WINNER NATIONAL INDIE EXCELLENCE AWARD
Best Legal Thriller 2019
Best Legal Thriller 2019
Chapter 7
The funeral
services, particularly the burial, had been announced as
private and that sympathizers should remain at a discreet distance; and in a demonstration of exemplary respect, the
hundreds of supporters complied with the request.
Family and comrades,
especially those from the New Hope
Clinic, were designated to be at the gravesite. An uninvited guest, surprisingly, was also among them: John Garson, Police Chief of Bruntfield Township.
After the lowering of the coffin, and the slow deliberate departure of the mourners, Garson slipped away, in the opposite direction that everyone else would follow toward their cars and hired limos: crossing fields of gravestones until he reached the
coppices of oak trees, in order to escape the press.
Everyone else present merged into the group of activists
who assembled at the gate of the plot, all intent upon making known the measure of their sorrow to the public.
The crowd that participated was moderate
in numbers, but in no way insignificant—about seven hundred were reported
to have shown up. They marched,
waving their signs and
chanting slogans, from the central
commercial district to the Bruntfield Veterans Memorial
Park, where a makeshift stage had been set up for the guest speakers. The local TV stations from Newark and Trenton, including the network affiliates, were present covering the march.
The whole thing was fairly orderly, despite the loud chants of
“Justice for Jay” and the cardboard signs that said: WE DON’T WANT KILLER COPS, SHAME
ON
YOU, PROTECT NOT KILL, PUT
THE ANIMALS BEHIND BARS. Police presence was minimal and
subdued.
Once they arrived at the previously
setup podium in the
park, representatives of the various groups got their chance to
express their views with the condition
of keeping it short, and as
per Marshal Felson’s request, focused on the incident. The fact
that Jay Felson was approached
by police when he was not in the act of committing
any crime was stressed
on more than one occasion. The TV crews covered the speeches with utmost diligence, as this was one of the highlights
to be expected.
Finally, for the emotional
touch, the organizers called on the
young man’s father.
“We are here today to let the city authorities know that we will be following very closely the grand jury proceedings!” Marshal Felson shouted. “That we, as a community, will not just brush
this aside. I am grateful to all of you who have shown concern and have voiced their support for my son.” He gave up the mike and
walked off the stage amid cheers and applause.
A
rather frail-looking young man with glasses took control of the
audience to announce that Dr. Tessa Thorpe from the New Hope
Trauma Recovery Clinic was to be the next speaker.
Tessa had given much thought as to how she should dress for the
occasion. Her first instinct was her Karen Kane pants suit, but
dismissed that idea to wear her copper-brown print kaftan
in its stead.
Now, with its folds caught in the vigorous
September breeze,
giving the illusion
of a multitude
of miniature flags fluttering
around her, her thick locks of hair dancing around her head, she spoke to the crowd, slowly, deliberately taking her time.
“Hello, my fellow citizens.”
She stopped to survey the mass of people standing in front of her. Dramatic pauses replete with eye contact, if not overdone, were quite effective in getting one’s message across. Not surprisingly,
Tessa
knew how to get her message across, a special
art in the realm of behavioral
scientists. Public relations
firms, advertising companies, political
campaigns, all hired an army of psychologists to sell a product. And Tessa Thorpe, as someone who had thirty years’ experience
as a criminal psychiatrist, could sell as well as any of them. “We are here today for two reasons, two very important reasons that are essential to our well-being
in a modern society. Freedom is one, and justice is the other.”
Enthusiastic cheers.
“When the call for war came, we were told that our enemies hated our freedoms. We were told that the citizens
of Iraq had been
held hostage by a ruthless
dictator who denied his own people these freedoms.
Our invasion of that country was sold to us as Operation
Iraqi Freedom. And so we sent our young men and
women off to war, the most traumatic
experience a human being could ever go
through, with the
belief that they were fighting for liberty and freedom. And yet, one of those whom we had sent…had
come back to us only to have his own freedom denied. His single offence at the time he was approached
by law enforcement officers was that he was exercising his freedom to stand on a street
corner.”
This
elicited a roar from the crowd.
“This is not merely tragic,
it is an act of deplorable fraud, being denied the very thing he fought for!”
More heartfelt
cheering.
“When I was young, we were made to pledge allegiance, an oath
that
ended with the phrase, ‘with liberty and justice for
all.’ Well, Jay Felson was denied liberty…let us make sure he is NOT DENIED JUSTICE!”
An
ear-shattering reverberation
of concurrence.
Having descended
from the little platform with the crowd still shouting in endorsement,
Tessa
was
serially embraced by her coworkers: Casey, Ed, Penny…all with
praise about her wonderful speech, culminating in Marshal Felson’s hug, whispering into her ear, “Amazing.”
The next event on the program was to go together to the site
where Jay was killed at the bus depot in order to lay memorial flowers and gifts. The TV teams followed, instinctively knowing that this was indeed
another newsworthy item. In fact,
as a
human interest story, it tugged at the heart to see the gift
bearers laying their offers down. And what made it even more poignant was the huge bloodstain
that had yet to be cleaned off the pavement, a crimson smear that drew numerous zoomed-in shots by the camera crews.
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