08x15 - Three On a Patch

Episode transcripts for the TV show "L. A. Law". Aired: September 15, 1986 – May 19, 1994.*
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High-powered law firm of McKenzie, Brackman, Chaney and Kuzak handles both criminal and civil cases, but the office politics and romance often distract them from the courtroom.
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08x15 - Three On a Patch

Post by bunniefuu »

Attorney visit for inmate C.

[clears throat]

Is that really necessary for a non-contact visit?

It's procedure, sir.

[door buzzes]

Tom.

I've been asked to communicate something to you.

The state of California might be willing to consider

a transfer to Folsom prison

in return for you dropping the suit.

Might be willing to consider it, huh?

Right.

Does that mean they think we might win?

It might mean that, it might mean they'd rather not

litigate this until after the elections.

It might mean they want to turn the other prisoners here against you.

Have they changed the trial date?

No.

They're still flying me out to Los Angeles today.

If you elect to go to trial,

they'll fly you down to Los Angeles

and we will go to trial.

Well, please tell them that I elect to go to trial.

♪♪ [theme]

♪♪

Padrutt vs. the California Department of Corrections.

Yeah, uh, that's mine.

Tom Padrutt is incarcerated at the security housing unit

at China Lake.

State of the art super maximum security prison.

We're suing to have it shut down.

On what grounds?

On the grounds that the prisoners there are

being kept so totally isolated

that they're being driven insane.

There are no windows, no sunlight.

No interaction with other prisoners.

Literally, they are going mad.

Sounds like the perfect environment to reflect

on one's past sins.

And catch up on one's reading.

How are we so fortunate as to have this one

fall into our laps?

A prisoner's rights group contacted me.

Shall we continue?

Golden Pines retirement community vs. Carr, Nordoff

and Kroft. This one's mine.

The retirement community is seeking to evict

three senior citizens because

they're participating in a drug experiment.

What kind of drug?

They're wearing testosterone patches.

The administrator of the facility claims

that they have become overly libidinous

and disruptive as a result.

A patch?

How ingenious that is.

It allows you to control the ebb and flow, so to speak.

A poker game with the boys, you take it off.

A weekend up at the San Ysidro ranch

with a tootsie, you put it on.

What are you looking at me for?

No reason.

We also have the issue of staffing to discuss.

Yes, we do.

We've culled through all the potential candidates

under consideration from the past,

resumes, recommendations, favors and the like,

and it pretty much narrows down to two:

Inez Garcia and Patrick Flanagan.

Patrick Flanagan's a contender?

Yes, he is.

I've told you about my experience with him.

Yes, you have,

and we should factor that into

the decision making process.

Which I would ask we conclude by the end of the week.

And with that, we're adjourned.

Don't we have something to talk about, you and I?

No.

What do you mean, no?

You kissed me on the mouth.

Yes, I was upset.

Does that mean you regret having done it?

It means that it was a transitory impulse,

and I acted on it, and now it's passed.

What can I do to make it come back?

You can't do anything.

[sighs]

You little temptress.

I'd like to see you beg.

What are my chances?

I'd say they're pretty good.

-Think so? -Yeah.

You graduated in the top five percent of your law school class.

You've got great experience.

Plus, you know me.

My interview's Thursday.

-Great. -Will you be in the room?

I can't be, I'm sponsoring you.

Too bad.

You'll do fine.

I'm nervous.

I'm not used to being around places like this.

Yeah, well, you can get used to it, let me tell ya.

I'm sure you can.

I'll see you Thursday when we come in.

We can have lunch together or something.

I appreciate you doing this, Daniel.

Inez, I've known you since you were born.

Who you going to come to for a job if not me?

Would you state your occupation, Mr. Overvald?

I am the administrator of the Golden Pines Retirement Village.

You've instituted eviction proceedings against Mr. Carr, Mr. Nordoff,

and Mr. Kroft, is that right?

Yes, it is.

For the record, would you state your reasons for doing so?

They are participating in the clinical trials

of a testosterone patch.

Consequently, they've become disruptive.

-Did you ever see one? -Harold.

No, I haven't.

Boys.

My, my.

Like a nicotine patch.

Only these get you to start smoking.

Can we return to the matter at hand?

What specifically do these gentlemen do, Mr. Overvald?

They wear tight pants.

They stage golf cart races.

They get into fist fights,

and they engage in blatantly promiscuous behavior.

What's the ratio of women to men in your community, Mr. Overvald?

