-
This was my body.
-
On December 27, 1979,
-
I lay in bed all day.
-
Whether I was asleep or in a coma
-
later became a subject of dispute.
-
When my breathing became obstructed...
-
Maria!
-
My husband, Claus von Bülow,
-
finally did as my maid
had been urging all day.
-
He summoned a physician.
-
Dr. Paultees.
-
I stopped breathing.
-
My heart stopped beating.
-
By this time, I was
certainly in a deep coma
-
from which I awoke several hours later.
-
By the next morning, I was myself again.
-
There's no reason for all this fuss.
-
I've never felt better in my whole life.
-
This first coma aroused suspicion and fear
-
in the minds of my personal maid, Maria,
-
my son, Alex,
-
and my elder daughter, Ala.
-
From this time on,
-
though they never voiced
their suspicions to me,
-
they kept a vigilant eye on Claus.
-
A year later, just before Christmas,
-
their darkest fears seemed justified.
-
Has mummy had breakfast yet?
-
No, we haven't seen her.
-
My husband did not want
our daughter, Cosima,
-
to see what he had found,
-
so he motioned to his stepson Alex.
-
Second coma.
-
- Oh, no. - My pulse was 38,
-
my temperature, 81.6 degrees.
-
Did you call an ambulance?
-
Nicholas, would you ask Robert
to open the main gates?
-
We're expecting an ambulance.
-
Mrs. von Bülow...
-
Ma'am, send an ambulance immediately.
-
= it's on Belleview Avenue.
-
- Look, bring her something warm.
- Thank you.
-
Uh, or... or blankets or
anything you can find.
-
All this activity was pointless.
-
We better do an eeg.
-
I never woke from this coma,
-
ahd I never will.
-
I am what doctors call
persistent vegetative,
-
a vegetable.
-
According to medical experts,
-
I could stay like this
for a very long time,
-
brain-dead, body better than ever.
-
Enter Robert Brillhoffer,
-
former Manhattan district attorney.
-
My two children from my first marriage,
-
Alex and Ala von auersberg,
-
hired Brillhoffer to investigate the case.
-
He put a "do not resuscitate”
order on her hospital chart.
-
They sent Alex and a private investigator
-
back to my Newport cottage,
Clarendon Court,
-
to search for drugs.
-
They found plenty
-
in Claus' closet.
-
On top of that,
-
the hospital lab reported
-
that my blood insulin on admission
-
was 14 times normal,
-
a level almost surely caused by injection.
-
Insulin injection could
readily cause coma...
-
Or death.
-
This encrusted needle tested
positive for insulin.
-
Alex couldn't wait to get back...
-
Let's get out of here.
-
And show Brillhoffer.
-
Now they felt they had the murder weapon.
-
All they lacked was the motive.
-
At that moment,
-
my husband was vacationing
with his mistress,
-
the very beautiful soap opera
actress, Alexandra Isles.
-
Oh, god.
-
Mrs. Isles, a divorcée,
-
was the daughter of an old friend,
-
count Billy Botsky.
-
Brillhoffer also discovered
that, at my death,
-
Claus, whose own net worth
was only a million dollars,
-
stood to inherit 14 million from me.
-
Alexandra later testified
-
that Claus showed her a
legal analysis of my will.
-
On the evidence collected by Alex,
Ala, and their lawyer, Brillhoffer,
-
my husband was accused of twice trying
-
to murder me with injections of insulin.
-
On March 16, 1982,
-
he was found guilty on both counts.
-
Charged the defendant committed
on December 27th, 1979...
-
Even Alexandra isles
testified against him.
-
How do you find?
-
Guilty.
-
As to count two,
-
charge the defendant committed
on December 21, 1980,
-
the crime of assault
with intent to murder,
-
how do you find?
-
Guilty.
-
You are about to see how Claus
von Bülow sought to reverse...
-
Or escape from that jury's verdict.
-
You tell me.
-
And two!
-
Here we go! Here we go! Here we go!
-
Taking you downtown!
-
Air dersh!
-
Take it in! Take it in! Foul!
-
Okay. Here I go. Here I go!
Watch the hands!
-
Watch the hands!
-
Yeah, hello.
-
What?
-
Oh, shit. Ju... bottom line.
-
Oh, shit!
-
Hi.
-
Let's try that again.
-
Hi, dad. Remember Maggie?
-
Hi, Maggie. Hello.
-
They're going to fry.
The Johnson brothers.
-
What?
-
But...
-
Two black kids broke their
father out of prison.
-
The father shot two people,
-
and the sons are convicted of murder.
-
A lawyer prays for an innocent client.
-
Finally, finally, I get two.
-
Both of them are going to get zapped.
-
No more appeals?
-
Supreme court, but this was the best shot.
-
Mmm!
-
It's the press.
-
You don't want to talk to the press?
-
Dershowitz psychiatric institute.
-
Yeah, hang on a second.
-
Claus von Bülow.
-
It's a reporter.
-
With an English accent?
-
If I can't save two innocent
kids, what's the point?
-
- I might as well hang it up. - Yeah.
One second, one second, sorry.
-
He really seems to think he's von Bülow.
-
Hello. This is Alan Dershowitz.
-
Who are you? What do you want?
-
It's von Bülow.
-
Back in business.
-
Can I help you, sir?
-
Claus von Bülow.
-
Elevator's to the left, go right ahead.
-
Holy shit.
-
Hello?
-
Hello?
-
Professor Dershowitz, hello, hello.
-
How good of you to come.
-
Pleasure.
-
Won't you sit down?
-
Do you play?
-
That? No.
-
Most people think it's a game of luck.
-
Actually, it's largely a matter of nerve.
-
Um... nothing, thank you, Charles.
-
Why don't we go to Delmonico's
and have a proper lunch?
-
Whatever.
-
I should tell you that I
have the greatest respect
-
for the intelligence and
integrity of the Jewish people.
-
When I married Sunny,
-
she was the most beautiful
divorcée in the world
-
and one of the wealthiest.
-
Even so, we never got this table.
-
Professor Dershowitz.
-
Dr. von Bülow.
-
Two injections of insulin,
already I'm a doctor.
-
No, in America, it's
fame rather than class.
-
Now, after all this unpleasantness,
-
I always get the best table and...
-
Speaking of the unpleasantness...
-
Oh, yes, I suppose we
better discuss your fee.
-
Okay.
-
It's 300 dollars an hour.
-
Good Lord!
-
You know, I used to be a lawyer in London.
-
That sounds a bit steep.
-
It's average for a case like this.
-
Besides, I do a lot of pro bono work.
-
You would pay for that.
-
Plus, I have to pay
students, associates...
-
Are you saying if I agree to pay 300,
-
you will handle my appeal?
-
No, not so far.
-
It doesn't look like my kind of case.
-
I'm not a hired gun.
-
I got to feel there's some moral
or constitutional issue at stake.
-
But I'm absolutely innocent,
-
and my civil liberties have
been egregiously violated.
-
I've got two black kids
facing the electric chair
-
for a crime they did not commit.
-
They are innocent.
-
Well, before you assume I'm guilty,
-
won't you hear my story?
-
Nope. Never let defendants explain.
-
Puts most of them in an awkward position.
-
How do you mean?
-
Lying.
-
But I give you my word as a gentleman.
-
Oh... well...
-
Well, won't you at least
read the record and
-
see if you can find something... well...
-
Constitutional?
-
You do have one thing in your favor.
-
Everybody hates you.
-
Well, that's a start.
-
Come on, Maxwell!
-
Get up! Come on, Max!
-
He was hit! He... = oh! Hit!
-
Yes!
-
So what do you think?
-
Oh, he did it. He did it.
-
Of course he did it. Can we win?
-
Hundred to one against.
-
The maid. The maid shmeared
him on both comas.
-
Look at it. At this. It says here...
-
After you realized that Mrs. von Bülow
-
had not gotten up, what did you do?
-
I came downstairs,
-
and Mr. von Bülow said that madame
-
had a very sore throat,
-
and I didn't have to do any work,
-
and she was in bed all day.
-
What are you doing?
-
She's ice cold.
-
Madame! Mrs. von Bülow!
-
Leave her alone.
-
She's sleeping.
-
She was drinking last night.
-
We didn't get any rest.
-
She's not sleeping.
-
She's unconscious.
-
You must call a doctor. = Maria.
-
Go on!
