Hi, honey!
You're home early.
Well, I couldn't wait
to see my best girl.
You going to introduce
me to your friends?
Detective Stabler.
This is
my partner, Detective Benson.
We're investigating a string of
residential burglaries in the neighborhood.
Oh, well, we have a
great security system here.
Yeah.
Like they say,
protected by Smith & Wesson.
You have a gun?
Yes.
Several.
All legally registered,
of course.
Just make sure you keep
those weapons secure, okay?
Why? So I can say,
"Excuse me, Mr.
Criminal,
"could you wait a moment while I
take this frigging safety lock off?"
Thanks for the
heads up, Detectives,
but I'm perfectly capable
of taking care of my own home.
Dinner ready?
I'm starved.
Well, I wasn't expecting you until 6:00.
But why don't you relax with
a drink while I finish cooking?
Fine.
If we don't stop him, that prick's
going to use Mia for target practice.
He's got her
on a tight leash.
And if she won't talk,
we can't touch him.
Maybe there's
another way.
Walls have ears.
Welcome.
Welcome.
This is a treat.
I'm a huge crime buff.
See,
over here, I have everything
from Wilkie Collins
to George Pelecanos.
Linnie?
If we had a view, I'd
be watching the neighbors
like Jimmy Stewart
in Rear Window.
And this is my
Grace Kelly, Linnie.
Sweetie,
the police are here.
Oh, the police?
Is something wrong?
Actually, we wanted to ask you a few
questions about your upstairs neighbor.
Did something
happen to Mia?
Why would
you ask that?
Because of
her husband.
Jonah, please.
We can't get involved.
Was there a disturbance in
their apartment last night?
No.
Linnie, I've got MS.
If you've got Alzheimer's,
we're in big trouble.
There was an
unholy ruckus.
It was like they
were moving furniture.
Well, maybe they were.
At 3:00 in the morning?
Did their fights
ever get physical?
She had a broken
arm last spring.
She said she tripped.
Hogwash.
Linnie,
the girl needs our help.
And who's going to help
us if he kicks us out?
We'll never find another
rent-controlled apartment
that has
wheelchair access.
We'd have to
leave the city.
Sweetheart.
No, Jonah.
I won't do it.
I'm sorry.
My wife is
afraid of everything.
She hasn't left Manhattan
in over 30 years.
She's afraid of water.
She won't go
across a bridge or through a tunnel.
Mia's body is
covered in bruises.
Husband really did
a number on her.
She told you
it was her husband?
No.
No, we haven't been
able to speak with her alone.
Then how do you know?
The same way
you know.
The way she flinches
when he comes toward her.
The way she has fear in
her eyes when he speaks.
The way she wants to
jump out of her skin.
Sort of the way
you are right now.
Well, of course
I'm scared.
This place is a godsend to me and Jonah.
He moved in here
almost 40 years ago,
when he started
using the wheelchair.
If we were to lose it
There are laws that protect
tenants from retaliation.
But if you don't help us,
we can't protect Mia.
Brent's a monster.
All smiles
and good looks.
But underneath,
there's only ice.
He has no heart.
So, you've heard
them fight before?
When he starts yelling,
I put on my headphones.
I don't want
to hear it.
But next day,
I see the bruises.
So, help me help her.
Linnie?
In here, dear.
I got your message.
I thought you
needed help getting Jonah out of the tub.
No.
No.
No.
Please, Mia.
Talk to her.
No, I have to go.
Mia, listen to me.
If you go back
upstairs, I can't protect you.
I don't need
protection.
Sweetheart,
you do.
Please.
Let me help you.
Listen to me, Mia.
Listen to me.
Please.
It's okay, Mia.
Mia, I want you
to look.
Okay?
Mia,
look what he did to you.
Oh, my poor child.
Look at yourself.
Look what he did.
He always says he's sorry.
He brings me flowers.
Promises he will never hurt
you again, until he does.
Mia, listen to me.
He's not going to change.
You have to.
Okay?
I need you to tell me
what really happened.
Okay?
He wanted
to have sex.
"Let's make a baby,"
he said.
Because he knew
I was ovulating.
He tracks it.
Takes my temperature every day.
But how can I have
a child with him?
I told him
I wasn't feeling well,
and he called me
a selfish ***.
And then, he started
hitting me and kicking me.
And he *** you.
I'm so
sorry I lied to you.
I just I didn't
know what to do.
Hey.
Come here.
I'll take care
of her.
Go arrest the ***.
Detectives.
Brent Latimer.
You're under
arrest for ***.
***?
Where's my wife? Did you hear that, El?
You said ***.
He says wife.