Approximately five to one.

Is it possible that what you characterize as promiscuity

is nothing more than the laws of supply and demand at work?

I didn't just refer to promiscuity, Mr. Brackman.

I referred to blatant promiscuity.

We're talking about necking.

We're talking about swapping.

We're talking about public displays

of highly salacious behavior.

Is it fair to say, Mr. Overvald,

that you find the idea of senior citizens

being sexually active personally repugnant?

No, that which seniors do privately and discreetly

is of no concern to me whatsoever.

That which destroys the tranquility of our community,

that which violates our bylaws

is of great concern to me.

You have any more need of us, Douglas?

-No. -Let's split.

I've had about all I could take of this little wind bag.

We're not giving up our patches, Monroe.

And we're not moving out.

Your depositions start tomorrow, gentlemen.

We'll be here, doll.

You little vixen, you.

Yay!

Mr. Padrutt, how long have you been incarcerated

in the security housing unit at the China Lake penitentiary?

Three years and four months.

Would you describe your cell for us?

It's eight feet by ten feet.

There's a bed, a sink, and a toilet.

There's a shelf above by bed with ten unbound sheets

of white writing paper, a plastic ink cartridge,

and there's a magazine with the staples removed

and one book.

One a shelf above the sink,

there's one roll of toilet paper and one bar of soap.

How many hours a day do you spend in the cell?

and a half.

And where are you during the period of time

that you're not in the cell?

I'm in the dog run.

Would you describe for us what the dog run is?

It's a concrete yard, feet by feet.

Would you describe for us the process by which you're taken in and our of your cell

in order to go to the yard?

You're handcuffed through a slot in your cell door.

The control booth officer open the door

and an as*ault r*fle is pointed at you.

And then you remove all your clothes.

Another officer looks inside your mouth,

behind your testicles,

and they shine a flashlight up your rectum.

And this happens each and every time that you're taken in and out of the cell?

Yes, sir.

Is there ever a time, Mr. Padrutt,

when the prisoners are permitted to interact with other prisoners?

The prisoners can talk to the other prisoners through the walls of their cells.

But they're not permitted to see the other prisoners.

And what effect, if any, have you observed

the conditions to have on the other prisoners?

Objection.

The witness has no medical or psychological expertise.

He's in no position to answer that question.

The witness is being asked for his observation.

I'm going to allow it.

Mr. Padrutt?

Well, some of them scream.

Some cry.

Two weeks ago, one of them k*lled himself by

swallowing a showerhead.

And how do they effect you?

I don't sleep more than a half hour at a time.

I think in a very precise, controlled manner.

I work very hard at keeping myself sane.

I don't believe I'll be able to do that much longer.

I have no further questions.

Who is Michael Sheehy, Mr. Padrutt?

He's a prisoner at Vacaville state prison.

He's a prisoner that you k*lled, was he not?

Yes.

Would you describe to us how you k*lled him?

I b*at him to death with a mop bucket.

Mm-hmm.

And who is James Wiley?

He was a prisoner at San Quentin.

You k*lled him, too, didn't you?

Yes.

Would you describe to us how you k*lled him?

I stabbed him in the heart.

Would you describe for us how you got the Kn*fe you used?

I melted down some candy wrappers,

waited until they hardened into plastic,

and then I shaped that into a Kn*fe.

And it's your testimony that you are not a security risk, Mr. Padrutt?

Michael Sheehy sexually assaulted me.

James Wiley put out a rumor that I was an informant.

In both of these cases, my k*lling these men

was necessary for my survival.

I'll ask you again, Mr. Padrutt...

is it your testimony that you are not a security risk?

If I'm such a security risk, then you should k*ll me.

You should just strap me in the chair,

drop in the pellets and put me down.

But I do not believe the prison authority has the right

to systematically destroy my mind

and the minds of the other men incarcerated at the SHU.

I do not believe that they have the right to drive us insane.

Douglas.

Where do we stand with the interviews?

Patrick's coming in today, Inez is coming in tomorrow.

They seem as thought they're both good candidates.

I agree, although I'd probably give the edge to the girl.

Would you?

She's clerked for a Federal judge.

She's worked in the state legislature.

She's handled a number of major appeals successfully.

I think she'd be a real asset.

What about Patrick?

A good resume, fair amount of trial experience.

It's not that he's a bad candidate or has a bad resume.

You know his father and I are extremely good friends?

Yes.

Well, they'll both be interviewed, and then we'll vote.

