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- Oct 4, 2018
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One of my favorite books by TC. I agree this may be a reasonable existence for BK. Rigid in routine, no pressures to socialize or to try and fit in. Maybe BK is more his true self incarcerated than he has been in a long time.True, but surely her client and she, herself, think this is a better strategy than actually going to trial and getting the death penalty.
To me, it seems clear she's got nothing that's factual, much less evidentiary, to save her client. He did it, she can't get into matters adjacent to his guilt and probably has never spoken to him about it or what he says actually happened. She sees the evidence, she's using the only tactics available (lawyerly ones).
I too think it's akin to "sitting pretty" to him, since he's used to it by now, and like some other inmates (quite a few, IME), prefers being alone. Just as college students fight hard to get a solo dorm room - he's finally got it. And they're giving him his dietary needs and being decent to him.
In Truman Capote's In Cold Blood, when one of the murderers is finally in custody, he is treated so humanely by LE. The lead officer's wife ends up having to live with one of the murderers immediately adjacent to her home - and she treats him like family. IME, jail employees treat people humanely, within the rules of their incarceration. Politely. Responding reasonably to request. This may be a situation that's not so terrible for BK.
IMO.
JMO