That sounds like
a confession to me.
You're making a
huge mistake, Detective.
Mia would never say
a word against me.
You want to bet?
"Docket ending 0424.
"People of the State of
New York v.
Brent Latimer.
"*** One.
Assault Two.
"
How does
the defendant plead?
Not guilty.
Bail, Ms.
Greylek?
That's punitive, Your Honor.
The People's case is weak.
Weak? The victim barely has
an inch of un-bruised skin.
The injuries fully
corroborate her story.
Which story? The one she
spun out of stranger ***,
so she wouldn't get arrested
for assaulting a pharmacist?
Or the tale of the big, bad husband
she snookered Detective Benson with?
That's what the Grand
Jury is for, Mr.
Langan.
To sort these things out.
Bail is set at 50,000.
Thank you, Your Honor.
I'll post it immediately.
Then, the People request
an Order of Protection
barring the defendant
from contact with the victim.
Kim?
Throw my client
out of his own home?
Well, if he made bail,
he can afford a hotel room.
We also request the defendant
surrender his firearms to the NYPD.
Your Honor, I have a Second
Amendment right to bear arms.
I'll sleep better knowing they're
in a gun safe at the precinct.
You'll turn them in.
Call the next case.
I can't believe
they're letting him go.
Mia, he's not
allowed in this house.
If he comes within 50
feet, he'll be arrested.
Well, if he gets that close,
I'll be dead.
He'll shoot me.
We're taking
away his guns.
You think that's
going to stop him?
Look, is there any family
that you could stay with?
No.
My parents are dead.
I'm an only child.
The only people we see are Brent's
friends.
They'll never believe me.
Okay.
So, maybe you should check
into a hotel for a few days.
I went to the grocery store last night,
and my credit card
was cancelled.
So was my ATM card.
Brent cut me off
from all our money.
I think you should
go to a shelter.
Like a homeless person?
For domestic violence.
They'll
find you somewhere safe to live.
Okay.
Then, what am I
supposed to live on? Welfare?
You know,
I grew up poor,
and I made it to
the Upper East Side.
Now, I'm back to
eating government cheese.
Mia, you'll file for divorce, and
you'll have enough money to start over.
No, I won't.
I signed a prenup.
I met Brent when I was 18.
He
convinced me to drop out of college.
No.
He made you depend on
him, so he could control you.
Well, it worked.
I mean,
I've never even had a job.
How am I
supposed to live?
Mia, listen to me.
It's not going to be easy, but
you're going to make a new life.
I had a friend whose husband beat her.
He said it was her fault.
If she wasn't so stupid and
worthless, he wouldn't have to hit her.
And she believed him.
But she escaped,
and she found a man
who would rather die
than hurt her.
That's what you
deserve, Mia.
Yeah.
So, what now?
Okay.
You pack.
Let's get your ID,
any important papers, anything
that can't be replaced.
You can't disclose the
location of the safe house.
You're going to need to sign
in and out each time you leave.
Be back for curfew
at 9:00 p.
m.
You'll have daily chores, plus
group and individual therapy.
You can't have any
contact with Brent.
If you do, you'll be
asked to leave the shelter.
Brent's free,
and I'm in prison.
I know that it's strict here, but
the rules are meant for your safety.
I know all about rules.
Brent has lots of them.
Knowing where I am
every minute,
looking pretty
all the time,
always wear makeup,
no sloppy sweats.
The house has to be
so clean, it sparkles.
My dad was the same way.
Always ordering me around.
There's never been a time where
someone hasn't told me what to do.
Hey.
How did it
go with Mia?
Lousy.
She's in a shelter,
but I pushed her into it.
It's better than staying home and being
a sitting duck for Mr.
Guns & Ammo.
It should have been her choice, not me
telling her what to do, like her batterer.
She's in no shape to make any
decisions.
She needed your help.
Now she's safe, and
Brent's going to prison.
I don't think so.
Mia came to me, recanted the
charges against my client.
On video.
Brent must
have gotten to her.
No, her guilty
conscience did.
Let's go play this for
Greylek and drop the charges.
I'm talking to Mia first.
Go ahead.
She's at
home with her husband.
Good morning,
Detective.
Beautiful day, isn't it? Where's Mia?
She's making me brunch.
We're
having a lazy day in bed.
So long.
I need to talk to her.
I have a legal
right to check on her well-being.
So, interfere, and I will
arrest you for obstruction.
You're a piece of work.
Why? Because you can't order me around?
Mia, come here!
Please.
Hey.
Mia, are you all right?
Yeah.
Everything's fine.
You don't look fine.
Come here.