Right.

You'll be in the room for the interviews?

Yes.

Good.

Are you familiar with these gentlemen, Dr. Gratz?

Yes, I am.

And would you tell us in what context it is

that you're familiar with them?

I work for Dermex industries.

And I'm involved in the development of a transdermal testosterone delivery system.

In common parlance, the patch.

These gentlemen are participating in a clinical trial for same.

Have any side effects manifested themselves

in this clinical trial?

Surprisingly few.

Would aggressiveness be one of them?

I choose my words very carefully, Miss Korshak.

Aggressiveness would be an overstatement.

Some degree of boisterousness, perhaps.

An intermittent rambunctiousness, even,

but aggressiveness is not an accurate characterization.

The purpose of this drug is to heighten sexual desire.

-Is it not? -That is one purpose.

Increasing testosterone levels also serves to lessen fatigue,

restore muscle tone.

The potential is here for the patch to become

a major asset in the practice of gerontology.

How high is high, doctor?

I'm afraid I don't know as to what

you are referring, Miss Korshak.

I would like to know what level of sexual desire

you're trying to attain.

How is that relevant?

These gentlemen have been behaving in a way

that suggest that the level is somewhat excessive.

Sometimes it gets real excessive.

That's when it gets interesting, right boys?

Harold.

Are you familiar with the practice of double-patching, doctor?

I am aware that it has occurred.

Certainly, it is not sanctioned

and anyone caught doing so

will be immediately dropped from the group.

You didn't have to drop Earl Grunwald, did you, doctor?

Mr. Grunwald's death was not attributable

to the patch.

He was found wearing two patches at the time of his death.

-Was he not? -Yes.

He was also engaged in an act of sexual congress

at the time of his death, was he not?

Yes.

He was also years old at the time of his death.

We should all be so lucky.

[chuckling]

How much money is your company spending to develop

this patch, doctor?

That is both irrelevant and proprietary.

You don't have to answer that.

-I'll get a ruling. -Get a ruling.

Until then, doctor, I have no further questions.

What's your expertise, doctor?

I'm a psychologist by training.

I specialize in the effects of confinement

as a means of punishment.

Have you ever had an opportunity to examine

the psychological effects of confinement at China Lake penitentiary?

Yes, I have.

I have interviewed of the inmates there,

including Mr. Padrutt.

And what were your findings?

That the technologies in use at China Lake

are unparalleled in the history of the American penal system.

The physical layout of the prison including the use

of intercoms and a*t*matic doors

ensure that the prisoners will be deprived of any direct human contact

except with the guards that take them in and out of the cells.

The inmates are given almost nothing in

the way of physical or mental activity

to occupy their time.

The lights are kept on at night,

and the meals consist of a processed nutrient loaf

that bares no resemblance to actual food.

The combined effect is one of prolonged sensory deprivation.

Is that different from solitary confinement at other prisons?

Well, yes, it differs both in the degree of the isolation

and the duration of the treatment.

No, at most of these institutions,

a prisoner is rarely kept in solitary for more than six months.

At China Lake, it can go on for years.

What's known about the effects of this kind of prolonged deprivation?

Well, the best known case studies we have are of P.O.W.s

who were kept in isolation during the Korean w*r.

Deprived of contact and conversation,

many of these men became psychotic.

Doctor... Would you assess

the mental healthy of the inmates at China Lake?

One third of the men I saw are actively psychotic.

Of this group, most experience visual

and auditory hallucinations.

Several have committed acts of self-mutilation.

Two are catatonic.

And what about the remaining two-thirds?

%, including Mr. Padrutt,

show signs of severe psychological trauma,

including uncontrollable tremblings,

sleeplessness, distortions in perception and panic.

What, in your opinion, are the prospects for these men

being successfully integrated

into a general prison population

or the world outside of prison

following incarceration at China Lake?

In my opinion,

there are no such prospects.

Thank you, sir.

Nothing further.

Your evaluation of inmates at China Lake

consisted of interviews, is that right, doctor?

Yes.

You would ask inmates if they had various symptoms

and they would respond affirmatively for the most part.

My interviewing technique is a little more sophisticated than that, counselor.

I usually can gauge pretty well

whether or not somebody's being truthful.

Assuming that the problems at China Lake

are what you say they are, what remedies would you propose?

I recommend that the prison be shut down

so that it can be modified to include common areas,

recreational and educational facilities,

and a fully staff psychiatric clinic.

