the rules for hearings are considerably more lenient. After three or four minutes, however, Ritaâs story is drawn to an awkward halt by Judge Ginder, who holds up his hand for silence.
âThis is a moving story, no doubt,â Ginder says. I realize I havenât actually breathed in twenty or thirty seconds. Ritaâs litany of horror paralyzed everybody in the room, except, thank God, Ginder. âWe are not presently on the streets of Khartoum, Ms. West,â he says. âWe are in the city of Nashville, Tennessee, where Mr. Bol is being held on very serious crimes. Is the court to understand that you have asked for this bail hearing because the internal psychology of the defendant is so tortured that conventional incarceration constitutes cruel and unusual punishment?â
âItâs deeply traumatizing to him, Your Honor. I would recommend that Bol be remanded to house arrest, with electronic monitoring.â
âI see. Well, I sympathize with the young manâs story, but unless you have something more, Iâm going to have to deny your client bail.â
Rita takes this well, like the professional she is; she must have known that no matter how good she was on this day, she didnât have a chance. I sneak a look behind me, wondering how the wall of young men are going to take the news that Bol isnât getting out. But the woman beside Rita has not come to court this day to be a part of the furniture. She stands up, uninvited, and addresses the court. Under normal circumstances, this would have the bailiff escorting her out of the room before she had a chance to finish her first sentence. But itâs a bond hearing, so Ginder merely looks at her like sheâs a kind of unwanted pest.
âYour Honor,â she says, âI have something to say on this matter.â
Rita looks pained; this isnât in her ideal script for the day.
âAnd who are you?â Ginder asks.
âI am Fiona Towns, the pastor of the Downtown Presbyterian Church.â
I look up. The voice is lower than I expected, with a sexy rasp. Pastor. Apparently, theyâre making them a lot more attractive than I remember.
âFine institution,â Ginder says.
âThank you, Your Honor. Iâm here to speak on behalf of Moses Bol.â
âIn the future, Iâd recommend you wait until called on to speak.â
âYou werenât going to call on me,â she says.
Ginder gives his unpleasant look. âAll right, Ms. Towns. Go ahead.â
âJanuary 7, 1994, Your Honor.â This is followed by a long silence. Rita slumps down in her chair a little, like she wants to be somewhere else.
Ginder looks at her blankly. âThatâs it?â
âThereâs also April 23, 1998. And October 27, 2002. I could go on, but I think you see my point.â
âI donât, as a matter of fact.â
âThose were days when people accused of crimes similar to Mr. Bol were released on bail. By you.â
Ginderâs eyes narrow; he senses heâs walking into a trap, but he doesnât see the teeth yet. âEvery case is unique, Ms. Towns. Iâm sure that if those individuals were granted bail, itâs because the circumstances warranted it.â
He raises his gavel, and Towns says, âAs far as I can tell, Your Honor, the only circumstances unique to those defendants were that they were white.â The gavel stops in midair. I look up at the judge, as does every other head in the room, especially the media flacks. Ginder looks like heâs been struck, then turns into stone. I see Gavin Davies physically lean forward, like heâs a hungry dog and someone is unwrapping steak.
Ginder sets down his gavel and looks out into the black sea, weighing his next move. Heâs been a judge for almost twenty years, and he knows how things play in the media, how context is everything, how there isnât going to be a way to put into print how
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