-
A half hour later, she had not moved.
-
I went back and forth all morning.
-
Strain over the last several days.
-
Finally, mid-afternoon,
-
Mr. von Bülow spoke to Dr. Paultees,
-
but he lied to doctor.
-
Yes, she's sleeping now,
-
but she was up earlier this
morning to the bathroom
-
and had a soft drink.
-
So I don't think there's
any cause for alarm.
-
But she never moved,
-
never got up.
-
She was lying in the
same position all day.
-
Later, her heart stops,
-
and Dr. Paultees, he comes and saves her.
-
After they go to the hospital,
-
I'm changing the sheets.
-
I find a puddle of urine.
-
If madame went to the bathroom,
-
she would not have peed in her bed.
-
Right.
-
Why would Claus lie about that?
-
Well, it's suspicious,
but hardly criminal.
-
How about the second coma?
-
Well, Maria wasn't in
Newport for that one.
-
But shortly before the second coma...
-
I'm cleaning up their room
-
when I find Mr.
von Bülow's white canvas bag
-
packed for Newport.
-
Inside, there's a little black bag:
-
A bottle of insulin, a
syringe, and needles.
-
Alexander!
-
Alexander, come here!
-
Insulin.
-
For what, insulin?
-
My lady is not diabetic.
-
Three weeks later,
-
Sunny's lying unconscious
in a freezing bathroom
-
with her nightgown hiked over her waist.
-
If I was on that jury,
-
I would have voted to convict.
-
Then you're taking the case?
-
It reminds me of my Hitler dream.
-
You know, Hitler calls up.
-
He's alive, needs a lawyer.
-
I say, "sure, come on over."
-
Then I have to decide.
-
Do I take the case or do I kill him?
-
You? No question.
-
I would take the case.
-
Then kill him.
-
I'm a maniac.
I need someone with your judgment,
-
someone to watch what I'm doing,
occasionally remind me about the law.
-
When can I see the transcripts?
-
You're a former prosecutor, conservative.
-
We agree on nothing.
-
But you're smarter than
the Rhode Island DA.
-
If I can beat your arguments,
I can destroy his.
-
Look, Rhode Island is the most
corrupt state in the country.
-
Everything is political.
-
I don't think that way. You do.
-
I have to see the big picture.
I can't afford to immerse myself in facts,
-
but we must know the facts.
-
Out of all my ex-students,
-
no one can assimilate information
as quickly as you two.
-
Well, I agree with that assessment.
-
You're out of your mind.
-
I only have 45 days to file.
-
I can't do it without you.
-
Look, Sarah, I know you
don't want to come back...
-
Is this strictly professional?
-
Better be.
-
That's wonderful.
-
Now, I want the best people
in the world on our side,
-
the most prestigious experts,
-
Nobel prize-winning scientists.
-
Some of your colleagues
at Harvard, perhaps.
-
Hey, hey, wa... wait a minute, Claus.
-
Look, we got a little problem there, okay?
-
People like that, we can't control.
-
They'll find one incriminating fact,
-
they'll tell the whole world.
-
I'm not afraid, Alan.
-
Let the chips fall where they may.
-
That's what an innocent man would say.
-
I know.
-
That just came for you, dad.
-
My daughter, Cosima. She never doubted me.
-
She loves Alex and Ala dearly,
-
and siding with me has
cost her their affections.
-
I don't know what I would have done.
-
Okay, look, I said I didn't
want to hear your story,
-
but I do need some information.
-
'Course.
-
Okay, I gather they'll, the older
children, deny Sunny had a problem
-
with pills and alcohol?
-
Spectacular understatement.
-
So there must be somebody
who saw it, right?
-
Some witness, somebody, somewhere?
A friend?
-
- You want affidavits? - Yes, I do.
-
I'll get them.
-
You'll get them?
-
You should also know, the drugs
prescribed for me were taken by Sunny.
-
That's a lot of drugs, Claus.
-
But the prosecution's allegation that
I knew about syringes, injections,
-
totally accurate.
-
Sunny and I used to give ourselves
b-12 injections in the late sixties.
-
It was quite the fad in London.
-
Can I explain something to you?
-
The less I know from you,
-
the more options I have.
-
When you tell me “the truth,”
-
you limit me to a defense that lines
up with what you have to say.
-
But isn't the truth the
simplest way, Alan?
-
I mean, why did I stay
all day at Sunny's side
-
without calling a doctor?
-
Because Sunny detested doctors.
-
If we called one without her approval,
-
she went berserk.
-
Once she broke her hip
-
and didn't go to hospital
for two full days.
-
Claus, did you hear what I just said?
-
Of course.
Did you hear the judge sentenced me?
-
Sorry. 30 years is a
pretty stiff sentence.
-
Twice trying to murder one's wife,
-
anything less would be monstrous.
-
But for a man like myself,
-
who did nothing...
-
What I wanted to ask,
-
if we lose the appeal,
-
will I have the chance later
-
to set my affairs in order
before I'm incarcerated?
-
In Europe, a gentleman
is given the opportunity
-
to end things properly.
-
Come on, Claus.
-
We are each the keeper
of our own souls, Alan.
-
Okay, two big problems.
-
The case against him is very strong.
-
But probably more important,
-
the legal conviction isn't
the only conviction
-
that we got to reverse.
-
The more dangerous conviction
-
is the absolute certainty
of the American people
-
that Claus is guilty.
-
Finding grounds for reversal
won't be enough here.
-
Judges on the Rhode Island supreme court
will have to go home to their spouses
-
and explain why they reversed.
-
To get them to do that, we
must completely obliterate
-
every single aspect of the state's case.
-
Destroy both the medical
case and their witnesses
-
so the judges have no
possible way to affirm.
-
Total victory, or we
are dead in the water.
-
Now, I assume that you've
all had an opportunity
-
to look at the transcripts,
-
first impressions, yeah, Minnie?
-
I think this whole thing stinks.
-
I think Claus von Bülow stinks.
-
He's obviously guilty of
something pretty despicable.
-
And if we free him,
-
we become partners in his crime,
-
accessories after the fact.
-
I'm really shocked,
-
with your record defending
the poor and oppressed,
-
that you've taken this case.
-
I won't have anything to do with it,
-
and I hope my fellow
students won't either.
-
Good-bye.
-
May I exercise my first
amendment right to free speech?
-
If lawyers only defended innocent clients,
-
there would be 10 defense
lawyers in the entire country,
-
and none of you would
be able to find a job.
-
Why help guilty people get off?
-
Oh, you're sure he's
guilty, 100 percent sure.
-
He had a lawyer. He had a trial.
-
He was convicted.
-
Are you sure he had a fair trial?
-
Come on!
-
It's the basis of the whole legal system.
-
Everyone gets a defense.
-
So the system is there
-
for the one innocent person
who is falsely accused.
-
Okay, look.
-
Say it's you, okay?
-
You decide...
-
You decide to get a divorce.
-
You're going to divorce your husband.
-
A week later,
-
you're accused of molesting your son.
-
Oh, no, now don't give me that look.
-
Stuff like this happens all the time.
-
Suddenly, you're alone.
-
You're hated.
-
It's... it's a nightmare.
-
Everyone assumes that you are guilty.
-
Even the mailman is beginning to look
at you a little... a little funny.
-
You only got one person
who believes in you.
-
There's only one person you can trust,
-
your lawyer.
-
Yeah. Okay.
-
So, someone's got to defend Claus.
-
But why you?
-
Why us?
-
Look, you're my student.
-
Y-you have a choice.
-
You d... you don't have to do
anything you don't want to do.
-
That is your choice.
-
The reason I take cases,
-
and here, I'm unlike most other lawyers
-
who are not professors and
therefore have to make a living,
-
I take cases 'cause I get pissed off,
-
and I am pissed off here.
-
The family hired a private prosecutor.
-
They conducted a private search.
-
Now, we let them get away with that,
-
rich people won't go to the cops anymore.
-
You know what they're gonna do?
-
They're going to get their own
lawyers to collect evidence.
-
And then they are going
to choose which evidence
-
they feel like passing on to the DA,
-
and the next victim isn't going
to be rich like von Bülow.
-
But it's gonna be some
poor schnook in Detroit
-
who can't afford or can't
find a decent lawyer.
-
I think it's a little more complicated
-
than your simple moral superiority.
-
No?
-
I agree von Bülow is guilty,
-
but that's the fun, I mean,
that's the challenge.