So you would close a $ million facility,

spend countless additional millions of dollars

on modifications

all so that the most vicious criminals in the state of California

could be made to feel more comfortable?

-Objection. -I'm going to allow it.

It's not a matter of making them more comfortable.

The state of California is running a facility

that not only denies these men the chance at rehabilitation

but effectively destroys their mental capabilities.

Now, I find that unconscionable.

Well, thank you, doctor.

Your moral outrage is duly noted.

I have nothing further.

Leland?

Patrick, my boy, how are you?

Great.

Great, they told me you were in here.

I just wanted to stick my head in and say hi.

Well, I'm glad you did.

Got my interview today.

I know all about it.

I just want to say thanks for everything you've done, Leland.

Well, what have I done?

We need an associate, you need a job.

Well, you made it possible for me to come in and be considered,

and I appreciate that.

Excuse me, are you Patrick Flanagan?

-Yes. -They're ready for you.

Great, which way am I headed?

Came with me.

I'll walk you.

This is Denise Iannello.

-How do you do? -Nice to meet you.

You still playing squash?

When I can.

Patrick was the number two ranked squash player at Harvard.

Is that so?

Well, it was a weak field when I was there.

[chuckles]

You're right in here.

-Thank you. -Mm-hmm.

-Good luck. -Thanks.

You'll do fine.

Let me start by saying that we are, all of us,

very impressed with your resume.

Thank you.

We also all know that there are a few

things we need to discuss.

Yes, there are.

I'd like to ask you to explain the incident at Harvard.

I plagiarized a law review article.

What would you like to know?

How do you explain it?

It's hard to keep an explanation from sounding like a justification.

And I want very much for it not to sound like that.

I did what I did because I wanted to fail.

I wanted to self-destruct.

I could just as easily have

driven my car into oncoming traffic.

Has the impulse passed?

It feels like it has.

I ended up taking some time off from school,

albeit not voluntarily.

And I thought about myself.

I ended up going to a psychiatrist for the first time in my life.

I took stock of myself.

All I can say is that

I'm a very different person at

than I was at .

There's another matter we need to discuss

and this happened only a year ago.

You represented a plaintiff in a whistle blower suit

and had your case dismissed because of falsified lab reports?

Say it ain't so, Joe.

I'll say it ain't so.

I'll say it to my dying day.

Those falsified lab reports

were planted by the defendant corporation.

Unfortunately, I couldn't prove that

and the judge bought that I was responsible.

One day, I hope I can prove it.

And then there's the matter of Daniel Morales.

You and he had a bit of a contretemps.

I'm sure you've heard the events recounted by Mr. Morales.

I would offer up a somewhat different interpretation.

Both our clients were on trial for armed robbery and m*rder.

He represented his, I represented mine.

He claims the you induced your client

to turn state's evidence.

The state induced him. They offered him parole.

He claims you put your client on the stand

knowing he was going to lie.

I didn't know he was going to lie,

I don't know that he did lie.

Should you come to work here, Mr. Flanagan,

this is a matter that you and Mr. Morales will need to settle.

Mr. Morales has thus far refused to talk to me.

You may want to make additional efforts.

Mr. Carr.

Call me Buzz.

Buzz.

Are you aware that since the beginning of this study,

the Golden Pines residents have lodged complaints

against you and your co-defendants?

From those without the patch, no doubt.

Some of these complaints were from women.

I haven't had any complaints, have you, Dwight?

Nope.

But I have had a few marriage proposals.

Mr. Carr, is that your signature?

Yes, yes, that looks like it.

That would indicate your familiarity with the by-laws

of the community in which you live?

Do I give her that?

Just tell her the truth, Buzz.

All right.

Yes, I am familiar with the by-laws.

On October th, ,

did not you and your two friends here

take over a square dance class and attempt to lead

your female partners in the lambada?

Oh, yes, we did.

And a fine lambada it was, too.

And did not two of those females

faint on that occasion?

Oh, no, what they did was swoon.

I believe fibrillate would be closer to the truth.

I would ask that your client not interject, Ms. Korshak.

The interject, why can't I interject?

I would ask that no-one interject.

Let me ask you something, dear.

Don't you think we should be able to decide for ourselves

what kind of recreational activities

we can engage in without being dictated to?

Mr. Kroft...

Unless of course a minx such as yourself

were interested in doing the dictating.

This is depraved.

This is utterly depraved.

Spare us the sanctimony, Mr. Overvald.

