1:00:02
	No, but it seems logical to me
he had put it in his pants pocket...
1:00:06
	It's logical.
1:00:09
	Ah yes, logical but it's too bad.
1:00:12
	That letter would have proven
Mrs. Wormser innocent.
1:00:15
	How would you know?
1:00:17
	Very simple, Mrs. Wormser told me
what she had written the letter.
1:00:21
	She is ready to repeat it.
1:00:23
	Very simply, she was imploring
Joseph Marlo to return immediately.
1:00:27
	A man who pretended
to be his friend could not have betray him.
1:00:32
	Good God, of course she suspected.
The Police saw to that.
1:00:36
	That is why she checked
her husband's financial status.
1:00:40
	Counselor, Mrs. Wormser is capable
of telling me all this herself.
1:00:44
	Yes of course, I understand, but...
1:00:47
	...she wrote him, begging he clears himself.
1:00:50
	She was convinced of his guilt
but still wrote him.
1:00:53
	Please Madam, tell us.
1:00:56
	That's it exactly, your Honor.
1:01:01
	Inspector Villon went to
Mr. Marlo's residence...
1:01:05
	...and found this by the couch...
1:01:07
	...and he found the second earring
in a dresser drawer.
1:01:12
	Please, madam.
1:01:15
	...please repeat exactly
what you told me for his honor.
1:01:22
	Yes, I don't quite know
why but in my sort of panic...
1:01:25
	...I told the Inspector
I had never been to Mr. Marlo's.
1:01:28
	I did go there with my husband one time.
1:01:31
	He wasn't home, I waited a few moments...
1:01:34
	I think that's when
I must have lost the earring.
1:01:38
	So, I add, if the police intend to use
this earring as proof of complicity...
1:01:43
	...I warn you that
I am quite capable of proving...
1:01:47
	...the police attempted a set up...
1:01:51
	..."planting" the earring
due to insufficient evidence!
1:01:55
	I won't do it, of course, but...
1:01:58
	...but I could if forced.