Komisarjevsky: Thirteen Killers?


Here’s the closing argument I would like to see Jeremiah Donovan give on behalf of Joshua Komisarjevsky. Something tells me he won’t.

"Four years ago, a family in Cheshire was destroyed and all of us awoke to a living nightmare. I doubt there is a person in Connecticut who is not aware of the horror of it all. It has been reported on television, radio and the Internet. One trial took place last year. You have now had a front row seat to behold the horror anew.

"On and on and on this bloody spectacle goes. It will end, if the state has its way, only in more death. In this case, the death of Joshua Komisarjevsky.

"Why?

"Oh, yes, justice requires another killing. But first you must find Josh guilty of a capital felony. Then you can sit through more weeks of testimony and argument all intended by the state to get you in the frame of mind to deliver a verdict with lethal consequences.

 Reprinted courtesy of the Connecticut Law Tribune.

"The horror continues. More testimony, more public spectacle, more crying for death over spilled blood.

"Haven’t you had enough, ladies and gentlemen? Hasn’t the State of Connecticut had enough?

"Josh offered to plead guilty long ago, knowing full well that a consequence of his plea would be that he spend the rest of life behind bars. He is still willing to enter that plea. The state does not want you to know that, of course. It wants to march and strut and parade around the well of this court asking you to find what we’ve already offered.

"The state insists on killing Joshua Komisarjevsky. So we are here at trial, at great expense, great effort and at the cost of asking you to walk the killer’s walk yourself.

"We will, of course, lie to you and we will spare no effort to make sure you do not feel yourself to be a killer. No one will ask you to plunge the lethal needle into this man’s arm. That would asking too much. You needn’t even attend the grim ceremony your verdict requires.

"Indeed, we will not even ask you to tell us he must die. We will hide the consequences from you. We will ask you to weigh the bad against the good in his life. You will play the lethal parlor game of Gods and Goddesses, deciding whether the bad outweighs the good. The judge then imposes sentence.

"It is a sick and twisted system. The entire weight of the state and all it can do is brought to be bear on Joshua Komisarjevsky. He must held accountable for his crimes. He must pay. Yet no one in this courtroom takes responsibility for what goes on here.

"The prosecutors claim to be humble public servants, merely enforcing a law made by others.

"You are asked to judge the case without regard to the consequences of your acts.

"The judge takes your verdict and then does what the law requires him to do.

"Each and every hand dipped into this bloody mess is kept from making contact with the other. No one must take hold of the executioner’s needle. It is sick, I tell you. The state is asking you to kill. Period. Don’t be seduced by the lies you are told here. Do what the state asks of you in this case, and thirteen killers will walk out of these doors.

"These arguments are premature, you say? We are not yet at the penalty phase? Now you must decide only guilt. Don’t listen to the serpent’s hiss.  The state invites you to eat the same lethal fruit of a tree for which Josh is to die for tasting.

"Let’s end this festival now. Find my client guilty of all crimes but the capital felony. I concede his involvement. He had a chance to flee before the fatal acts occurred. He did not. He is guilty, ladies and gentlemen. He is guilty and so are we. We’ve nurtured the morbid fantasy of revenge long enough. Let’s close this sordid book once and for all.

"If you will but vote not guilty to the capital felony charges, we can close the book on the chapter of state history once and for all."

Comments: (5)

  • 13 Killers
    Well written argument about the cruel pattern the courts and society take on when we run a capital case. But what are the chances that a juror, despite everything you wrote, would still volunteer to be the executioner, too? In this case, I'd argue some are so shocked and horrified that they would become a killer to stop JK, even if he would be harmless locked up in jail for life.
    Posted on October 6, 2011 at 3:29 pm by Scott Silverstone
  • Unlucky 13
    SS: My question would be: What are your qualifications to make such a flippant comment? Have you ever faced a jury, chosen a jury, pleaded in front of a jury, picked a jury, served on a jury; or, studied the art, science and philosophies of same? If not, I would suggest that you defer and demur until such time as you have a few notches on your belt. Recommended reading: My op-ed piece: "Our Broken Jury System," 2007. It might be better if you stuck to real estate law and sales, your apparent specialties.
    Posted on October 7, 2011 at 4:22 pm by william doriss
  • Unlucky 13, II
    Good luck. In CT, I predict the chances: zero to none, cowards and hypocrits all.
    Posted on October 7, 2011 at 4:23 pm by william doriss
  • 1 Killer & 12 Righteous People
    I have served on a jury, and I would gladly pull the trigger/switch/lever to advance the cause of justice which Conscienceless Norm cries about (even while he counts his enormous fees from this case). Pattis will not escape the Ultimate Judgment, however, and he will discover how God views his perverse, cruel statements.
    Posted on October 12, 2011 at 9:19 am by Richard Bridwell
  • This Case
    R.B.: This case? Which case? I did not notice Norm sitting at the Defense table in Komisarjevsky, and I watch WTNH and read the RAGister regularly. Are you on drugs, or merely pre-Alzheimeric? (Rhymes with "conscienceless".) All's well that Bridswell, I suppose,... and then there''s Braswell, but we won't go there. Ultimate Judgment--at least you spelled it correctly--Can't wait to see the look on your face sitting at the Defense table, killer!
    Posted on October 13, 2011 at 10:24 am by william doriss

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