As
we have said here and in Cross-ExaminationHandbook, the primary goal of cross-examination is to capture the truth
from the witness. On cross, you shouldn’t be trying to discover anything; you
shouldn’t ask any interrogatory questions. You know the truths that the witness
has to offer and you aim to extract those known truths. If the witness fails to
provide the truths that you can prove by direct or circumstantial evidence or
by common sense, the witness will suffer the consequences.
The Pizza Connection case provides a stark example of how a witness’s testimony can be exposed as comical if the witness refuses to provide the truthful answers. The Pizza Connection case was a mega-trial involving 18 defendants who were charged with a $1.6 billion heroin smuggling and money laundering that stretched from Brazil to small pizzerias in the the Midwest. Trial lasted from October 24, 1985 to March 2, 1987.
The following is an excerpt from Shanna Alexander’s book The Pizza
Connection: Lawyers, Money, Drugs, Mafia 318-320 (Weidenfeld &
Nicholson) (1988) in which she describes United States Attorney Robert
Stewart’s cross-examination of an alibi witness and it’s a gem of a cross:
(Defense counsel) Larry Bronson’s defense of (defendant) Sal Greco is
focused on his client’s need to prove that he was not in a Bagheria farmhouse
in early March 1980 watching a heroin quality-control test. Bronson will show
he [Greco] was quietly, busily at home in New Jersey. He calls Greco’s good
friend and tax accountant, Justin Pisano, a man who keeps detailed date books.
Under patient examination by Bronson, the witness goes through a precise
account of driving to the Jersey Shore three Sundays in March to go over
Greco’s accounts and to visit nearby pizzerias with his client in order to
compare their business with that of the Greco pizzeria in Neptune City.
Stewart’s cross-examination of Pisano becomes this prosecutor’s finest
hour. He concentrates on the March date-book entries.
“On March 2, yes, I drove down to see Greco,” Pisano says, “and we had a
leisurely dinner.”
“You told us yesterday you were in no rush, right?”
“Yes.”
“And that’s
the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth?”
“Yes.”
“Then what is this appointment for 7:00 p.m., with
Troviatta?”
“Just a tax appointment. Early March is income tax time, and I made
many Sunday and night appointments to service all my tax clients.”
“What is
Troviatta’s first name? Where does he live?”
“I don’t remember. I don’t even
think I do their taxes anymore.”
Stewart remembers. He says Pisano was
thirty-five miles away from Greco’s pizzeria
that night, in the heart of Manhattan, at Lincoln Center, at the
opera.
Pisano emphatically denies this. He has only been to Lincoln Center once
in his life, to hear Pavarotti.
“Are you an opera fan?”
“Nope. Only been to one
opera in my life, when I was in high school.”
Stewart shows the witness, and
the jury, the Sunday-evening newspaper opera
listing for March 2, 1980, at the New York State Theater at Lincoln
Center: La Traviata. Bronson objects. “Misleading the witness, your Honor.
His witness’s tax client is named Troviatta—with two t’s.”
“And the
advertisement for the opera is spelled T-R-A-V-I-A-T-A,
right?”Stewart asks. “No. It’s La Traviata,” says Pisano gamely.
“La
Traviata?”
“Right. I don’t see the comparison to Troviatta.”
“Except for the
time. That’s a coincidence. Isn’t it?”
Pisano agrees, and Stewart
directs him to look at the entry for two Sundays ahead,
March 16, at one in the afternoon.
“Are you referring to Carmen? Carmen
Sangari, who I no longer do?”
“Carmen Sangari?” Stewart produces the New
York Times, and asks him to read aloud the opera listing for that Sunday
afternoon. Pisano looks, and agrees that this is truly an amazing coincidence.
Spectators have begun to giggle. But Stewart is not finished. He directs the
wit- ness’s attention to his diary entry for the following Sunday at 7:00 p.m.
“Is that a tax client of yours?”
The giggling turns to guffaws. The notebook says, “Barber of Seville.”
This cross illustrates that no matter which way the witness responds, the
cross-examiner wins when the question require that the witness concede the
truth or suffer the consequences.
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