Look, Mia, maybe the shelter
wasn't the best way to go,
but I know that there are other
ways that we can keep you safe.
I want to be home
with my husband.
Satisfied?
Think about this.
Are you sure?
I made a mistake.
But Brent forgave me,
and now we're going to
get on with our lives.
And our breakfast.
Goodbye, Detective.
Oh, and tell your partner I'd like my
guns back.
He can drop them off anytime.
Linnie.
Linnie.
Sorry.
Jonah let me in.
So much for helping Mia.
Look, she wasn't ready
to leave her husband.
I pushed her.
It was my fault.
Oh, spare me
the self-pity.
Okay.
Linnie, I know that
you care about Mia's safety.
What's the use?
She doesn't care.
Where does that
staircase lead?
It's the old
servants' steps.
When they converted the house
into apartments, they left it in.
We share the laundry.
You are not
staying here.
It's the only way
that I can protect her.
She made her bed.
She'll have
to lie in it.
Go home, Detective.
You told Mia about your
friend who was battered.
Did you help her leave?
No.
She didn't tell anyone
what he did to her.
She went through
hell to get out.
So, if you had known,
wouldn't you have done anything
you could to protect her?
Don't you
run from me!
You made a mistake, and now you have
to pay for it.
Now, get on your knees!
Brent, please!
I said I'm sorry!
Sorry.
You're sorry?
Sorry's not good enough!
Let go!
You're hurting me!
Don't you
tell me what to do!
Put your
hands on your head!
I didn't
She attacked me!
Hands up!
She attacked me, okay?
Get on the floor,
face down!
Linnie, call 911!
Call 911!
Mia.
Mia, hang on.
You hang on.
Oh, God.
Oh, God.
Mia!
How you
holding up?
How do you think?
You did everything
you could.
I could have collared her for
filing a false *** report.
I have never seen
you lock up a victim.
At least she'd
still be alive.
For how long?
Sooner or later, she would
have gone back to him.
Mia made her choice, Liv.
You saying
it's her fault?
No.
But it's not
yours, either.
Come on.
Let's get out of here.
Was it
worth it, Olivia?
Linnie, stop it.
Liv, don't.
You couldn't leave her alone.
Linnie.
You just pushed and pushed.
And for what? That?
Detective? Don't let
him get away with it.
So, how does it look?
My evidence solid?
Like a rock.
And Warner did
a suspect kit on Latimer.
He didn't have a
scratch on him.
He can't claim
self-defense.
Brent Latimer's
going away for life.
And you might even
close another ***.
He's killed before?
Not unless he started
young and had a sex change.
We found fingerprints on the kitchen
phone that matched an old homicide.
In 1974, a guy named
Vincent Cresswell
was shot six times in his sleep in
his apartment in Greenwich Village.
His wife, Caroline,
was arrested at the scene.
She escaped
just before trial
and has been a fugitive
since the early '70s.
I've been dreading this for 34 years.
What's going on?
Linnie? What's that?
You never told him?
Told me what?
I don't understand.
When were you arrested?
1974.
We were living
together in '74.
I met you three weeks
after I escaped from jail.
Escaped?
I had nowhere to go.
I slept in churches,
on the subway.
I stole food.
Even a wallet.
And one night, it was pouring,
and I went into a diner
and spent my last dollar on a bowl
of soup to get out of the rain.
I remember her sitting there.
Wet, cold, shivering.
She told me she'd just
arrived on vacation.
Said a con man had
hustled her at the airport.
She lost her suitcase,
her money, and all her ID.
Jonah took me home.
He saved my life.
I had
no money, no friends.
I was thinking about suicide.
And
then, there he was.
Kind and generous.
Like the answer
to a prayer.
And you never told
him about your past.
She was like a character out of Dickens.
She had no family,
grew up in an orphanage.
My parents disowned me when I
was arrested.
I couldn't go home.
Jonah is all I have.
Did you ever
want children?
We tried for years.
Linnie
couldn't get pregnant.
She saw a doctor who told
her she was infertile.
I was on the pill.
I wanted a baby.
But if I was caught, I'd be sent
back to jail and lose my child.
Every choice I made
was out of fear.
Would somebody recognize me?
Would today be the day?
Well, she couldn't travel
because she'd need ID.
She couldn't work without
a social security number.
My God.
Is our marriage even legal?
I don't even know
her real name.
My name is Linnie Malcolm.
Caroline Cresswell
died a long time ago.
Right after
Vincent Cresswell died.
So, tell me
what happened.
We met when I was 17
at an anti-war protest.
Vincent was standing on the
stage, reciting his poetry.
It wasn't very good, but
He was so,
so passionate.