-
See, now there is a lawyer.
-
What?
-
Yeah, okay. Put him on.
-
Alan, a rather unsavory character
-
called David Marriott contacted me
-
claiming to have information about a
drug delivery at Clarendon Court.
-
Okay. Now, where does he live?
-
Somewhere in Wakefield.
-
Okay, we... no, we'll get on it.
-
Tom, I want you to get
a private investigator
-
to dig into a David Marriott
who lives in Wakefield.
-
Okay. How are we going to win this case?
-
The judge made lots of mistakes.
-
Judges always make mistakes.
-
How are we going to win?
-
All right, one issue leaps up,
-
this lawyer, Brillhoffer,
-
interviewed Alex, Maria, everybody.
-
He was the first person
fo hear their stories.
-
He took notes and he used
those notes at trial
-
against a defense witness.
-
But the defense never saw the notes.
-
The judge wouldn't let us have them.
-
This alone seems like sufficient grounds.
It's perfect Brady.
-
Okay, fine.
-
Why don't you draft a letter
-
writing to Brillhoffer
asking him very nicely
-
to send us his notes?
-
Yeah, right. He'll fax them right over.
-
Yeah, right.
-
We could win on this issue
alone and he knows it.
-
You know it, I know it.
-
We'll just make sure he knows it.
-
Now... Nancy and Dobbs...
-
Yes?
-
They're going to attack
the medical testimony.
-
Mm-hmm.
-
Our Rhode Island counsel, Peter Macintosh,
-
he will analyze the state supreme court.
-
I think the rest of us should
begin dissecting the transcripts,
-
errors, inconsistencies, anything unusual.
-
Okay, great. Now, remember,
-
most cases are won in the field,
-
not in court.
-
Minnie?
-
You want to work with Sarah on this?
-
You may learn something.
-
- Come on, Minnie. - Come on, Minnie.
-
- Minnie! - Come on.
-
Please?
-
Come on.
-
"Course I don't trust David Marriott.
-
I don't know David Marriott.
-
But if he knew Alex von Auersberg...
-
You're crazy, I don't know
who you think you are.
-
You Perry Mason?
-
Let our private investigator
interview this jerk.
-
It's stupid, it's arrogant,
-
and it's unprofessional.
-
- It's fun. - Fun? This guy is a sleaze.
-
You don't know what he's going to try.
-
What, is he going to shoot me?
-
Come on, I'm from Brooklyn.
-
Okay, look, I'll stand by the
window every 10 minutes, okay?
-
That way you can know I'm safe.
-
I had this friend...
-
Gilbert Jackson...
-
Interior decorator.
-
Flaming queen, but a very excellent guy.
-
He introduced me to Alex von Auersberg.
-
You sure it was Alex?
-
We had dinner a few times, drinks.
-
All I knew, Alex was some rich kid.
-
So sometimes,
-
this is like, uh, summer of '77,
-
I'd motor to Newport for some r and r.
-
Gilbert asked me to bring Alex a package.
-
I figured interior decoration.
-
Maybe drapes.
-
Like six times.
-
So I'd call Alex.
-
How'd you get his phone number?
-
From Gilbert.
-
You still have it?
-
Maybe.
-
I'm that kind of guy.
-
Here.
-
One night I got curious.
-
Opened the package.
-
Fucking pharmacy, man.
-
Needles, syringes, white powder.
-
Nice selection of pills.
-
Demerol.
-
Like a drugstore.
-
You delivered drugs six
times and didn't know it?
-
Stupid, huh?
-
Then Gilbert asked me again.
-
I couldn't say no, but this time
-
I made Alex open the
package in front of me.
-
Voila.
-
I go, "awful lot of
pharmaceuticals for one person.”
-
He goes, "oh, I give some to my mom
-
to keep her off my back.”
-
Few weeks later, Gilbert gets
mistaken for a softball.
-
Two guys bash his head in.
-
Alex calls me, totally urinary.
-
Will the cops find his phone number
-
and fuck up his trust fund or something?
-
Well, that's the fat.
-
That's the skinny.
-
You like it?
-
You traffic with drug
dealers and drag queens.
-
You have a part-time job.
-
You ride around in rented limos.
-
All in all, I would have to say
-
you're probably the least
impressive witness
-
I've ever seen.
-
Wait a minute.
-
You think I'm scum, don't you?
-
Blow it out your ass.
-
You want a witness to back me up?
-
I'll get one.
-
And, hey,
-
maybe I'll see you at the Celtics, huh?
-
I am not going to let them execute you.
-
You're not going to die.
-
Look, Johnny, th...
-
Johnny, this is going to
be a lot easier on me
-
if you don't cry, okay? I... I kn...
-
I know your brother's hysterical, I...
-
Number o... they always set
a date for the execution,
-
and they always postpone it...
-
He's great when he's like this, huh?
-
That's right.
-
I just wish he had something
left for the people around him.
-
What are you talking to me about money?
-
Did I ever ask you about money?
-
Anyway, it's nice to have you back here.
-
Okay. Say hello to your brother.
-
Right.
-
Okay.
-
Okay, who's got what?
-
Uh, yeah. Maria's testimony.
-
She says Sunny did take
valium prescribed for Claus.
-
Okay, score one for von Bülow.
-
And this Jamie Smather prescription?
-
Who's Jamie Smather?
-
Three-hundred-pound redheaded
hooker in pigtails and white boots.
-
She supplied Claus with valium.
-
He had a gorgeous mistress and
he went with an ugly whore?
-
You know, there's some things
even mistresses won't do.
-
Like what?
-
I-I'm not telling.
-
Anyway, Maria swears
-
she first saw this Jamie Smather
prescription February 14th,
-
and then again February 28th.
-
So?
-
It wasn't prescribed till the 28th.
-
You're not suggesting she's lying?
-
Okay, how about Maria's insulin?
"For what, insulin"?
-
- Anything more on that? - Not yet.
-
Something about that bothers me.
-
Okay, who's next?
-
Brillhoffer wrote back.
-
He's very attached to his notes.
-
"I am satisfied
-
that there is not a scrap
of paper in my files
-
that might even arguably
be viewed as exculpatory.”
-
English translation?
-
He says he doesn't have
anything that'd help us.
-
You with me?
-
Pay dirt.
-
What's pay dirt?
-
He's a lawyer.
-
If he really didn't have
anything, he'd give it to us...
-
But there's something there
-
and he's gonna fight like
hell to hold onto it.
-
I will bet my fee
-
that no one remembered seeing insulin
-
until after the lab report came back.
-
So... you're suggesting...
-
Memory enhancement.
-
It might be more than that.
-
Possibly.
-
A frame-up.
-
You mean by the kids?
-
Where are you getting all this,
from Brillhoffer's letter?
-
Pure deduction.
-
A good lawyer is part psychiatrist,
detective, logician.
-
A great lawyer...
-
Never would have taken this case.
-
If there's nothing more...
-
Has anybody read this?
-
It's an interview with Truman Capote.
-
He says when she was 19,
-
Sunny von Bülow
-
taught him how to inject drugs.
-
Let me see that.
-
Well, well, well, the famous professor.
-
Alan, I'd like to introduce
my new girlfriend,
-
- Andrea Reynolds.
- I'm not his girlfriend, I'm his savior.
-
Perfectly true.
-
Two days after the trial
ended, we fell in love.
-
- It was really very, very dramatic.
- Yes, Andrea, Andrea, come on.
-
Since then, I've devoted my
life to clearing his name.
-
I made him hire you.
-
"Get the Jew," I said.
-
Darling...
-
Can the Jew get down to business?
-
We've got an affidavit.
-
A Smythe, Mrs. Ruth Smythe,
-
gave us an affidavit
corroborating Truman capote.
-
I have affidavits, too.
-
Newport people.
-
They describe Sunny taking pills,
-
getting drunk and falling down...
-
Bumping into doorways,
-
smearing lipstick all over her face.
-
Not a very pretty picture.
-
She did it, didn't she?
-
Don't be a priss.
-
Sunny was a lovely woman.
-
Spoiled rotten.
-
Yes, but lovely.
-
Till she drank.
-
Two drinks and she became... nasty,
-
- irrational.
- All women are irrational, darling.
-
Did we mention the priest?
-
Oh. Marriott apparently
confided in a priest
-
who's consented to talk to us.
