THE VERDICT -- Robert Gardner
When one has been a judge as long as I was -- more than 60 years --
the faces and names of those who appear before you blend into anonymity.
All except for Oswaldo Lopez.
Oswaldo was a thief, a happy-go-lucky, not particularly bright thief.
One chilly December night, he was walking past the Salvation Army
headquarters, and there, in the window, was a coat. So Oswaldo did what
seemed to him a very logical thing. He picked up a rock, broke the plate
glass window, put the coat on and continued walking down the street --
and into the arms of the entire Santa Ana Police Department.
If he wasn’t very smart about crime, he was positively ingenious when
it came to his defense. He appeared in my court and claimed that he could
not speak nor hear. So that his rights would not be violated, we hired a
sign language interpreter plus a Spanish language translator. The pace of
the trial was agonizing. The district attorney would ask a question. The
translator would put it into Spanish. The interpreter would sign. Oswaldo
would sign, the translator would translate . . . the county was going to
go bankrupt at this rate. And then we found out he wasn’t what he
claimed. He could speak, and he could hear.
What an embarrassment. And so I arrived at a truly Solomonic (and
face-saving) solution. The district attorney, the public defendant and I
each put in $10. We trooped down to the bus station where we bought a
one-way ticket to El Paso. My bailiff, Lee Bruso, advised the bus driver
not to let Oswaldo off the bus until it reached El Paso, and we waved
Oswaldo on his way.
I guess it worked. I never saw Oswaldo again. Whether the city of El
Paso had to foot the bill for an interpreter and translator, we’ll never
know.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge. His
column runs Tuesdays.
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