I fell in love,
with him and the movement.
And after the
Vietnam War ended?
The world moved on.
But Vincent,
he couldn't.
He was still angry,
and no one wanted bitter
poems.
No one listened, so
He took it out on me.
So, you fought.
Constantly.
The rejection letters
kept coming, and
Well, he blamed me.
He said
I was stifling his muse.
I was dull,
ugly, boring.
It wasn't me.
It was
the drugs and the ***.
And he could barely walk,
let alone write.
Did he beat you?
All the time.
Mostly, it was
just bruises.
Occasional black eye.
One time, he choked
me until I passed out.
And then,
he bought the gun.
Did he threaten
you with it?
When he was drunk, he
would talk about suicide.
And then, one day,
he said he was going to shoot
me, and then kill himself.
And I know he meant it.
He was in this
downward spiral,
and he was going to
take me with him.
Why didn't you leave?
I was planning to.
I'd been stashing away
change from the groceries.
I kept it hidden in a shoe.
I had almost $50
when he found it.
He said I must be selling
myself to have so much money.
And if I wanted
to be a ***,
he was going to
treat me like one.
He *** you.
Over and over.
He did every vile
thing that he could think of.
And then,
he went to sleep,
so I took that gun
from under his pillow,
and I shot him.
I don't know how long I stood
there looking at his body.
I heard the siren.
I knew the neighbors
had called the police.
I still had the gun in my hand
when they broke down the door.
Did you tell them
that he *** you?
Until now,
I've never told anyone.
Marital *** wasn't
a crime until 1984.
Today, it would be
ruled self-defense.
We wouldn't
even charge her.
She'll have to face
the original indictment.
But if we can
corroborate her story,
she's probably
looking at probation.
Over my dead body.
Judge Donnelly.
Not anymore.
I've taken a
leave of absence
to return to the
D.
A.
's office.
Why?
Unfinished business.
Hello, Caroline.
Remember me?
You were the
prosecutor on my case.
I still am.
Arrest her.
The charge is
Escape in the First Degree.
Your Honor.
If you won't do it,
I'll bring in another detective
who isn't personally involved.
Your choice.
Stand up.
Linnie Malcolm.
Her name
is Caroline Cresswell.
Caroline Cresswell, you are under arrest.
You have the right to remain silent.
Anything you say can and will be
used against you in a court of law.
You have the right
to an attorney.
If you cannot afford one,
one will be appointed to you.
"Docket ending 1116.
"People of the State of New
York v.
Caroline Cresswell,
"AKA Linnie Malcolm.
"One count *** in the Second
Degree.
One count Escape.
"
How does the
defendant plead?
Not guilty, Your Honor.
I assume the
People request remand?
Unless you want to give her
another 34 years on the lam.
Your Honor, we request
home confinement
with electronic monitoring.
My client is her
husband's sole caretaker.
His disability requires
round-the-clock assistance.
Hire a nurse.
She won't
shoot him in his sleep.
Elizabeth.
I expect better of you.
Under the circumstances,
remand is appropriate.
Any motion practice?
Uh, notice that we will be
pursuing an affirmative defense.
My client was a battered
woman who used reasonable force
to protect herself
against imminent danger.
A sleeping man
poses imminent danger?
He beat my client
on a daily basis.
Can you provide
documentation?
You know, photographs, medical
records, eyewitness testimony?
She never
disclosed the abuse.
Because it
never happened.
The victim had no history of violence
toward his wife or anyone else.
To have his reputation smeared
by his murderer is repugnant.
Save your moral outrage for the
jury.
I'll allow the defense.
Anything else? Next case.
Come to show me
the error of my ways?
You've spent your entire
career protecting abused women.
And now, you're going after one.
You don't know,
do you?
Know what?
Did you ask Linnie
how she escaped?
No.
Does it matter?
She asked for a meeting
to discuss a plea bargain.
I let her use the bathroom.
She crawled out the window.
So, you took the fall.
For years,
whenever a rookie A.
D.
A.
Pulled a stupid move,
it was known as
"Doing a Donnelly.
"
You have no idea
what it was like in law
enforcement back in those days.
I fought to get assigned
to the Homicide Bureau,
but the D.
A.
Didn't think it
was a suitable job for a woman.
So, what made him
change his mind?
Well, he knew a male prosecutor beating
up on poor little Caroline Cresswell
would get sympathy points with
the jury, so he gave me the case.
After he called my husband
and asked for his permission.
So, all of this because
she made you look bad?
She made me
look like a fool,
and she set back the
image of women prosecutors.
I never made it back
to the Homicide Bureau.
So, you want revenge.