-
A father Capello from Providence.
-
Priest?
-
Well, a priest is the ideal witness.
-
- It's like getting the word of god.
- I checked.
-
God is unavailable.
-
If
-
If the priest comes through
-
and we can get documentation
on Sunny's drug use,
-
then self-injection may
be a plausible theory.
-
There's no insulin in this case.
-
Yeah, but people do use insulin,
-
they use it for dieting, it's
not a prescription drug.
-
Sunny was concerned about her weight.
-
Maybe, but believe me, Alan...
-
There's no insulin here.
-
Really?
-
How can you be so sure?
-
Do you realize...
-
With this case, I'm looking for
evidence to exonerate you?
-
But at the same time,
I'm also wondering...
-
What really happened...
-
Who you are.
-
Who would you like me to be?
-
Your mother's death...
-
What happened?
-
I believe she had a heart problem.
-
Really?
-
The rumor in England is you killed her.
-
Hey, wait a minute, Alan.
-
Statute of limitations ran
out on that years ago.
-
There's rumors also that I killed my aunt.
-
And that I'm a necrophiliac,
-
who injected Sunny with insulin
-
so that I could have my way with her.
-
Please.
-
Your mother's death wasn't
recorded for five full days.
-
True.
-
Where were you during that time?
-
In the flat.
-
Where the body was?
-
My mother is my own business.
-
Did Claus drive me crazy?
-
Even I don't know.
-
But it's true that I took
up to 24 laxatives daily,
-
popped aspirin like m&ms,
-
smoked three packs of cigarettes a day,
-
had a problem with alcohol,
-
took valium and seconal frequently,
-
and consumed large quantities of sweets
-
despite a medical condition, hypoglycemia,
-
which made them hazardous.
-
As for my state of mind...
-
I had not had sex with
my husband for years.
-
My schedule was...
-
I woke at 9:30,
-
did a little exercise and shopping,
-
ahd returned to bed at three o'clock
-
for the remainder of the afternoon.
-
I liked to be in bed.
-
I didn't much like anything else.
-
Hold on here, will you?
-
Come in.
-
Alan.
-
Welcome to my humble law firm.
-
In the kitchen,
-
our insulin-on-the-needle team.
-
They're cooking up some surprise for us.
-
This is our Brillhoffer notes team.
-
Mr. von Bülow!
-
Where do you keep the paper towels?
-
Ask Sarah!
-
Sarah used to live here.
-
This...
-
I guess he was up all night.
-
This sort of commune,
-
you do it on every case?
-
Never before.
-
Thirty-eight days to write 100 pages?
-
Only way to get it done.
-
Here's the black bag team.
-
Illegal search teams.
-
My son, Elon, lost his room.
-
Well, actually, this is,
uh, this is another case
-
that you're paying for.
-
And this is my team.
-
You wish.
-
I... I can't find the damn thing.
-
Hi. I'm Sarah.
-
And a very lovely Sarah you are.
-
Does that really work?
-
Flattery?
-
Absolutely.
-
Like Chinese food?
-
What do you give a wife
who has everything?
-
An injection of insulin.
-
How... ah, my prawns.
-
How can one define a fear of insulin?
-
Claus-trophobia.
-
Hm.
-
Is there anything more you can tell us
-
about Alexandra Isles?
-
For instance, is it true
that she gave you a deadline
-
of Christmas 1979 to be together?
-
Uh, not really.
-
No, she knew I was looking
for full-time work.
-
I worked for JP Getty in London.
-
Alexandra assumed that
when you did find a job,
-
you'd marry her, correct?
-
Oh, she assumed it.
-
How about when she testified,
-
did you get a sense that she
wanted to get back together?
-
Very much so.
In fact, at the trial, she said...
-
I loved him, but I was still
caught up in my own anger...
-
And I'm sorry I acted that way then.
-
I loved him, and I was angry.
-
Let me ask you this.
Maybe you can't answer.
-
Do you still love him?
-
I don't know.
-
That means yes, doesn't it?
-
It would seem so.
-
In fact, after the trial,
-
she wrote me a letter
saying so explicitly.
-
A very passionate letter.
-
Passionate and...
-
Jealous.
-
But that was the relationship
from the outset.
-
That was Alexandra.
-
She was your love slave.
-
Ah.
-
Well, I think now I'll have
my own individual order
-
of ginger prawns.
-
- Waiter. - Three weeks
before her final coma,
-
Sunny overdosed on aspirin.
-
Can you tell us anything about that?
-
No one maintained I had
anything to do with that, Alan.
-
No, of course not.
-
I'm asking you what happened.
-
Well, Sunny had been unwell.
-
Ohhh...
-
Are you all right?
-
Oh, just a bit dizzy.
-
Well, if you're dizzy, don't go wandering.
-
Sunny?
-
Oh, my god.
-
Come on, my darling.
-
Now, you're all right.
-
Come on, put your arm around my shoulder.
-
There we are.
-
Now, you're all right.
-
Get you... come on.
We'll get you back into bed.
-
Something happened to my head.
-
You're all right. = it's cut.
-
Just a little cut. It's nothing.
-
Come on.
-
Let's get you lying down.
-
There you are.
-
There.
-
Shall I call a doctor?
-
No! No, I don't want...
-
I don't want a doctor.
-
Just... don't want a doctor.
-
Just want to be left alone.
-
Want to be left alone with all those beaut...
beautiful letters.
-
What did you do with those letters?
-
Why did you write those letters?
-
And those...
-
Later, Dr. Praug said
-
we needn't have gone to the hospital,
-
but I wasn't going to take any chances.
-
Why did she take so much aspirin?
-
Oh, Sunny always took aspirin.
-
She'd been taking a lot for several days.
-
That's not what our doctor said.
-
Dr. Lucas Lupardus,
-
chief forensic toxicologist,
Suffolk county,
-
says that people who take large
amounts of aspirin every day
-
never reach that level.
-
He also said the average blood
level in cases of death is...
-
Sixty. Hers was 90.
-
So...
-
So it was obviously a suicide attempt.
-
Why?
-
Yeah, why?
-
Why?
-
Alan, do they all want to be prosecutors?
-
We're waiting.
-
Well, I presume she was unhappy.
-
How about we all finish up
and go back to the house?
-
We're not going to win this
on a technicality. Peter.
-
I've read every case in
the last seven years
-
where the Rhode Island
supreme court reversed.
-
They don't like to make new law,
-
they don't like to discuss
broad legal issues.
-
When they do reverse,
-
the grounds are technical,
-
but the reason seems to be
-
they suspect a convicted
defendant may be innocent.
-
Okay, so everybody get that?
-
True or not, we've got
to convince the judges
-
that you are innocent.
-
Claus, now I do want to hear
your side of the story.
-
With pleasure.
-
Innocence has always been my position.
-
First coma. What preceded it?
-
Well, Sunny loved Christmas.
-
It was her favorite season, really.
-
You see, what you must
understand about Sunny
-
is that she loved giving
more than anything else.
-
J peace on earth and mercy mild j
-
j god and sinners reconciled... j
-
each year, she always made a
big bowl of fresh eggnog.
-
Now, that year, she drank a lot of it.
-
How much?
-
Oh, 10 or 12 glasses.
-
With her hypoglycemia?
-
She didn't always drink like that?
-
Never.
-
She never touched alcohol at
all except on social occasions
-
to overcome her shyness...
-
Or when she was upset.
-
This was not a social occasion.
-
No.
-
We'd been discussing
divorce all afternoon.
-
This whole subject of your...
-
Work... coming between us,
-
isn't it just a pretext when
the real subject is her?
-
Certainly not.
-
I'm thinking of redecorating
this whole fucking house.
-
Then she knew about Alexandra.
-
Yes.
-
How did she find out?
-
Uh...
-
I, um...
-
I told her the previous summer.
-
Ala, can't we find one a bit slower?
-
- Ah, that's much better. - Hm.
-
- Cooler. - Hm.
-
Thank you.
-
Oh, I've been meaning to mention...
-
Our understanding about my...
-
Extracurricular activities.
-
Mmm?
-
I've been involved with someone who...
-
Falls outside the parameters
of our agreement.
-
- Really? - Someone...
-
Peripherally in our circle.
-
Billy Botsky's daughter,
-
Alexandra isles.
-
Well.
-
That must be better for you
-
than what you've had to put up with.
-
You're referring to the call girls.
