Trapped With Ms. Arias
I'm most interested in Lawrence"s motivation to write his book because I'm always interested in motivations that people have in what they do, in general- both good and bad parts) I'm also interested in why Mr. Barwood would change his mind on the "innocence" of the murderer as he was a staunch supporter of her (and that alone makes me glad that L wrote the book- gives me great satisfaction that a supporter has changed their mind).
I'm reading the book as I would read one of my college text books and pulling out parts I think are relevant to find the answers to my questions (they might not be what others are looking for tho') at least in the beginning- I don't know all that he will write about later on in the book, so I may change tactics down the road. He may just write about things that we all know about and there might not be any "bombshell tonight" thingys)
and there might be a test at the end- so good notes :facepalm:
(so I'm a college student again-I'm excited for this type of "research" - :floorlaugh
ETA: I know others are posting about L's book, but I haven't read them. I'm pulling out the things that I think are important to why he wrote his book and anything that I/we might not know about the case.
I don't want to rehash things, over and over- makes me crazy :scared: , but I will post whatever he writes about and will not leave anything out.
I'm not going to post whole chunks of his book.
I'm not reading his book to ridicule Lawrence ( that's not why I'm posting about his book either) or for other's to ridicule his life or what he wrote, but trying to interpret what happened at the trial in Lawrence's mind is one of the things I'm interested in (and his take on the murderer).
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Introduction
L had a daily calendar with teachings and philosophy's of Deepak Chopra
Kept one page of the calendar with this thought:
"The best thing that could happen to you is happening right now"
Kept it because
"things happen for a reason and somewhere down the road you will discover the meaning"
"writing this book served as an exercise that I hope will get me to the answer of why"- ( why being the murderer's attorney) was
"the best thing for me"
writing book is not about making money- it's
"more about satisfying my own curiosities, it is also about aiding others"
will hope some readers
" might learn something from the truth of what occurred between Ms Arias and Mr Alexander....there are lessons to be learned.. about the unhealthy relationship.. in hopes that they will get out of the relationship before they harm themselves or others.. I think I will anger many readers"
He calls the murderer's supporters
"misguided"
doesn't understand why there are "sides" in the case- it's a tragedy that could have been prevented and will discuss how he thinks it could have been prevented
another reason for writing book
"besides using it as a therapeutic tool, is redemption"
- took a lot of flak from supporters of both Travis ( "asserting" the murderer's defense) and the murderer's supporters (
"not doing enough to show how she was truly innocent [their words not mine]")
- took flak from the media- saying he was a
"poor lawyer"
knew exactly what he was doing in trial/case
will discuss: his background, what life and career was before the murderer became his client, how he was assigned to case- up to opening statements on 1/2/2013.
He stated:
"Describing these things may not redeem me in the eyes of some, but that"s okay with me, my true redemption comes from being judged on the truth of who I am and the course I took."
L talks about the
"truth"
- according to L- this book will not be his
"version of the truth"
-
"when I speak of the truth it will be in objective verifiable realities"
- states that
"facts are stubborn things"
-
"when you put what you mean to believe up against what is actually true, what you want to believe may not be true"
his reasoning for title of book and picture of the handcuffs on cover: he felt trapped into representing the murderer when he couldn't get away from her (
"trapped on the case" and
"trapped with her")
calling her Ms Arias in the title:
"trying to be professional" and
"she screamed at me for calling her by her formal name", screaming
"she would ruin my career if I didn't follow her commands"
he never called Travis, Mr Alexander
"as an expression of disdain, but instead out of respect"
the handcuffs: are
"golden" in color because
"golden handcuffs" mean-
"relates to a situation you do not wish to be in but the money is good"
didn't think the money was worth it
"representing Ms Arias...heck it may even prevent me from ever having a real practice"
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My thoughts:
So what is the meaning of the word:
redemption-
noun
1. an act of redeeming or atoning for a fault or mistake, or the state of being redeemed.
2. deliverance; rescue.
4. atonement for guilt.
