“How was this tip-off made?”
“By phone, sir. About thirty minutes before the plane landed.”
“Did the informant give you his name?”
“No, sir, but that’s not unusual because informants in cases of this kind are often drug dealers themselves. They may want a rival removed or punished for not having paid for a previous consignment.”
“Was the conversation with the informant recorded?”
“All such conversations are taped, Mr. Carman, in case they are needed as evidence in a trial at a later date.”
“Might I suggest, my lord,” said Carman, looking up at the bench, “that this would be an appropriate moment for the jury to hear the tape?”
The judge nodded, and the clerk of the court walked over to a table in the center of the room where a Grundig tape recorder had been set up. He looked toward the judge, who nodded once again, and pressed the Play button.
“Customs office, Heathrow,” said a female voice.
“Put me through to the senior customs officer.”
“May I ask who’s calling?”
“No, you may not.”
“I’ll see if he’s available.” The hum of the whirring tape continued for some time before another voice came on the line. “SCO Collier. How can I help you?”
“If you’re interested, I can tell you about some drugs that a passenger will be trying to smuggle in today.”
Sebastian noticed that Mr. Gray was making copious notes on his yellow pad.
“Yes, I’m interested,” said Collier. “But first, would you tell me your name?”
“The passenger’s name is Hakim Bishara. He’s well known in the trade and is traveling on flight 207 from Lagos. He has thirteen ounces of heroin in his overnight bag.” Click, burr.
“What did you do next, Mr. Collier?”
“I contacted a colleague in passport control and asked him to inform me the moment Mr. Bishara had been cleared.”
“And he did so?”
“Yes. When Mr. Bishara entered the green channel a few minutes later, I stopped him and inspected his overnight bag, the one piece of luggage in his possession.”
“And did you find anything unusual?”
“A cellophane package secreted in a side pocket of the bag containing thirteen ounces of heroin.”
“How did Mr. Bishara react when you found this package?”
“He looked surprised and claimed he had never seen it before.”
“Is that unusual, Mr. Collier?”
“I’ve never known a dealer admit to smuggling drugs. They always look surprised and behave impeccably. It’s their only defense should the case come to court.”
“What did you do then?”
“I arrested Mr. Bishara, cautioned him in the presence of a colleague and conducted him to an interview room, where I handed him over to an officer from the Drugs Squad.”
“Now, before my learned friend Mr. Gray leaps up to tell us all that a doctor has examined Mr. Bishara and found that there is no indication he has ever taken drugs in his life, can I ask you, with your twenty-seven years of experience as a customs officer, Mr. Collier, would it be unusual for a drug dealer not to be a drug user?”
“It’s almost unknown for a dealer to take drugs himself. They are businessmen who run large and complex empires, often using apparently legitimate businesses as a front for their criminal activities.”
“Not unlike a banker?”
Mr. Gray did leap up.
“Yes, Mr. Gray,” said the judge. “Mr. Carman, that was uncalled for.” Turning to the jury, Mr. Justice Urquhart added, “That last comment will be struck from the record, and you should dismiss it from your minds.”
Sebastian had no doubt that it would be struck from the record, but he was equally certain it would not be dismissed from the jurors’ minds.
“I apologize, my lord,” said Mr. Carman, who couldn’t have looked less apologetic. “Mr. Collier, how many drug smugglers have you arrested in the past twenty-seven years?”
“One hundred and fifty-nine.”
“And how many of those one hundred and fifty-nine were eventually convicted?”
“One hundred and fifty-five.”
“And of the four who were found innocent, how many were later—”
“Mr. Carman, where is this leading?”
“I am just trying to establish, my lord, that Mr. Collier doesn’t make mistakes. It was simply—”
“Stop there, Mr. Carman. Mr. Collier, you will not answer that question.”
Sebastian realized that the jury would know only too well what Mr. Carman was trying to establish.
“No more questions, my lord.”
* * *
When the court reconvened at two o’clock that afternoon, the judge invited Mr. Gray to begin his cross-examination. If he was surprised by the defense counsel’s opening remarks, he didn’t show it.
“Mr. Collier, I don’t have to remind a man of your professional standing that you are still under oath.”
The customs officer bristled. “No, you don’t, Mr. Gray.” The judge raised an eyebrow.
“I’d like to return to the tape recording, Mr. Collier.” The witness nodded brusquely. “Did you find your conversation with the anonymous informant somewhat unusual?”
“I’m not sure I understand the question,” said Collier, sounding defensive.
“Were you not surprised that he sounded like a well-educated man?”
“What makes you say that, Mr. Gray?”
“When replying to the switchboard operator’s question, ‘May I ask who’s calling,’ he said, ‘No, you may not.’” The judge smiled. “And didn’t you also find it interesting that the informant never once swore or used any bad language during the conversation?”
“Not many people swear at customs officers, Mr. Gray.”
“And did you get the feeling he was reading from a script?”
“That’s not uncommon. The pros know that if they stay on the line for more than three minutes we have a good chance of tracing the call, so they don’t waste words.”
“Words like, ‘No, you may not?’ And didn’t you find the caller’s expression ‘well known in the trade’ rather strange, given the circumstances?”