No kidding. If we were in our s or s or s,

it wouldn't be depraved, would it?

There are rules that govern conduct in our community.

Well, to hell with your rules.

We're not living in a ding-dang gulag.

We're living in the US of A.

Gentlemen, the fact is there are rules.

And these rules are legal and enforceable.

And not withstanding the fact that you are

three very attractive men

with testosterone surging,

in the end your options are to adjust or move.

You are wicked.

Clearly, we have a difference of opinion.

It's also quite impossible for us to move.

Why is that?

Because you've got all our money tied up, you little squint.

Between your entrance fees and your rent,

we can't afford to move.

Yeah, and if it weren't for what we make selling patches,

we could hardly... get by.

You have been selling patches?

I believe that's a felony, Douglas.

I'll need some time to confer with my clients.

Take all the time you want.

As far as I'm concerned, this deposition is over.

I'll be in front of a judge tomorrow seeking an injunction.

Good day, gentlemen.

Drug traffickers.

and to think that at one time I'd hoped to make you, Dwight,

the master of ceremonies at our pageant.

How does a prisoner wind up

in the security housing unit at China Lake, warden?

He proves himself to be unmanageable at other prisons.

Characteristically, how would he do that?

He'd k*ll someone, he'd traffic in dr*gs.

He'd make himself a thr*at to the rest of the prison population.

The security housing unit at China Lake

employs technology and prison design not found in other prisons.

-Is that right? -Yes.

And what, to your mind, is the effect of that?

The most significant effect is not a single prisoner or guard

has been k*lled since the unit has been in operation.

Why is it necessary to isolate these men?

To protect them.

These men have demonstrated that they can't function in a group environment.

Do you acknowledge that some prisoners may be psychologically damaged

by the conditions in the SHU?

I would argue that most prisoners

are psychologically damaged in one form or another to begin with.

I will acknowledge that it's not particularly pleasant

to be incarcerated in the SHU.

But I'd also argue there's no one there

who doesn't deserve to be there.

I have no further questions.

It's fair to say, is it not, Warden,

that you've pretty much abandoned any pretense

of providing a means of rehabilitation for these men, yes?

Rehabilitation requires a certain minimal level

of cooperation on the part of the prisoner.

These men thus far have not demonstrated that.

And according to you, the nature of the operation at the SHU

is dictated by what they have demonstrated.

That's right.

All right, prisoners are allowed in the yard

for minutes a day. Is that right?

Yes.

Are there recreational activities of any kind

available to them in the yard?

I don't know what constitutes a recreational activity to your mind.

-Are there weights in the yard? -No.

Why aren't there weights?

Weights can be made into weapons.

Is there basketball?

Or handball in the yard?

-No, there isn't. -Why isn't there?

They can also be made into weapons.

And if you doubt that, I suggest you talk to your client.

I'm sure he could tell you exactly how he'd do it.

Objection. Ask that the latter part of the response be stricken.

So stricken.

Warden...

Isn't the mental deterioration of prisoners

the express purpose of the SHU at China Lake?

No, it is not.

You do understand it to be the inevitable and proximate

result of incarceration there, though, do you not?

I understand no such thing.

Isn't this prison designed for one thing only, sir?

Isn't it to make it as easy as possible

for you to store these men?

I've worked in the prison system for years, Mr. Rollins.

There wasn't a single day in all that time

that I would call what I did easy.

When I was a guard, I took it as a personal failure

to have a prisoner die on my watch.

I felt it was my responsibility to see to it

that prisoners staid alive for the entire length of their sentence.

I still feel that way.

Now, I don't fail nearly as often.

♪♪

All right, Ms. Korshak.

I've read your motion. You have something to add?

Your Honor, in addition to the disruptive incidents

referred to in my brief,

we have reason to believe the defendants have been

peddling these testosterone patches to other residents

of Golden Pines.

We ask the court to enjoin this study immediately,

to cut off distribution of this illicit testosterone.

Your Honor, there's absolutely no evidence

of any trafficking.

Enjoining the study would be a drastic over-reaction

and grossly unfair to my clients.

These patches constitute controlled substances, Your Honor.

They're wreaking havoc on the community

and we have no idea what the long range side effects are.

I'm years old, Missy.

How long range should I be concerned about?

That's quite enough, Mr. Nordoff.

Can I say something, Judge?

Go ahead.

Well, before we got our patches, Harold, Dwight and I,

were just three lonely old men

sitting around waiting to die.