-
Yes.
-
I mean, that is where you've
gone previously, isn't it?
-
Yes, it is.
-
And isn't this better?
-
Or is Billy Botsky's
daughter a call girl, too?
-
This is much better.
-
That was what, July, August?
-
Now it's Christmas time,
-
and you were still
squabbling over Alexandra?
-
No. We were fighting about my work.
-
Well, by the evening,
-
she'd drunk so much eggnog,
-
that I had to help her into the bedroom.
-
Alexander.
-
Time for bed, darling.
-
Mmm, mmm, mmm.
-
There we are.
-
Please don't hold my arm.
-
Darling, you know when
you get like this...
-
Remember?
-
You fell and broke your hip.
-
That was years ago.
-
It was two years ago.
-
Get me a scotch and soda.
-
May I at least urinate alone?
-
She runs the water every
time she goes in there.
-
If she was already soused,
why'd you go for the scotch?
-
Because she asked for it.
-
Sunny got what Sunny wanted.
-
It's okay.
-
Good night, dad.
-
Good night, darling.
-
Good night, Claus.
-
Good night, Alex.
-
Hasn't my mother given us enough money?
-
Claus?
-
That night, we hardly slept.
-
Your age, it's perfectly
acceptable to retire.
-
I'm already retired.
-
I haven't worked full-time since Getty.
-
Exactly. It's your ego.
-
You've never had a career. Not really.
-
Well, I'm going to have one now.
-
Oh, come on, Sunny, your father worked.
-
Do you want the children to grow up
-
thinking a male's place
is in a deck chair?
-
Claus, you marry me for my money,
-
then you demand to work.
-
You're the prince of perversion.
-
I mean, what? Are you trying
to destroy our whole family?
-
Oh, no, of course not.
-
I... l... l simply want some...
-
Intercourse with the world.
-
Shut up, pan!
-
Oh, what does it matter?
-
So is that it?
-
Another divorce?
-
Okay.
-
I'll divorce you. I will.
-
Oh, god...
-
Two-time loser.
-
I'll divorce everybody.
-
I don't want a divorce.
-
I don't want to marry
Billy Botsky's daughter.
-
I want to stay with you
and I want to work.
-
I need that as a man.
-
It's hopeless.
-
Oh, god.
-
I need my beauty sleep.
-
Why do you... why do you believe it's
hopeless just because of some...
-
Good night, Claus.
-
Sunny, you know I love you.
-
Good night.
-
Okay, and the next day?
-
Well...
-
Maria's testimony was wildly exaggerated.
-
Sunny was never moaning.
-
Maybe the occasional snore, but...
-
And Maria shook Sunny.
-
Nobody ever shook Sunny.
-
What happened when she
regained consciousness?
-
After the first coma,
-
well, it was kind of absurd.
-
Everybody was angry at me.
-
Can't you ever leave me alone?
-
Why did you do it?
-
I would have been better off.
-
You would have been better off.
-
What do you want me to say?
-
That I'm sorry I saved your life?
-
Yes.
-
Say it.
-
Of course I'm not sorry.
-
Wha...
-
Claus...
-
What am I going to do with myself?
-
When I phoned Alexandra,
-
to tell her what had happened,
she said the same thing,
-
she said, "why did you do it?
-
Why did you call the doctor?”
-
You telling me she wanted
you to let Sunny die?
-
No, no, no, no, no.
-
It was more...
-
"Everybody says Sunny" s
such an unhappy woman
-
and has nothing to live for."
-
Well, so much for the first coma.
-
The second, of course,
-
was much more theatrical.
-
Theatrical? What is this, a fucking game?
-
This is life and death.
Your wife is laying in a coma.
-
You don't even make a
pretense of caring, do you?
-
'Course I care, Alan.
-
It's just I don't wear
my heart on my sleeve.
-
Let's call it a night, okay?
-
Okay, guys, so...
-
As you wish.
-
There were three drugs
on the needle, right?
-
Amobarbital, valium, insulin.
-
We can't all be you, Alan.
-
Shoot! Shoot! All right.
-
Okay, get a doctor to
prepare five needles,
-
one with nothing,
-
two with valium, amobarbital, and insulin,
-
two with just valium and amobarbital.
-
We're gonna send them to the same
lab that our famous needle went to.
-
Let's see if we can get a
false positive result.
-
If we don't?
-
We don't, I clean the latrines.
-
Aw, you're not gonna believe this.
-
David Marriott wants money.
-
Yeah, who doesn't?
-
I'm afraid his memory might fade.
-
Oh, the hell with him. Forget about him.
-
Well, he has lost his crumby job,
-
and he is running around trying
to find evidence for us.
-
Okay, why don't we do what the
government does with its witnesses?
-
Okay? We'll pay for his time.
-
What's his time worth?
-
Buck and a half. = Sarah? Dersh?
-
Your team's on.
-
Okay. You going to pass
to me this game or what?
-
No.
-
Their private investigator said
-
the needle had a small
encrustation near the tip.
-
Now, doctors tell us this is totally
inconsistent with injection.
-
Okay, so how did it get there?
-
Oh.
-
If I inject this needle,
-
the skin acts as kind of a swab.
-
It cleans the needle off,
-
leaving the tip completely free of liquid.
-
But if I just dip the
needle into the liquid,
-
what do you see?
-
Dry this out,
-
you have an encrustation.
-
So it's a frame-up?
-
It's Desdemona's handkerchief.
-
My stepchildren thought I was guilty,
-
didn't feel they had enough evidence,
-
and so concocted some.
-
This should win us the case, no?
-
No. We're maybe halfway home.
-
There's still a lot of weird stuff.
-
Did you love Sunny?
-
I married her.
-
Of course I loved her. She was beautiful.
-
Rich.
-
Why not?
-
What I've seen of the rich, you can have.
-
I do.
-
The black bag,
-
was it yours?
-
Sunny appropriated it.
-
Now, to understand that,
-
you must understand that
after the first coma,
-
she went into a complete rage.
-
Where are they? Did you take them?
-
Certainly not. Take what?
-
My pills, you moron.
-
Valium, seconal...
-
You took them, didn't you?
-
My dear, I've long since
stopped interfering.
-
Well, who? My children wouldn't dare...
-
Oh.
-
Oh, I know who.
-
Where are you going?
-
Maria!
-
She soon found them.
-
It's my lovely mother, isn't it?
-
She's behind all this.
-
She's in cahoots with Maria.
-
Well, just because she had all the money
-
before I had all the money
-
does not mean she's my lord and master.
-
'Course not. I am your lord and master.
-
Just kidding.
-
Maria loves me too much.
-
It's unhealthy for her,
-
and it's certainly no fun for me.
-
There.
-
We'll see if that ugly little maid of mine
-
can sniff this one out.
-
And what are you going
to do with all that?
-
I'm not going to tell you.
-
I assure you, it not gonna
be among my affairs.
-
Odd she used that word, affairs.
-
You realize the prosecution
thinks you ground up the drugs
-
so you could inject Sunny?
-
And frankly, this nose drop
business is pretty far-fetched.
-
But consider the pattern, Alan.
-
It's public record that Sunny used drugs.
-
Her behavior here of hiding them in liquid
-
so that no one will find them,
-
it's your classic alcoholic
buying pints of whiskey
-
and stashing them all over the house.
-
You're right.
-
Of course, I mean...
-
I mean, you've always
been right, haven't you?
-
This is the most dangerous
case I've ever worked on.
-
You find that exhilarating?
-
No, I do not.
-
I am breaking every rule.
-
'Cause the best way to win is
to proclaim your innocence,
-
and I've never done that for anybody.
-
And the problem I got
is I see who you are.
-
You'd do anything to win.
-
So would you.
-
Yeah, but you don't
trust the legal system.
-
You're saying I'd manufacture witnesses?
-
Affidavits?
-
No, but you would sacrifice me.
-
Oh, please, Alan.
-
See, the more I believe that you are
innocent, the more nervous I am.
-
I go out on a limb for you,
-
you're proven guilty, I
look like an asshole.
-
My reputation, my credibility,
my career, destroyed.
-
That's the risk you're taking, isn't it?
-
Yeah, well, fuck you.
-
Fuck you, man.
-
I'm glad we understand one another.
-
It's easy to forget all
this is about me...
-
Lying here.
-
To most of you, my name means coma.
-
My second marriage means attempted murder.
