White Sox

Since the Chicago Cubs didn't make it to the playoffs, I rooted for the Chicago White Sox during the world series against the Houston Astros. Well, the Sox just pulled it off, for the first time in 88 years. The insane play was made by Juan Uribe, who leapt into the crowd to catch a ball.

And the insane game of the series was last night's game that stretched to 5 hours, 41 minutes -- the longest in history.

Next year: CUBS!

Posted by Layla at 9:02 PM, October 26, 2005. Comments (0)

Execution looms

When the possible scenario arose a year ago, I decided that, yes, I would witness an execution if the date actually came. Well, the date is getting closer. Here's my second story about it this month, and this one's pretty long. I over-reported and found myself struggling to cut it down to size. But how do you quickly sum up a brutal murder and the 25-year impact it has had?

Anyway, here's the story. (If it's been archived and won't load without a password, try this version, which probably won't have the photos.)

Posted by Layla at 11:14 PM, October 24, 2005. Comments (0)

Famous impressions

Did you miss me? OK, so you probably didn't know I was out of town. I just spent several days at a conference of journalists, lawyers and judges involved in high-profile cases. I have a lot of things (i.e., e-mail and news and a recording of "Desperate Housewives") to catch up on, so here's a stream-of-consciousness excerpt of my impressions about a few of the attendees.

Linda Deutsch, naturally, was the coolest person there. Yes, I'm biased because she's my cousin and because she got me into the invitation-only conference. But I'm not so very biased, because when she introduced me to people as her cousin, word began to spread. Before long, people knew who I was just because they'd heard of the family connection between us. And then when she went on an eloquent tirade directed at Thomas Mesereau during a panel they were both on, it was fantastic.

Speaking of Mesereau, the guy who represented Michael Jackson was more down-to-earth than one might expect. Mark Geragos (Scott Peterson's defense attorney), however, was exactly what I'd expected, though he didn't stay long enough for me to see much more of him. Peterson's prosecutors, Rick Distaso (now a judge) and Birgit Fladager (who's running for District Attorney) were genuinely nice and friendly.

Actually, just about everyone was very nice and friendly, with a healthy sense of humor thrown in. The judge in Robert Blake's criminal case was a sweet lady, the guy who prosecuted the Washington D.C. sniper made me want to adopt him as another grandfather, and Gerald Schwartzbach (Robert Blake's attorney, who's called Gerry outside of the professional stuff) had some hilarious one-liners and poked fun at himself. I think the hilarity award, however, would have to go to Judge Hiller Zobel, whose bow ties and age belied the endless jokes that kept coming -- even while he retained every word spoken and had some very intelligent insights.

And that's just the tip of the iceberg. Linda wasn't the only well-known journalist there, and there were also a number of other people in high-up jobs dealing with high-profile cases I'm sure you've heard of (Jeffrey Dahmer, the Green River Killer, NBA star Jayson Williams, Zacarias Moussaoui).

Anyway, it was a good conference, and I came out of it feeling inspired. And I came away with more perspective.

Posted by Layla at 8:03 PM, October 11, 2005. Comments (0)