“Yes. Sounds like me.”
“When you said to Ms. Hill, ‘Either you pay up or there’re going to be traffic problems,’ what did you mean?”
“That was a saying. Like from Fort Lee, New Jersey.”
“I understand the reference. But what did you mean, ‘pay up’?”
“I don’t even know. I just said it. I was trying to get hold of her so I could get closure on what she did to me.”
Giftos said, “So once again I ask you, when you phoned Ms. Hill in the week following your overnight date and left this message, ‘You pay up or it’s time for some traffic problems in San Francisco,’ you were reinforcing your blackmail attempt on Ms. Hill, weren’t you? ‘You pay up or I’ll go public with the video’?”
Yuki said, “I object, Your Honor. There is no evidence of a blackmail threat.”
Rathburn said, “Overruled. It’s relevant and I want to hear this. Mr. Giftos, ask your question again.”
“Mr. Christopher, were you blackmailing Ms. Hill?”
“Not at all,” Marc said. “Far from it. All I wanted was to talk to her. I needed to talk to her. She did this to me. Raped me and left me lying there like roadkill. I needed an explanation. She needed to apologize. I needed something from her. And you bastard,” he said to Giftos. “You should be disbarred for even suggesting this crap.”
Judge Rathburn said, “Mr. Christopher, I’m warning you. Any more outbursts and I will find you in contempt. I will fine you, too. Jurors, you will disregard Mr. Christopher’s personal remarks to Mr. Giftos, and the clerk will strike those remarks from the record.”
Giftos said, “Thank you, Your Honor.”
To the witness he said, “I guess we’ll let the jury decide what you meant when you left a message for this wealthy young woman—whom you had recorded in a compromising act that you orchestrated—‘Pay up or else.’”
Yuki was on her feet. “Argumentative, Your Honor.”
“Sustained.”
Giftos said, “Your Honor, I have nothing more for this witness at this time, but I reserve the right to question him again.”
The judge asked Yuki, “Redirect, Ms. Castellano?”
“Yes, Your Honor.”
Yuki approached the witness and said, “Marc, please tell the jury what you have to gain by accusing the defendant of rape.”
Christopher wiped his eyes with the back of his hand and said, “I don’t want or need her money and never have. I’m here to get justice and peace of mind. She shouldn’t get away with what she did to me.”
“Thanks, Marc. I have no further questions.”
Rathburn told Marc Christopher that he could step down. With much bumping and limping, Yuki’s star witness left the courtroom.
When the doors had closed behind him, Yuki said to the court, “The People rest their case.”
Judge Rathburn said, “Okay. Mr. Giftos, you’re up with your opening statement.”
CHAPTER 78
JAMES GIFTOS HAD delayed making his opening statement until after the prosecution had concluded its case.
Yuki knew that it was risky to let the jury steep in the prosecution’s theory for four days. But James was smart, a trial-tested veteran with an impressive record of wins. He surely had a plan and it was about to be revealed.
In the next few minutes he would begin to present his defense, in which he would do everything possible to blow up the prosecution’s case and win the jury over to Briana Hill’s side.
She watched Giftos walk back to his table, return the notes and transcripts to a file folder, exchange looks with his client, and respond to a note from his second chair.
Yuki was glad that Art was here to witness what could well be a master class in how to deliver an opening statement.