Wine and Gun

Chapter 354

I'm suddenly a little aware of what the defense's defense is going, but—isn't it?

"I was worried that the police would catch me, so I couldn't help but find out what stage the investigation had reached," Black said. "Anyway, I found out that the person in charge of the autopsy was Dr. Bacchus, and..."

"Objection!" Ms. Wallis Hardy suddenly said loudly, she obviously knew what was about to happen, and this development was definitely something she never thought of. "This statement has absolutely nothing to do with this case—"

"The objection is invalid, Ms. Hardy." The judge made such a decision solemnly, which was expected. "We need to hear what he said."

Blake said in a flat tone: "I paid him $100,000, and he helped me conceal the corresponding autopsy results in the autopsy report."

I could hear a gasp from the jury. Not surprisingly, the witness accused of taking bribes and obstructing the investigation was Albarino Bacchus! Even without mentioning the fact that he was a victim of Westland's pianist, his own experience is legendary enough. He's the youngest chief forensic officer ever of the Westland Forensic Service, has contributed to the Sunday gardener and the pianist's case, and now we have a man pointing out in front of us that he'll change the autopsy report for the money. !

So how should the authenticity of all the anatomy he made before be determined? How can the authenticity of the autopsy report in the current Slade case be determined?

"Now," then, Herstal Armalet said to the judge and the stunned jury, his voice calm and slow, as if he were the only unaffected person in the courtroom , "I have a few more questions for Dr. Bucks."

Of course the judge agreed, and it was obvious that the situation had gone beyond his expectations. And Albarino Bacchus was back in court again. After the shocking case of the Westland pianist, we have written many articles analyzing Dr. Bacchus, but now it seems that there is a new explanation for what happened at that time - Victoria Does the Strand pianist know the truth? Did he also target Dr. Bacchus because he knew the forensic doctor was not entirely innocent?

At last Dr. Bacchus was on the witness stand again, and it was ridiculous, and he even had a polite, strange smile on his face. The defense attorney looked at him, looking like a knight who had dealt a fatal blow to his defeated opponent.

Mr. Armalette asked: "Do you have anything to add to Mr. Black's testimony?"

As ironic as the move was - they both swore by the Bible, and if their testimony didn't agree, then at least one of the two was lying. Perjury in court is a federal felony.

But Dr. Bucks only shook his head softly.

"I have nothing to refute," he said simply. "Mr. Black is telling the truth."

And then Amalet asked—his voice was strangely tense, as hard as steel, was that suppressing the ecstasy of the moment of near-victory? ——“So, did you really take bribes and revise the autopsy report illegally in order to exonerate the suspect?”

"Yes."

- Dr. Bucks said in a very calm tone, so peaceful that I'm not sure if he really knew that with this simple word, his career was coming to an end.

There was a burst of uncontrollable murmurs in the courtroom, and Dr. Bucks still had that strange, unsmiling smile on his face. And Amarette turned to the jury and the judge, expressionless, nodding slightly like a curtain call.

"Your Honor," he said, "I'm done with my questions."

Chapter 90 Lotus Eater 01

In the two days of the trial, Albarino only saw Herstal three times.

This is more or less to be expected, Herstal has been working on the case to the point where he actually lives in the office - it's also a very contradictory detail, and this guy doesn't miss a single one to kill Slade's chance, but he will not deliberately release water in occasions such as court trials.

Although he has a bad reputation for choosing a series of murders, he is indeed the best kind of lawyer a defendant can imagine.

The first time they met was in court, and Albarino could see Herstal's eyes as he took the autopsy report to prove to the jury that the weapon in the sixth corpse was in Slade's office. Looking over from the dock, his eyes were cold and blue.

Albarino knew exactly what he was doing. It was the trump card prepared by Wallis Hardy, and it was also one of the best results that Best and others could come up with after working day and night. There's a reason Albarino didn't tell Herstal about it - he got the forensic lab from Wallis twenty minutes before he appeared in court as a technical witness. There is no way to go to the defense's lawyer team in full view of the inspection report.

This, he thought, illustrates a problem. This shows that Wallis must have heard bits and pieces from Bart Hardy about his relationship with Herstal, and this jīnggān prosecutor chose not to trust him at such a moment.

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