“Yes.” Rothenberg came forward now, frowning as he leafed through the file. “My client was arrested in the current case three days ago because his specimen went into the Registry’s database from a plea three years ago.”
“Rape also?”
“No. Indecent assault.”
“Which sounds an awful lot like rape bargained down to a lesser charge. And maybe a pattern of conduct on your client’s part.”
Rothenberg closed the file. “He didn’t wear a mask three years ago.”
“So he’s learning from his past mistakes. And he necessarily would have known the Hamilton girl could recognize him.”
Rothenberg sighed, then slumped back into his chair again. “You know what drives me nuts, John?”
“Private investigators?”
“Innocent clients. The guilty ones, I make the system work for them the best I can, but I can also sleep nights, knowing that something I didn’t think of never got the wrong guy put in jail. On this baby, though...”
“Steve, they’ve got a DNA match, so unless this Tinch has a twin brother—”
“Just an older one, I think—”
“—I don’t see there’s much I can do for you.”
Rothenberg pursed his lips, then gave a judicious nod. “Tell you what, John. On my dime, go see Devonne Tinch, give me your take on him.”
“Steve...”
“Please.” Rothenberg waved his hand over the file as though administering a blessing. “The paperwork reads right for him as the guy, but the kid’s attitude just doesn’t
I dropped my head, then looked back up. “Is Tinch in Middlesex, then?”
The so-called “new” Middlesex County Courthouse and Jail had been open for about thirty years now, and the building’s furnishings were starting to show it. I sat in a little conference room with glass walls across a scarred and scorched tabletop from a slim, intense young black male with a shaved head and a face like a camp hatchet. A corrections officer stood outside the room, watching for security reasons but not listening in on us.
Devonne Tinch stared through me as he spoke. “I did
I clasped my hands on the table. “Looks like we have to start with a vocabulary lesson, Devonne. Ms. Hamilton is either the ‘victim,’ or the ‘accuser,’ or just the ‘complaining witness.’ ”
“Now you sound like a cop.”
“I was. Military Police, but a long time ago.”
“Army, huh?” Tinch stood down a bit. “I was thinking about joining the army too. Get that scholarship program for college.”
“Let’s think about more current events, like your version of what happened.”
A flare from the eyes. “My
“Then where were you on the afternoon Ms. Hamilton claims she was attacked?”
“How should I know, man? That was two months ago, and my lawyer says even Lissy’s not dead sure which day it was.”
Lissy. “Can you remember back three years, then?”
Tinch blew out a breath smelling of “mystery meat,” a jailhouse staple.
“I was just a kid — fifteen years old. The bit — the
“The conviction still stands.”
“I wasn’t convicted. I plea-bargained it, on account I was a juvie, and they said that meant the record’d be sealed up. Only now it turns out they can unseal the DNA stuff.”
“You tell the good folks at the METCO program about your juvenile record?”
“You out of your mind? I’m a black student with decent grades in a crappy school, and I got the chance to attend an A-plus school in Calem that might get me on to college. What would you do?”
“I was never in the position.”
Tinch grunted out a derisive laugh and waved his hand behind him, toward the cells. “Yeah, well, this here’s my ‘position.’ And it’s gonna be, till you and Rothenberg figure out a way to prove I didn’t rape that girl.”
“Did you ever have consensual sex with her?”
“No, man. Never, not once.”
“Then how do you account for your DNA being on her clothes?”
A cruel, wise smile. “Same way Johnnie Cochran accounted for it in O. J.’s case. I was framed.”
“If that’s your best argument, Devonne...”
Tinch held his hands up shoulder high, as in a double stop sign. “Look, I
I was beginning to see what Steve Rothenberg meant by Tinch not “feeling” right for the crime. “Does Gloria have a last name?”
“Yeah. Carson.”
Time to change tacks. “Any chance your older brother could help us here?”
“Maurice?” A streak of what I took to be genuine sadness crossed Devonne Tinch’s features. “No, man. Maurice and me, we don’t get along so good.”