-
Everything that came before,
-
everything beautiful, does not
exist in the public mind.
-
No one thinks of how I loved my children.
-
Look at Cosima,
-
and Alex, of course,
-
and Ala,
-
and certainly no one cares about Claus,
-
the way he was when I
fell in love with him.
-
When Claus and I first met,
-
I was married to the dashing, young
prince Alfred Eduard Friederich
-
Vincenz Martin Maria von Auersberg.
-
It was 1964,
-
seven years into my first marriage.
-
It seems that my first husband,
-
Alfie, as he was called,
-
had vowed to be unfaithful with
every pretty girl in Europe.
-
He was having quite a success.
-
And so...
-
I was unfaithful with Claus.
-
Psst!
-
Wildly unfaithful.
-
Happy memories.
-
But it's not the passion I remember most.
-
It's the tenderness.
-
Good god, what's that?
-
There's one of Frank's pets.
-
Oh, my god. No, no.
-
I never liked people much,
-
not as a rule.
-
Go ahead, feed him.
-
But Claus was somehow different.
-
Not a normal person, I guess.
-
It's all right. Do it again.
-
Give him some more.
-
Aw!
-
One of those things you never forget.
-
Of course, now he lives in my apartment...
-
My bedroom...
-
My bed.
-
Cold, isn't it?
-
Cold and brutish and the way of the world.
-
Looking at him now,
-
the issues seem simple.
-
Is he the devil?
-
If so, can the devil get justice?
-
And all this legal activity...
-
Is it in Satan's service?
-
"Sunny von Bülow was totally vulnerable
-
to Claus von Bülow."
-
Can't argue with that.
-
But it's speculation. Exaggeration.
-
You keep working on it.
-
Totally inflammatory!
-
Okay, good. Let's go over this.
-
Okay, we went over it...
once, I just wanted you to see if...
-
Oh, shit, wha...
what is this, illegal search?
-
It's a classic technicality.
-
It's a guilty man's argument.
-
Come on, this is different.
-
Usual fourth amendment case,
you're trying to exclude evidence
-
that's bad for your client.
= no, no. No, no.
-
Same thing here. Same thing.
-
No. This search destroyed evidence.
-
No fingerprints, no inventory.
-
Yeah, what's left hurts
Claus, but under Brady,
-
the state has an obligation...
-
Wait, wait, wait a second.
The cops tested the drugs
-
- from the illegal search, right?
- Yes, yes.
-
And we are saying that that test
constituted a second illegal search.
-
There are precedents.
-
- Walter, Jacobson, Morgan.
- I know there are precedents.
-
I know the law is on our side.
I'm not debating that.
-
What I'm trying to do is...
-
No. You're debating me personally. Why?
-
I'm debating strategy, okay?
I'm not... I'm not debating you.
-
We're all on the same team.
-
A-a-are we on the same team here or not?
-
I don't know. We seem to be.
-
Well then, why don't I feel it?
-
I thought this was strictly professional.
-
- It was. - That's bullshit, Alan.
-
Look, I brought you... I...
l asked you to work on this case
-
because I think you are a good lawyer.
-
I think you're a fine lawyer, too.
You're a great lawyer.
-
But you give everything
you have to the law,
-
and you forget the people you care about.
-
My clients are the people
that I care about.
-
Obviously.
-
What I care about, all I care about,
-
all I fucking care about is this!
-
This case!
-
And making... making the best possible
appeal we're capable of doing, okay?
-
Now, you can make your
argument better, Sarah.
-
You know that! I know that!
-
So why don't you just do it
and cut out all the bullshit?
-
Wow, you always have to have
the last word, don't you?
-
What?
-
We're going to lose.
-
W-why do you think this
case fascinates people?
-
'Cause one time or other every
man is driven crazy by his wife,
-
and in his secret heart,
-
he wants to do exactly
what Claus is accused of,
-
kill her in some sly, silent
way that can't be detected.
-
Claus is a scapegoat.
-
Someone has to suffer for the
sin that we all want to commit.
-
Alan, that's ridiculous.
-
It's ridiculous, you're right.
-
It's rid...
-
What do you got?
-
Prosecution's case is based on a theory.
-
The needle in the bag,
-
plus insulin on the needle,
-
- plus insulin in her blood.
- Right, right, yeah. Okay, fine.
-
In Derek, this Rhode Island supreme court,
-
these same judges,
-
said that in a case based
on circumstantial theory,
-
the case falls apart
-
if any part of the theory is weak.
-
If there's a weak link in the chain,
-
then you throw the whole chain out?
-
Exactly.
-
Peter, that's very... that's good.
-
That... that's very good.
-
Oh, yeah, this is good.
-
- Thank you. - Oh, yeah.
-
Wait, wait, wait.
What do you want me to do now?
-
What I want you to do?
-
I want you to find as many
alternative theories as possible.
-
Hey! Hey, hey!
-
Come on, come on, come on.
There's only seven days left.
-
Dersh? I'm sorry, but you
better come downstairs.
-
Hey, Dersh. Sorry to get you out of bed.
-
What do you...
what do you want, more money?
-
Can you get more?
-
Can I have a glass of water, please?
-
No.
-
The reason I'm here,
-
my affidavit is inaccurate.
-
Great. Just what I need right now.
-
- That's swell. - Yeah.
-
I left something out, something
incredibly important.
-
Remember I gave Alex's drugs
to a woman at Clarendon Court?
-
Yeah. So?
-
Well, that bitch was
definitely Sunny von Bülow.
-
David...
-
This, uh...
-
This is bad. It looks bad.
-
I've met with you, what, five times now?
All of a sudden...
-
No, it's not sudden.
-
I think I always knew,
but I became convinced
-
by staring at pictures of her.
-
Well, we can't use your
affidavit unless it's truthful.
-
Are you sure this time?
-
I swear...
-
On the body and soul of my mother.
-
Poor woman.
-
Put in this change and make him go over
-
every word of the affidavit.
-
Uh...
-
Can I use your men's room?
-
More money?
-
Can you get more?
-
But if Claus had injected her,
-
he'd have thrown away the needle, right?
-
Sure. If he threw away the insulin,
-
why keep the needle?
-
Hey, Claus is strange,
but he ain't stupid.
-
He is arrogant.
-
Is that a crime?
-
Sometimes.
-
Why are we even discussing this?
-
It's obvious. The kids framed him.
-
Whoa, you changed your tune.
-
A frame-up doesn't mean he's innocent.
-
The kids could have framed a guilty man.
-
Dersh!
-
Telephone!
-
It's Peter Macintosh.
-
Yeah?
-
You know what it is?
-
Okay.
-
Word in Rhode Island is
that the state can't lose.
-
They got an Ace up their sleeve.
-
What is it?
-
He's going to try to find out.
-
All right, my friend...
-
Friend? I like that.
-
Nothing personal.
-
Okay, no students, no witnesses.
-
Second coma. Let's hear it.
-
Well, Alan,
-
strange as it may seem
now in retrospect...
-
Claus, cut the bullshit.
-
December 20, 1980.
-
Sunny was unwell.
-
We'd been arguing all afternoon.
-
I'd at last been offered a new
position in the oil business,
-
which would have meant my
spending some time in Europe.
-
Well, the discussion must have escalated,
-
because I went to talk to the children.
-
This cargo will bring 50,000 gold florins
-
from any rebels worth the name.
-
50,000 florins?
-
That's a pretty good take.
-
Let's put it to the vote.
-
All those in favor...
-
If you'll forgive my
interrupting, skipper,
-
I'd like to think before I...
-
L... I've something to tell you both.
-
We're heading for the biggest
and the best pirate days ever!
-
L...
-
It looks as if...
-
As though...
-
Mummy and I are going to have to split up,
-
because my work is something
she just cannot tolerate.
-
Mummy says things like that.
-
She always gets over it.
-
Yes, but this has been
going on for too long.
-
I'm going to Europe for a
few months in the New Year,
-
and this will probably lead to a split.
-
Oh.
-
It's all right. She'll get over it.
-
Yeah, well, Alexander says that
conversation happened the next day.
-
Can you imagine anything more absurd
-
than announcing your
intention to divorce a woman
-
who's just fallen into a coma?
-
No. That evening, everything
seemed normal enough.
-
Not cheerful,
-
but then, we didn't usually
giggle at mealtimes.