No.
Please.
I got over being bitter a long time ago.
I'm speaking for the
victim, Vincent Cresswell.
That man beat the crap out
of her every single day.
She had nowhere to turn.
They didn't have a single battered
women's shelter in the city.
Not to mention that raping
your wife wasn't a crime.
You don't need to remind me
how hard it was for women.
Linnie snowed you, Olivia.
But don't feel bad.
She snowed me, too.
"Dear Ms.
Donnelly.
Please help me.
"I want to plead guilty, but I have a
terrible problem and only you can save me.
"I have to speak
with you in private.
"
So, what was
the problem?
It was a ruse to get me to
bring her down to my office.
I wanted to help her,
just like you do.
Linnie plays the
victim quite well,
but she's really a very
smart, manipulative woman.
What more do you
want from me, Olivia?
The truth.
I've told you everything.
No.
You haven't.
Why did you escape?
I didn't plan to.
There I was in the bathroom,
and the window was open.
So, it just happened?
Yes.
Well, then, why did you
write this letter to Donnelly?
What was so important that
you had to meet with her alone?
Don't remember.
Then, you're going to go to
jail for the rest of your life.
It's what I deserve.
I shot
a man six times in cold blood.
In self-defense, Linnie.
Linnie, I know how much
you cared about Mia.
And I know how much
you love your husband.
And a cold-blooded killer
isn't capable of that.
You have to tell the
jury what really happened.
No.
Why did you run away,
Linnie?
I can't tell you.
Well, if you won't help
yourself, then do it for Jonah.
He won't forgive me.
He loves you, Linnie,
but you've been lying
to him for 34 years.
Doesn't he deserve
to know the whole story?
After Vincent *** me,
I was crying.
And he told me to shut up
so he could get some sleep.
He put the gun
under his pillow,
and he said
he knew I liked it.
And if I was
a good girl,
he was going to give me
some more in the morning.
And I could hear him
breathing softly, like a baby.
What he did to me
didn't bother him a bit.
He was relaxed.
Hurting me was the only
thing that made him feel good.
And I pulled
the trigger.
I kept seeing
him slap me
and kick me
and *** me.
And I kept shooting until
those images went away.
The next thing I remember
was the blood, everywhere.
Thank you, Linnie.
Nothing further.
So, you were scared
and you shot him?
Yes.
Did you tell the
police that he beat you?
Well, they could
see the bruises.
They didn't document
them in the arrest report.
Did you tell them
that you'd been ***?
No.
Maybe if there
had been a woman there
But, of course, there were no
female police officers in those days.
Your story is very convenient.
It tugs at the heart strings.
But there's no proof.
It's the truth.
Well, why didn't you tell
that to a jury 34 years ago?
We're all waiting.
Please answer
the question.
I can't.
You mean you won't.
You ran because you knew
you'd be convicted.
There was
no beating.
No ***.
No self-defense.
You're
guilty and you knew it.
I was pregnant.
Oh, so, now hormones
made you do it.
Did they make
you run, too?
I ran so I could
get an abortion.
I couldn't get
an abortion in prison,
and I couldn't
have that baby.
I didn't care if I spent
the rest of my life in jail,
but the thought of his
child growing inside me
That's why
I came to see you.
To say I'd plead guilty, if I
could just end the pregnancy first.
But you were so strong,
so self-confident.
I was ashamed
of my weakness.
I couldn't tell you.
How could a woman like you
ever understand
a woman like me?
Has the jury
reached a verdict?
We have, Your Honor.
Will the
defendant please rise?
As to the first count of the
indictment, *** in the Second Degree,
how do you
find the defendant?
Not guilty.
As to the second count of the
indictment, Escape in the First Degree,
what is your verdict?
Guilty.
Ladies and gentlemen of the
jury, thank you for your service.
You are excused.
I'll see you
in two weeks for sentencing.
At which time, Your Honor, the
People will be recommending probation.
I look forward to hearing
your reasoning, Elizabeth,
but I tend to
agree with you.
Why?
Because back then, I was trying
so hard to be one of the boys,
I forgot why I
became a lawyer.
Thank you.
Thank you.
You'll be home
in a couple of weeks.
Jonah.
It's over.
It's over.
I'm happy for
you, Linnie.
But
Oh, no.
Please don't say it.
When did you
have the abortion?
The week you went to
the conference in Seattle.
You left me money.
Every decision you and I
made was based on a lie.
I wanted children, remember?
And grandchildren.
And I'll never have them.
You
stole them from me, Linnie.
I'm sorry.
I don't know you.
I'm still the
woman you married.
Can't you forgive me?
I don't think I can.