Yeah, the patch opened our eyes.

It restored us.

Made our lives less lonesome.

We're begging you, Judge.

Take away our Motrin, take away our digitalis.

Even our milk of magnesia.

But for God's sakes, do not take away our patches.

If you men are trafficking in a controlled substance,

you can and will be prosecuted.

Since there is no evidence of such activity,

I deny plaintiff's motion to enjoin the study.

The eviction notice will continue as scheduled.

We stand adjourned.

Very well said.

Your Honor, the defense calls Elizabeth Rowe.

Objection, Your Honor...

The testimony of this witness is wholly irrelevant.

What is this witness here to testify to, Mr. Clay?

Your Honor, Miss Rowe witnessed the k*lling of her father

at the hands of Mr. Padrutt years ago.

She's flown here at her own expense

to testify to the nature of that crime.

Testimony about a crime committed prior

to Mr. Padrutt's confinement is irrelevant.

Objection sustained.

Call your next witness.

The defense call Roland Prince.

Objection.

The testimony of this witness is wholly irrelevant.

Is Mr. Prince also here to testify

to events prior to Mr. Padrutt's incarceration?

Yes, Your Honor.

His sister was k*lled by Mr. Padrutt.

Objection is sustained.

Call your next witness.

The defense calls Dorothy White.

Objection, irrelevant.

Mr. Clay...

She was assaulted by Mr. Padrutt.

Objection sustained.

Call your next witness.

The defense calls Trent Mott.

Objection, irrelevant.

Counsel will approach the bench.

Are all your remaining witnesses crime victims, Mr. Clay?

Yes, Your Honor.

They're here to testify to the nature of crimes

committed by Mr. Padrutt

and the other men who are now being held--

Okay. What are you doing is grandstanding.

I'm not impressed.

It does not help your case.

The testimony of all these witnesses is inadmissible

and irrelevant.

What you have done is waste the time of this court,

and the time and the money of these people who showed up here.

I submit that you owe all of them an apology.

Step back.

Well, Inez, we know something about you from your resume.

But perhaps it would be best if you told us yourself

about the kind of work you've been doing.

I've been working in a storefront legal clinic is East L.A.

I've done mostly immigration, landlord-tenant, and criminal.

Primarily, I'm a trial lawyer.

You've handled some pretty major appeals.

Yes, I have.

How come you're leaving?

We had a rough year last year.

Our budget was cut, they closed out office doors.

How do you feel about doing types of law other than what you've been doing?

I feel good about it.

It's one of the reasons I want to work in a firm like this

is that I hope to try other types of cases.

You see yourself as a trial lawyer?

Yes.

Are you prepared to serve second chair while another lawyer tries the case?

Absolutely.

Are you prepared to spend the vast majority of your time

doing work that has no political significance whatsoever?

That's an odd question.

Well, it's not an odd question at all.

You worked in a legal clinic at East L.A.

I'm sure you derived a great deal of professional gratification

from handling cases that were in concert

with your political beliefs.

You weren't doing it for the money.

My question is

how happy would you be here?

I think I would be very happy here, Mr. Brackman.

I'm interested in acquiring a certain credibility

as an attorney that currently,

I feel myself to be lacking.

I'd be making considerably more money

than I'm used to making

and I also know something about this firm from Daniel Morales.

I know the kind of cases you take on.

I think I know the kind of people you are.

This is where I want to work.

Fair enough.

The th amendment to the United States constitution

says that cruel and unusual punishment shall not be inflicted.

It codifies what we very much like to believe about ourselves

that we have evolved.

That no matter how much we may revile an individual,

no matter how heinous may be their crime,

we don't t*rture them.

We don't use the rack, or the whip,

or the thumb screw.

We as a society have come to believe those devices

to be immoral,

and so our constitution makes them illegal.

Your Honor, the use of psychological t*rture

as found in the security housing unit at China Lake

is no less immoral and no less illegal.

You have heard uncontroverted expert testimony

that % of the prisoners there are clinically psychotic.

You've also heard expert testimony

that what brought about this mass psychosis

is the conditions at the prison.

Now, assuming that those conditions don't evoke

a sense of moral outrage,

there are still practical considerations.

Most of the men at the SHU

will one day finish their sentences

and when they do, we as a society will have to deal with them.

We will either maintain them in psychiatric hospitals

or we'll put them back on the streets.

And we will soon find out

what this latest prison technology has made them into.