-
Despite her doctor's
warnings about sweets,
-
the only thing Sunny
consumed was a sundae.
-
After supper, I went to finish
off some work in my study.
-
Well, what should we all do?
-
The others decided to
chat in the living room.
-
Ah, that would be lovely, but...
-
First I need to go to my...
To my room for just a minute.
-
After about an hour, I dropped in on them.
-
Darling, would you care for anything?
-
Mmm...
-
If there's some...
-
Chicken bullion left.
-
I'll look.
-
There you are, darling.
-
Thank you.
-
How is your work... coming?
-
I'm totally flummoxed.
-
I can't get the figures to make any sense.
-
Why don't you call your friend Deborah?
-
I doubt she'd be in Saturday night.
-
So, Deborah, I think you'll agree,
that's 728... right, now.
-
But Deborah was home,
-
and we did talk for some time until...
-
- Claus. - Hold on.
-
Come quick. Mummy's not well.
-
Deborah, can I call you back
in the morning? Thanks.
-
Her voice got very weak and she almost fell down.
I had to help her.
-
Somebody open a window.
-
I find the chill reassuring.
-
Now I must speak with Claus.
-
- Night, mummy. - Night.
-
Good night, darling.
-
Good night, Alex.
-
She'll be all right.
-
That is, if Claus has time to talk.
-
Or are you going to work
-
every spare moment right
through Christmas?
-
Hmm?
-
Is your work really so fascinating,
-
or are you trying to drive me away?
-
Because if you are, it's
succeeding beautifully,
-
because I don't want this.
-
I didn't marry you for this.
-
I could have had anybody.
-
With my money? Anybody.
-
Well?
-
Say something!
-
Do something!
-
Be a man!
-
I already have a Butler.
-
Do something!
-
I don't want this! I don't!
-
I don't want this!
-
Please! I don't...
-
I don't want th...
-
The same conversation
as the previous year,
-
only this time with greater venom.
-
You've always been afraid of me.
-
It's not because of my money.
-
It's basically because you're a coward.
-
Because your pitiful
masculinity is so fragile
-
you can't stand the idea of confrontation,
-
so you go off with miss Botsky...
-
Good night.
-
Hey! Hey.
-
As was usual, I was awakened before dawn.
-
I let the dogs out, as was customary.
-
I went back through the bedroom
-
to my study as quietly as possible.
-
I did not notice if my wife was in bed.
-
I did not notice if the light
was on under the bathroom door.
-
Had it been on, I wouldn't
have given it a thought.
-
I did my exercises, showered,
-
and then I called Deborah Knowles.
-
Well, I mean, it's stable
and it's profitable.
-
Can anyone really believe,
-
if I was trying to murder my wife,
-
that I would spend an hour going
over a tedious set of figures?
-
After the call, I passed
through the bedroom again.
-
I remember it was freezing.
-
By this time, Sunny was
certainly not in bed,
-
and I heard water running in the bathroom.
-
I had breakfast, walked the dogs,
-
and on my return,
-
asked the children where mummy was.
-
Has mummy had breakfast yet?
-
We haven't seen her.
-
Sunny?
-
Her bathroom was her private sanctuary.
-
No one entered it, except
the maid, of course,
-
to clean up.
-
Sometimes she stayed there
for hours, or so it seemed.
-
One can only speculate what
goes on behind a closed door.
-
Sunny, are you there?
-
I hesitated even to knock.
-
Darling?
-
Sunny?
-
Oh, god.
-
Once I'd ascertained she was breathing,
-
I went to fetch Alexander.
-
Why not call an ambulance first?
-
Panic, Alan, panic.
-
I mean, I... il...
-
I... l needed to talk to somebody.
There...
-
She was breathing normally.
-
It wasn't...
it wasn't like the year before.
-
I mean, in retrospect it seems absurd,
-
but I looked at her upper
lip, she had blood on it.
-
I thought she'd broken a tooth.
-
That was the extent of my concern,
-
and that's...
-
That's really all... all I can...
-
That's really all I can say.
-
Yeah, but is it the truth?
-
Of course.
-
But not the whole truth?
-
I don't know the whole truth.
-
I don't know what happened to her.
-
Wish I didn't believe you.
-
You know, it's very hard to trust
someone you don't understand.
-
You're a very strange man.
-
You have no idea.
-
Everybody here?
-
Peter Macintosh is late.
Says he's got bad news.
-
There he is.
-
Well?
-
I found out what the state has.
-
Mm-hm. = their Ace in the hole.
-
It's you.
-
It's me?
-
David Marriott taped all his
conversations with you.
-
Oh, great.
-
The scuttlebutt is, if we win
the case, you go to prison.
-
What did I say?
-
Good ol' corrupt Rhode Island, I
got a friend to get me an excerpt.
-
The reason I'm here,
-
my affidavit is inaccurate.
-
David, this is bad. It looks bad.
-
What, you want more money?
-
Can you get more?
-
Yeah.
-
Hey, that is not what I said.
-
It's on tape, Alan.
-
I don't care if it's on
tape, it's not what I said.
-
What do we do? =I don't know.
-
I... I'll tell you what we do.
We ignore it, that's what we...
-
Alan, with that tape,
it's your whole career.
-
I now believe Claus is innocent. So.
-
We've decided, no tricks,
no technicalities.
-
We are going to base our appeal
-
directly and explicitly
on Claus' innocence.
-
That's not proper.
-
An appeal has to be based
on judicial error.
-
It is. The judge should've
thrown out the case.
-
How can you say there was
insufficient evidence
-
when a jury convicted him?
-
- That's a good point, but...
- But that's what we are saying.
-
If the rules don't work, you change them.
-
Red Auerbach got the
jump ball rule changed
-
when the Celtics had a short team.
-
Uh, but it's dangerous politically, Alan.
-
If the judges feel insulted,
then we're gonna find...
-
Wait up, here. State Supreme Court
shouldn't even look at an appeal
-
based on new evidence.
-
Hey, guys, I'll take care of that, okay?
-
You just... you leave it to me.
-
Look, I know you're all exhausted.
-
We got four days left.
-
What we do now is going
to decide this thing.
-
Do you wanna win, or not?
-
Alan! = what?
-
- We've got something.
- We've hit the jackpot.
-
Our needles that had
amobarbital and valium...
-
But no insulin...
-
Both came back with
false positive readings
-
for insulin.
-
Okay.
-
One was 93, the other 282.
-
We've knocked out every piece
of their medical case.
-
Good work, good work.
-
Okay, now, now all they've
got left is my neck.
-
Anybody know anything about
editing audio tapes?
-
Defense! For what, defense!
-
- Come on! - Come on!
-
All right, Alan.
-
- Come on! - Hey!
-
Hurry up!
-
- What's going on? - Pass it, Alan.
-
I got it. Wait a minute.
I got it, I got it.
-
- Where's raj? - He's upstairs.
-
- Where you going? - Alan!
-
Raj, raj, I got it.
-
I got it.
-
Remember Maria?
-
She could have said it like this...
-
Insulin?
-
For what, insulin?
-
My lady is not diabetic.
-
You see? "My lady is not diabetic.”
-
She is assuming that the bag is Sunny's.
-
Her first reaction, instantaneous,
-
not part of a legal
strategy devised later,
-
is that the stuff in the black bag
-
belonged to Sunny, not Claus.
-
Who's gonna know better than she?
-
Start writing.
-
You are not god, you are a prosecutor,
-
and Alabama cannot execute
those Johnson kids
-
before the supreme court rules!
-
That... that's right! You heard me right.
-
You've got two hours to
get to Rhode Island.
-
You're gonna have to speed.
-
You want me to commit a crime?
-
Of course not! Because if you
do, they're gonna stop you,
-
you're not gonna make the deadline.
-
I'm telling you right now, buddy,
those kids fry, you're next!
-
You forgot your jacket.
-
You're damn right!
-
Some startling developments
in the von Bülow case.
-
Harvard law school
professor Alan Dershowitz
-
had been accused of paying
for falsified testimony,
-
but those accusations
were discredited today
-
by the Rhode Island Attorney General,
-
who announced that David
Marriott's tape was doctored
-
and that Marriott is not
a reliable witness.
-
So, what was he up to, Alan?
-
Who was he working for?
-
Damned if I know.
-
Hope they don't think
he was working for you.
-
Alan, no one's going to think...
-
Look, I don't think you did it, okay?
