1:10:04
	I've never done this.
1:10:06
	In 45 years of practising,
1:10:08
	I've never
waited in a corridor for a jury.
1:10:11
	- I always do.
- I can tell.
1:10:14
	You're good at it.
1:10:17
	You seem so at peace doing it.
1:10:24
	What do you think?
ls it good they're out this long?
1:10:28
	- For who?
- For me, of course.
1:10:33
	You can never tell.
It could mean anything.
1:10:36
	It could mean jury duty's more fun
than working at the post office.
1:10:42
	- It's bad for both of you.
- You think?
1:10:48
	Well, here's my take.
1:10:51
	Guilty.
1:10:54
	Not guilty.
That's what they're going to say.
1:10:58
	Nothing to do with dates
or ground-water measurements
1:11:02
	or any of that crap,
which nobody understands anyway.
1:11:06
	It's going to come down to people,
like always.
1:11:10
	You found someone
who saw him dumping stuff.
1:11:13
	You didn't find anyone who saw me.
1:11:20
	- What's your take?
- They'll see the truth.
1:11:23
	The truth?
1:11:26
	We're talking about a court of law.
1:11:29
	You've been around
long enough to know
1:11:32
	courtrooms aren't
where you look for the truth.
1:11:35
	You're lucky to find anything
that even resembles the truth.
1:11:42
	You disagree. Well, since when?
1:11:47
	Eight kids are dead, Jerry.
1:11:51
	Jan, that suit fits you better
than the sentimentality.
1:11:56
	That's not how you
made all that money, is it?
1:11:59
	It wasn't about dead children from
the minute you filed the complaint.