losing his driving privileges in Lithuania.
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Over the course of the next three days, Jaywalker did precisely what Daniel Pulaski had left him no recourse but to do. He met in turn with each of Alonzo Barnettâs three previous lawyers, collecting copies of court documents, motion papers and discovery materials. By the end of the week heâd put together the bare bones of a file. And during the course of amassing it, heâd gained a few insights into Barnettâs reluctance to take a plea, but only a few. Among the highlights were âHeâs self-destructive,â âHeâs a psycho,â and âI dunno, beats the shit outa me.â
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The case appeared in court that Thursday, in Part 91. Part 91, located at the far end of the fifteenth floor of 100 Centre Street, was at that time designated as the L.T.D. Part, which stood for Long Term Detainees or, as one cynic suggested, Let Them Die. Its calendars were filled with cases of jailed defendants that were not only ripe for trial, but overripe. In a system that supposedly guaranteed an accused felon a speedy trial within six months of arraignment, every defendant in Part 91 had already been locked up for a year or more. And in a business that was evaluated largely on statistics, these aging caseswere negatively skewing the average arrest-to-completion time that the administrative judge desperately needed to bring down in order to demonstrate efficiency and justify budget increases. So the word had gone out to get the cases disposed of by plea or, failing that, to get them tried.
Jaywalker had a couple of other cases besides Barnettâs on that Thursday, involving defendants who were out on bail. So he stopped by Part 91 early in the morning and left word with the clerk that heâd be back. Back turned out to be just before eleven, and when he walked in, the judge was waiting for him.
Judges come in all shapes and sizes. Not all of them look like they were born to the bench like Learned Hand, say, whose iconic photographâfeaturing his shock of white hair and bushy eyebrows, his black robe and his craggy faceâhas âjudgeâ written all over it. Then again, itâs entirely possible that Justice Hand may have looked like that at birth, only in miniature, seeing as his parents had pretty much named him to the bench, too. Still, we tend to think of judges as dignified, august father figures, peering down from the bench with an overabundance of firmness and just a hint of compassion. John Marshall comes to mind, as do Oliver Wendell Holmes, Benjamin Cardozo and William O. Douglas. Giants, all.
Shirley Levine hardly fit the mold.
Barely five feet tall and a hundred pounds if she was that, Levine was not what Jaywalker would have called a beautiful woman. Somewhere in her sixties, she was either cursed with a permanent bad hair day or simply unconcerned with her physical appearance. Her voice could charitably be called squeaky. She had no use for formality, having long ago dispensed with the trappings of the standard-issue black robe that came with the job.Or perhaps sheâd simply been unable to locate one small enough for her. She didnât expect people to rise to their feet when she entered her courtroom, and she quickly beckoned them to sit if they insisted on doing so. She needed no gavel to bring the room to order, and so far as Jaywalker knew, sheâd never once raised her voice in anger.
Some judges maintain decorum through the volume of their voices or the sheer force of their personalities. Others develop a reputation from their willingness to toss troublemakers into the pens at the first hint of insubordination. A few make it their business to get even, taking out their frustrations on defendants in the rulings they make and the sentences they dispense.
Shirley Levine did none of those things.
She didnât have to.
She accomplished everything she needed to, and more, through her unfailing