“I’m not sure I’m following you, Mr. Gray.”
“Then allow me to assist you, Mr. Collier. You have been a customs officer for the past twenty-seven years, as my learned friend kept reminding us. So I must ask you, under oath, with your extensive knowledge of the drugs world, have you ever come across the name of Hakim Bishara before?”
Collier hesitated for a moment, before he said, “No, I have not.”
“He wasn’t among the one hundred and fifty-nine drug smugglers you’ve arrested in the past?”
“No, sir.”
“And didn’t you find it a little strange, Mr. Collier, that the thirteen ounces of heroin were in a side pocket of his overnight bag and no attempt had been made to conceal them?”
“Mr. Bishara is clearly a confident man,” said Collier, sounding a little flustered.
“But not a stupid one. Even more inexplicable, to my mind, is the fact that the man who gave you the tip-off, the well-educated man, said, and I quote”—Gray paused to glance down at his yellow notepad—“‘He has thirteen ounces of heroin in his overnight bag.’ And thirteen ounces he had. Not fourteen. Not twelve. And, as promised, in his overnight bag.”
“Clearly the informant’s contact in Nigeria told him the exact amount of heroin he’d sold to Mr. Bishara.”
“Or the exact amount he’d arranged to have planted in Mr. Bishara’s bag?”
Collier gripped the sides of the witness box, but remained silent.
“Let me return to Mr. Bishara’s reaction when he first saw the package of heroin and remind you once again, Mr. Collier, of your exact words: ‘He looked surprised, and claimed he had never seen it before.’”
“That is correct.”
“He didn’t raise his voice, lose his temper or protest?”
“No, he did not.”
“Mr. Bishara remained calm and dignified throughout this extremely unpleasant ordeal.”
“No more than I would expect from a professional drug dealer,” said Collier.
“And no more than I would expect from a totally innocent man,” retorted Mr. Gray. Collier didn’t comment. “Allow me to end on a point that my learned friend was so keen the jury should know about, and indeed so am I. You told the court that during your twenty-seven years as a customs officer, you have arrested a hundred and fifty-nine people on drugs-related charges.”
“That is correct.”
“And during that time, have you ever made a mistake and arrested an innocent person?” Collier pursed his lips. “Yes or no, Mr. Collier?”
“Yes, but on only one occasion.”
“And—correct me if I’m wrong—” said Gray as he opened a separate file, “the man in question was arrested for being in possession of cocaine.”
“Yes.”
“And was he convicted?”
“Yes,” said Collier.
“What was his sentence?”
“Eight years,” said Collier, his voice barely above a whisper.
“Did this evil merchant of death serve out his full sentence?”
“No, he was released after four years.”
“For good behavior?”
“No,” said Collier. “In an unrelated trial some years later, a convicted drug dealer admitted he’d planted the cocaine on him during a flight from Turkey.” It was some time before Collier added, “The case still haunts me.”
“I hope, Mr. Collier, that this case won’t also come back to haunt you. No further questions, my lord.”
Sebastian turned to see that one or two members of the jury were whispering among themselves, while others were making notes.
“Mr. Carman,” said the judge, “do you wish to reexamine this witness?”
“I have only one question, my lord. Mr. Collier, how old were you when you made that unfortunate mistake?”
“I was thirty-two. It was almost twenty years ago.”
“So you’ve only made one misjudgment in one hundred and fifty-nine cases? Considerably less than one percent.”
“Yes, sir.”
“No more questions, my lord,” said Carman, resuming his seat.
“You may leave the witness box, Mr. Collier,” said the judge.
Sebastian watched the senior customs officer as he made his way out of court. He turned to glance at Hakim, who managed a thin smile. Seb then looked at the jury, who were talking among themselves, with the exception of one man who didn’t take his eyes off Mr. Collier.
“Are you ready to call your next witness, Mr. Carman?” asked the judge.
“I am indeed, my lord,” said the prosecution’s standard-bearer, as he rose slowly from his place. Mr. Carman tugged at the lapels on his long black gown and adjusted his wig before turning to face the jury. Once he was confident that every eye in the courtroom was on him, he said, “I call Mrs. Kristina Bergström.”
Chattering broke out in the court as an elegant, middle-aged woman entered the room. Mr. Gray swung around to see that his client had been taken by surprise, although he clearly recognized her immediately. He turned back to look more closely at the woman everyone had been searching for, for the past five months. He grabbed a new yellow pad, unscrewed the top of his pen and waited to hear her evidence.
Mrs. Bergström took the Bible in her right hand and read from the card with such confidence you would not have known English was her second language.
Mr. Carman didn’t attempt to remove the Cheshire cat grin from his face until he’d asked the witness his first question.
“Mrs. Bergström, would you be kind enough to state your name for the record.”
“Kristina Carla Bergström.”
“And your nationality?”
“Danish.”
“And your occupation?”
“I am a landscape architect.”
“Mrs. Bergström, so as not to waste everyone’s time, yours included, do you recognize the prisoner standing in the dock?”
She looked straight at Hakim and said, “Yes, I do. We were seated next to each other on a flight from Lagos to London some four or five months ago.”