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/redemption
A search for redemption is, IMO, to find some resolution of the pain that you have caused others.
Redemption? ( but I think the truth of what one says lies in what one does....guess I will see).
And, to me, being sorry is a sacrament- it's an offering and a gift to others for the wrongs that have been done to them, but I don't think L is sorry.
Looks like L's redemption is #2 (of being "rescued")
He hopes he could redeem himself by making a difference with this book. Lawrence doesn't mean he wants redemption for any pain he has caused, but instead he means that he will be redeemed by what other's have thought wrong about him (because in his eyes, he has done no wrong).
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Chapter 1
Who is Nurmi?
born in the South
father was in the Navy
moved to Seattle when he was young- all lived with grandparents
parents went to work and school, so grandparents really raised him and
"became my parents in a sense"
L's grandfather came to America from Finland, served in WW 11, married a single- mother
"when single motherhood was supposedly something to be ashamed of"
spent time fishing, washing car, watching sports with grandfather
spent time
"hanging out in the basements of my friend's house and driving huge station wagons" in the '70s
"fondest memories" of his grandmother was watching
"Gilligan's Island reruns while she ironed shirts"
loved playing soccer, watching sports, loved dogs and all animals
rescued a bunny from the school science lab snake and brought the bunny home- grandfather made a cage for it at home
loved school- favorite subject math
became a lawyer, in part, because he read a book about lawyers in grade school and because of an incident where a security guard falsely accused L and his friends of stealing candy (they had a receipt)
"without any evidence to support their claim"
in high school worked in grocery store bagging groceries
graduated HS year early at 17- planned to become police officer
enrolled in community college- criminal justice courses- kept job at grocery store- sporadically attended the college
became union member grocery store manager - returned to college full-time while working all-night shift as store manager
graduated with BA in Criminal Justice- applied to several Law schools- didn't get in to any- devastated
had kept job as grocery store manager- realized that job was
"like trying to fit a square peg into a round hole" and not for him
quit job and enrolled in Grad school to
"boost my academic resume....have a better chance of getting into law school"
seeking Ma in History at Central Washington University in Ellensburg- decided not for him and decided on another BA (this time in Psychology)
met his wife in college- married to her since 1993
eventually received his Master's degree of Art in Criminal Justice from Wa State Univ ("
go Cougs" he says- LOL)
after Master's had job as a counselor at a residential group home for delinquent youth (house got shut down- not up to code)
returned to retail job
applied to Law school again- accepted at Gonzaga School of Law and Univ of Wyoming- chose Wyoming because wife would be able to complete her degree in education
while attending, worked as the "student director" of the Defender Aid Clinic (students wrote appeals for those convicted of crimes in Wyoming)
graduated- job as law clerk at Maricopa Co Public Defender's office- received license
writes about his first trials
joined Maricopa Co Office of the Public Defender's Capital Unit as DP attorney
in July, 2009, he was 40, married for 15 years, played tennis, struggled with his weight, had 4 lb chihuahua (LOL), grandfather died, grandmother had Parkinson's disease and was dying
"So,having said all of this, whether you like it or not, I have gained a little of the redemption I spoke of in the introduction. Because after reading this chapter whether you love me or hate me at least you are basing your feelings on who I am not who you think I might be simply because in August of 2009, I was assigned by the Public Defender's Office to work as lead counsel to CR 2008-031021-001."
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My thoughts:
Sounds as if he had a good childhood, IMO, even tho' his parents were very busy- he had his beloved grandparents.
I don't see how his background has "redeemed" him in any way. I always thought he was a "real" lawyer and doesn't have anything to do with how he conducted himself at the trial for the murderer, but I can understand this as, I guess he is very defensive because many people/media ridiculed him as a defense lawyer for the murderer. We shall see......
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Next chapters:
Chaper 2: The Ultimate Job of a Capital Defense Attorney
Chapter 3: The Defense Team
Chapter 4: Here is to Wishing That I Never Got the File
End of Section 1 (to page 32)
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