Your Honor, I'm asking the court to declare

the conditions and procedures

at the China Lake prison security housing unit

cruel and unusual punishment.

I would ask the court to shut it down.

Your Honor, China Lake is a success.

Tom Padrutt and the other inmates

in the security housing unit there

have demonstrated their inability

to live in the society of other men.

Even in the controlled environment

of a maximum security prison,

attempts to rehabilitate them have failed,

They are the most violent, most dangerous,

most incorrigible inmates in the entire prison system.

And somehow, the prison system must deal with them.

China Lake offers the safest, best,

most economically feasible solution.

Now is there psychological damage?

No doubt there is.

It comes with the territory.

Commit heinous crimes on the street,

continue committing heinous crimes in prison,

and we will do that which is necessary

to counter-act your ability to commit crime.

We will put you in a place like this.

And we will be safe from you.

I'll be right back...

Come on, just wait a second.

Not a minute too soon.

Officer, I'm the attorney for these men.

Please advise me as to what's going on?

It's been alleged that these gentlemen have been

selling a controlled substance, counselor.

We have no choice but to bring them in.

Who alleged this?

Monroe, who else?

We searched the units of several other residents here.

We found testosterone patches.

We questioned the residents.

They said they purchased them from these gentlemen here.

They ratted us out.

Please put your hands behind your back, sir.

Now wait a minute.

I have to handcuff you.

-Come on. -Wait.

Those patches don't contain testosterone.

-What? -Who are you?

I'm Dr. Kendall Gratz.

I'm conducting the clinical trials.

Those patches are placebos.

What do you mean, placebos?

Every clinical trial has a control group.

In this trial, you're it.

You mean we haven't been getting the real thing?

We'll need a statement to that effect, doctor.

I'll give you a statement. I also have full documentation.

But what about... you know...

Yeah!

The mind can be a powerful aphrodisiac, Mr. Carr.

I'll talk to Lorraine Korshak.

We'll see what effect this has on the eviction proceedings.

Well, sh**t.

Where are you going?

I'm gonna go lay down.

I think I'll do the same.

Come on, Dwight.

Where are you going?

[knocks]

Two minutes, that's all I'm asking.

What do you want?

I want to see if I can clear the air.

Man, we have nothing to talk about.

Well, with all due respect, I don't think that's right.

You gonna tell me what's right?

No.

What I would ask, though, is you at least consider the possibility

that I didn't do what you think I did.

Patrick...

I have a client doing to life in a maximum security prison

because your client lied on the witness stand.

Are you saying your client was innocent?

I'm saying he never would have been convicted

of felony m*rder if it hadn't been

for that particular testimony.

I don't see it that way.

Like I said, we have nothing to talk about.

So what do we propose we do?

I propose we stay as far away from each other as possible.

Well, that may be a problem if I come to work here.

Yeah.

Well, we'll cross that bridge when we come to it.

Tell me something, do your, uh...

do your partners know how you feel?

Oh, yes, they do.

It's a little surprising I'm still being considered.

All right, I'm coming.

Whatever we're here to do, let's do it quick.

I've got a sitz bath schedule for :.

They faxed over the terms of the agreement.

They'll be here any minute.

And we need to discuss this.

Dwight, have a seat, please.

Thank you.

I strongly advise against you signing this.

Well, we are gonna sign it, Doug.

Let me tell you what's here.

In exchange for them dropping the eviction proceedings,

you agree to no parties without written permission from the management.

No music after : P.M.

No tight jeans. No spandex bicycle shorts.

No cruising in electric golf carts.

Douglas, it doesn't make any difference.

Let's sign the paper and be done with this.

Guys...

We can go to court and win.

They have no right to impose these rules on you.

We don't want to make waves.

They want thins to be quiet, let them be quiet.

[sighs]

Explain something to me.

You find out that you've been getting a placebo,

and suddenly you want to fold your hands and file in

like good little boys?

What's the story?

The story is, we're old.

You were old yesterday.

You were old the day before yesterday.

You were also studs.

We were under the illusion

that we were receiving medication.

You don't need the medication.

You had the desire to be a bunch of sharpsters,

and that's what you were.

You didn't want to be physically decrepit,

and you weren't.

The fact that those patches were placebos

is good news, boys.

It means that you can go back to being studs.

Good morning.

I assume you received the documents?

Yes, I have.

Good. And are they acceptable?

Not as far as I'm concerned, they're not.

Are they acceptable to your clients?

You'll have to ask them.