“And you are certain that the man you sat next to is the man in the dock?”
“He’s a handsome man, Mr. Carman, and I remember being surprised that he wasn’t wearing a wedding ring.”
One or two smiles greeted this statement.
“During the flight, did you strike up a conversation with the defendant?”
“I thought about it, but he looked exhausted. In fact, he fell asleep within moments of the plane taking off, which I envied.”
“Why did you envy him?”
“I’ve never acquired the knack of being able to sleep on a plane, and have to pass the time watching a film or reading a book.”
“Which was it on this occasion?”
“I’d read half of Watership Down on the flight to Lagos, and I intended to finish it on the way back to London.”
“And did you?”
“Yes, I turned the last page a few moments before the captain told us we were about to begin our descent into Heathrow.”
“So you were awake for the entire journey?”
“Yes.”
“Did you at any time see another passenger, or a member of the crew, open the luggage compartment above you and place something in Mr. Bishara’s bag?”
“No one opened it during the entire flight.”
“How can you be so sure of that, Mrs. Bergström?”
“Because I’d closed a major deal when I was in Lagos, to landscape the oil minister’s garden.” Hakim wanted to laugh. So that’s why he’d been kept waiting for five hours. “And to celebrate I bought a Ferragamo handbag in duty-free. I’d placed it in the same overhead locker. If anyone had opened it I think I would have noticed.”
Mr. Carman smiled at the women on the jury, one of whom was nodding.
“Was there any time during the flight when you were not sitting next to Mr. Bishara?”
“After the captain announced that we were about half an hour from Heathrow, I went to the washroom to freshen up.”
“And Mr. Bishara was in his seat at the time?”
“Yes, he’d just been served with breakfast.”
“So while you were gone he would have been able to check and see if anyone had opened the hold above him and interfered with his bag.”
“I would presume so, but only he can answer that.”
“Thank you, Mrs. Bergström. Please remain in the witness box, as I’m sure my learned friend will want to question you.”
When he rose, Mr. Gray certainly didn’t look as if he wanted to question anyone. “My lord, I wonder if I might request a short break, as I need some time to consult with my client.”
“Of course, Mr. Gray,” said Mr. Justice Urquhart. He then leaned forward, placed his elbows on the bench and turned to the jury. “I think this would be a convenient time for us to break for the day. Would you please all be back in your places by ten o’clock tomorrow morning when Mr. Gray can cross-examine this witness, if he so wishes.”
* * *
“Let me first ask you, Hakim,” said Gray once they were settled in the privacy of one of the court’s consultation rooms, “is that the woman you sat next to on the flight from Lagos?”
“It certainly is. She’s not someone you’d easily forget.”
“Then how did Carman get to her before we did?”
“He didn’t,” said Arnold Hardcastle. “Carman was only too happy to tell me that she’d read about the case in the press and immediately contacted her company lawyer.”
“Read about the case?” said Gray in disbelief. “In the Copenhagen Gazette, no doubt.”
“No, the Financial Times.”
“We�
�d have been a lot better off if she hadn’t,” muttered Gray.
“Why?” asked Hakim.
“Without her evidence I might have been able to sow some doubt in the jury’s minds about the role she played in this whole affair, but now…”
“So you’re not going to cross-examine her?” asked Arnold.
“Certainly not. That would only remind the jury what a convincing witness she is. No, everything now rests on how Hakim comes over.”
“He’ll come over as what he is,” said Sebastian. “A decent, honest man. The jury won’t be able to miss that.”
“I wish it were that simple,” said Mr. Gray. “No one can ever be sure how a witness, especially one who’s under so much pressure, will perform once they step into the box.”
“Perform?” repeated Ross.
“I’m afraid so,” said Mr. Gray. “Tomorrow will be pure theatre.”
34
AS 10 A.M. STRUCK, Mr. Justice Urquhart entered the court. Everyone rose, bowed and, after the judge had returned their salutation, waited for him to be seated in his high-backed red leather chair at the center of the dais.
“Good morning,” he said, smiling down at the jury. He then turned his attention to defense counsel. “Mr. Gray, do you wish to cross-examine Mrs. Bergström?”
“No, my lord.”
Carman stared at the jury, a feigned look of surprise on his face.
“As you wish. Mr. Carman, will the prosecution be calling any further witnesses?”
“No, my lord.”
“Very well. In that case, Mr. Gray, you may call your first witness.”
“I call Mr. Hakim Bishara.”
Everyone’s eyes followed the defendant as he stepped out of the dock and made his way to the witness box. He was wearing a navy-blue suit, a white shirt and a Yale tie, just as Mr. Gray had recommended. He certainly didn’t look like a man who had anything to hide. In fact, Sebastian was impressed by how fit he looked. He might have just flown in from a holiday in Lyford Cay, rather than having spent the past five months in prison. But then, as Hakim had explained to Seb on one of his many visits to HMP Wandsworth, he spent an hour in the gym every morning, then walked around the exercise yard for another hour in the afternoon. Besides which, he was no longer eating business lunches, and the prison didn’t have a wine cellar.
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