-
But at the Chinese restaurant,
-
you did duck the big question.
-
Chuck is our Alexandra isles expert.
-
Sunny's aspirin overdose...
-
What happened? Sunny had a headache?
-
Headache... was Alexandra, right?
-
Let's hear it, Claus.
-
Alexandra was spiteful.
-
On the day of Sunny's aspirin overdose,
-
she returned some presents I'd given her,
-
some photographs...
-
Love letters.
-
She dropped them off in a shopping bag.
-
Did Sunny see them?
-
Sunny was home.
-
I was not.
-
Alexandra neglected to
address the package to me.
-
I want to be left alone with all those beau...
beautiful letters.
-
What did you do with those letters?
Why did you write those letters?
-
There's a big difference between
knowing about an affair
-
and having love letters
crammed down your throat.
-
It seems that Sunny did
care about your affair.
-
She cared a lot.
-
Why didn't you tell us?
-
Everything was open book.
-
"Get the best experts.
-
I'm not afraid of the truth.”
-
Looks to me like Alexandra tried
to force Sunny into a suicide.
-
Or they plotted it together.
-
Either way, he's protecting Alexandra,
-
because he's still in love with her.
-
And why not?
-
I mean, hey, she's a babe.
-
"Course I still love her.
-
And hate her.
-
Alexandra, Sunny, Andrea...
-
I love them all.
-
Being a human being is very literal.
-
You're trapped.
-
Time moves in only one direction,
-
forward.
-
It's stupid and boring
-
and results in a lot of silliness.
-
Example, the legal process.
-
In this particular case,
-
a vast amount of time,
effort, and money was spent
-
trying to determine
precisely what happened
-
on those two nights so close to Christmas,
-
December 26th, 1979, December 20th, 1980.
-
Happened right here.
-
Even now it all looks the same,
-
feels the same, smells the same.
-
If you could just go back
in time and take a peek,
-
you'd know,
-
and all this would be unnecessary.
-
All rise!
-
Hear ye, hear ye!
-
All persons having business
before the supreme court
-
holding in Providence within and
for the state of Rhode Island
-
may now draw near...
-
Then again,
-
everyone enjoys a circus.
-
Be seated.
-
If the appellant is
ready, you may proceed.
-
If it please the court,
-
oral argument will be made
by out-of-state counsel,
-
professor Alan Dershowitz.
-
Your honors,
-
you may not like Claus von Bülow.
-
You may think he is guilty of something,
-
but I am here to tell you he is innocent.
-
Our new evidence will clear...
-
Professor, you know there isn't
a single case which allows you
-
to introduce new evidence on appeal.
-
Well, there is one, your honor,
-
and you wrote it. Derek.
-
In Derek...
-
In Derek, you yourself said
-
that a case based on circumstantial
theory rather than fact
-
only stands up
-
if no other theory makes sense.
-
The only way to show a better theory
-
is to present it.
-
Get on with it, counselor.
-
I hope you will have the courage
-
to free an innocent man
-
and remedy a grave injustice.
-
This will never work.
-
Too smart for his own good.
-
Alan says it will work,
-
if the prosecutor takes the bait.
-
What do you mean, "bait"?
-
Argues the evidence.
-
Your honors,
-
introduction of new evidence on appeal
-
violates every principle of jurisprudence,
-
every statute,
-
every precedent, every rule of ethics.
-
Ah, he's nailing us right off the bat.
-
I am not going to stand before you
-
and argue Mr. von Bülow's guilt.
-
However,
-
I have no choice but to address Mr.
Dershowitz' arguments
-
one by one.
-
- Bingo. - First,
-
the matter of the encrusted needle...
-
So? Now it's up to the judges.
-
Tell me what you really think.
-
I think it's easier to love somebody
-
than to live with them.
-
Love is fantasy.
-
Living is work.
-
I'll say. And those people
don't like to work.
-
But, if you don't do the
work, the love dies,
-
and nobody wants to deal with that one.
-
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
-
The love died,
-
Sunny couldn't accept it...
-
So Claus tried to kill her?
-
Maybe.
-
I don't agree.
-
Face it, all we had to do was prove
the state made a lousy case.
-
We didn't prove that Claus was innocent.
-
We couldn't. We didn't have
to, and he probably isn't.
-
He isn't? You mean, you thi...
-
I mean, so, he didn't
inject Sunny with insulin.
-
So what? Break it down.
First coma, no problem.
-
Even the attending doctor thought
it was caused by hypoglycemia,
-
loss of air to the brain, and so on.
-
All right. But what about the second coma?
-
I mean, why does Claus act so guilty?
-
Hey, come on, wouldn't any man feel
guilty if his wife was suicidal?
-
Yeah, so, so maybe she
took the sleeping pills
-
with the intention of killing herself,
-
but how did she end up lying on a
marble floor in a freezing bathroom
-
with her head under the toilet bowl?
-
How about this?
-
Sunny wakes up miserable.
-
Second marriage is over.
-
Children are leaving home.
-
What's to live for?
-
But when she was found,
-
her nightgown was hiked over her waist.
-
Exactly. How did it get there?
-
Okay, let's say she's
standing at the sink.
-
She has to pee.
-
At exactly the same instant,
-
the drugs hit.
-
Body convulses.
-
She grabs the nightgown.
-
I don't buy that.
-
It does seem far-fetched.
-
So's the truth sometimes.
-
Oh, bull. I think she took the
barbiturates the previous night.
-
And, let's say he saw her take them,
-
or she told him she was going
to before they fell asleep.
-
This time, he wants her to succeed.
-
Sunny?
-
Maybe there's some way
he can help her along.
-
Of course, the open window.
-
Zero degrees.
-
But somebody might see her there.
-
The action of dragging her would
naturally pull up the nightgown.
-
In this cold, how long could she survive?
-
Remember what Sunny said?
-
"I would have been better off.
-
You would have been better off.”
-
Because the law is a blunt instrument.
-
It is not a rapier. It is a cudgel.
-
Tomorrow, death penalty,
-
which reminds me of the comedian who said,
-
"ll don't know why they
call it the death penalty.
-
That's no penalty.
You're out of the game!"
-
- Good news. - Great news.
-
And more good news.
-
The decision came down?
-
They just announced it.
-
Five-zip.
-
We murdered them.
-
Grounds?
-
Well, they got the Brillhoffer notes.
-
And that silly, silly
guilty man's argument,
-
search and seizure.
-
Federal or state? = both.
-
- That's important.
- Yeah, it's federal, they could appeal it
-
in the us supreme court.
-
But because it's Rhode
Island, they can't. We win.
-
Don"t... don't get too excited
until we see Brillhoffer's notes.
-
We destroyed their medical case,
-
but their witnesses still
carry emotional weight
-
if there's a second trial.
-
Unless...
-
The Brillhoffer notes show that
they've changed their stories.
-
Good afternoon, sir.
-
Let me get that for you.
-
Thank you.
-
You have Brillhoffer's notes?
-
Yes.
-
Well?
-
They're not what we hoped.
-
I knew it.
-
They're much better.
-
No one mentioned seeing insulin when
they first talked to Brillhoffer.
-
Plus... Maria told them
-
that at Thanksgiving, when
she supposedly saw insulin
-
for the first time,
-
she couldn't even read any of the labels.
-
They were all scraped off.
-
What does this mean?
-
It means
-
that if there is a second trial,
-
we can be reasonably confident
-
both the medical case and their witnesses
-
are now highly suspect.
-
Oh, god.
-
So...
-
Darling...
-
This is Alan Dershowitz.
-
Yes, I know. Hello.
-
Alan tells me...
-
Well, things look very hopeful.
-
I knew it would come out all right.
-
Thank you.
-
Yes, Alan, thank you.
-
I am eternally grateful.
-
Hey, this means we'll be
getting back your bail,
-
a million dollars.
-
Uh, I know I still owe you, Alan.
-
Please send me your bill.
-
And maybe when you're in New York,
-
uh, we can...
-
We can meet for lunch. I'd enjoy that.
-
One thing, Claus...
-
Legally, this was an important victory.
-
Morally, you're on your own.
-
Claus von Bülow was given a second trial
-
and acquitted on both counts.
-
This is all you can know...
-
All you can be told.
-
When you get where I am,
-
you will know the rest.
-
Two packs of vantage, please.
-
Anything else?
-
Yes, a vial of insulin.
-
Just kidding.