Okay.

Gentlemen?

What'll it be?

Harold?

Well...

As a matter of fact, I do have a question.

That rule that says we've got to have written permission

before we can have a party.

What constitutes a party?

I think you can assume standard usage of the word.

So, if for instance

I were to meet, let's say a woman like you

and I struck up a conversation

and one thing lead to another,

and you came back to my place

and I put on my Charlie Rich records

and we had a couple of drinks, and after

a while you turned to me and said,

"Charlie Rich or no Charlie Rich,

you're the silver fox as far as I'm concerned",

and the passions took a hold of us,

would that constitute a party?

That would not be acceptable behavior.

Then to hell with it.

That's right.

Douglas, you do whatever you have to do.

And I say we go to court.

Fine.

You are willing to go to court over this?

In a red hot minute.

[chuckles]

It's horrifying to consider that an institution

whose highest aim is the rehabilitation of men

could actually be subjecting some of those same men

to conditions that drive them insane.

What's ever more horrifying is the thought that

those conditions may be necessary to save lives

and to allow that institution to survive.

From the evidence presented, it's quite clear to me

that many of the inmates of China Lake

are psychologically being harmed by the prison.

It's equally clear that the prison system

has legitimate security needs.

And to meet those needs it may be necessary

to place Tom Padrutt and men like him in isolation.

There's nothing in our constitution that prohibits

a special unit for the dangerous, incorrigible offender.

Therefore, I deny the plaintiff's petition.

Find in favor of the defendant.

This court's adjourned.

Tom, we'll appeal.

I don't think so, Jonathan.

Just give me a minute.

Please, Tom, Tom.

It's not costing you anything.

You're in prison, let me just work on the appeal.

By the time you're ready to go back into court again,

I'll be as crazy as the rest of 'em.

-Hold the elevator, please. -Yeah.

What are you doing?

We want to say something.

This isn't the way to do that.

This is the way we're doing it.

Okay, what do you want to say?

We want you to hear from us the kind of man you represent.

I don't make any apologies for the kind of man--

He k*lled my father in front of me.

He k*lled my sister because he wanted her car.

If you appeal this case,

we'll be right there in the courtroom.

Whether we're allowed to testify or not.

Any attempt to restore to this man any freedom

at all, we'll be there,

and we'll bear witness.

This shouldn't take very long.

We just need to put the two candidates to a vote.

Before we do that, I'd like to say something.

By all means.

I think Inez Garcia would make a great addition to this firm.

She's smart, she's principled,

she's got all kinds of trial experience.

Plus I've known her since she was a kid

and I can vouch for her character.

That said, I would urge you whether or not

you vote to hire Inez not to hire Patrick Flanagan.

Because of what he did to you.

Because what he did to me is indicative of what he does.

I'm not sure that's altogether fair.

Check his track record: Plagiarism in law school,

fabricating evidence in one case,

suborning perjury in another.

He would argue that there are legitimate explanations

for these things.

Of course he would. Guys like that always do.

Doesn't change the fact that there's been

a pattern of treachery to his entire life.

Since I have known this young man for his entire life,

let me weigh in on what I think.

Patrick did plagiarize a law review article.

He was young, he had problems.

And he did it.

And he also paid for having done it.

He was suspended from the university.

He took off a year, and he came back

and graduated in the top % of his class.

What about since then?

What about since then?

None of us can prove that he fabricated evidence.

And we can't prove, none of us can prove

that he suborned perjury.

Well, to exclude him on the basis of any of these charges

strikes me as manifestly unfair.

We can only hire one of them.

Oh, we can definitely only hire one.

Let's put it to a vote.

Inez Garcia.

Yes.

I vote yes.

I also have Jonathan Rollins' proxy.

He votes yes as well.

I vote no.

Also no.

Also no.

No.

I don't feel comfortable voting on this.

I haven't been here long enough.

I abstain.

Four to three against.

Patrick Flanagan.

I vote yes.

Yes.

Also yes.

Also yes.

You're going to abstain this time too, right, Eli?

Right.

You're going to fall in line behind Leland McKenzie?

Well, he is owed a certain amount of deference, Daniel.

He's not owed this.

The votes been taken. Should an opportunity arise again,

I suggest we do go after Inez.

As far as I'm concerned, there won't be a next time.

What does that mean?

That means I quit.

-Oh, come on, Daniel. -Save your breath.

I don't want to work for a firm that does what this firm just did.

♪♪ [theme]
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