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Chapter 73 Section 22

America's Top 8 Cases 胡佳 1260Words 2018-03-22
Steven Vermiliti: You mean... RICHARD STOCK: Yes, I mean, someone injected insulin into Mrs. von Pro. The defendant cross-examined. Gerald Fallinger: Since you suspect that Madame von Prow was murdered, why didn't you do anything to stop or prevent it before she fell into a coma for the second time? Richard Stork: This is a very sensitive subject, sir.Before you "do anything", you must first make sure that your judgment is correct...Unless I am absolutely sure, I cannot casually say to one of my patients, "Your spouse may harm you".I can have doubts, but not necessarily actions.We are a country of laws, sir.No one can be charged without solid evidence.

Gerald Fallinger: You're not a die-hard man, are you?The reason you didn't take any action is because your so-called "doubt" at the time was not as certain as you say it is now. Richard Stork: You don't have to believe what I say, but I have to tell you, and I've got to tell everyone here.Now, whenever I walk into Mrs. von Prowe's ward and see her lying motionless on the bed, I can't help but blame myself: "Why didn't you tell her? Why didn't you tell her?" Writing this paragraph, William Wright added a few lines of footnotes in his book "The von Prow Affair": "One day during the court break, Clos von Prow said to me that if I really wanted to expand my In this area of ​​knowledge, it is best to read the 'Elizabeth Cirdan case', about the case of a woman in Edinburgh, England, who killed her lover with arsenic poison... I saw a copy of "Insulin Injection Murder", which is the murder of Baru in 1957. I read the whole case in one go, and felt that it was similar to the von Prow case that was being tried. How similar! I think I should have let the prosecution know...I found Steven Vermiliti, who, unexpectedly, knew more than I did...I went back to Thomas Simpson's 1976 best-selling novel, Blood and Money, in which A doctor, speculating on the perpetrator's modus operandi, said: 'Maybe an insulin overdose. It's a natural product, and there's no trace of it.' Steven immediately said, 'I know, page 135.'”

In the eyes of the public prosecutor, it is self-evident that Closs von Prose's motive for seeking wealth is self-evident, so when Sunny's property manager, Morse Goley, vice president of Manhattan Chemical Bank, appeared in court, Steven Farr Militi just wanted to take this opportunity to clear up the rumor that was going around at the time that all these suspicions, accusations, trials, etc. Erase the stepfather's name in the will, thus depriving Cross of inheritance rights. Morse said that the total property under Sunny's name is 75 million US dollars. In the will of Sunny that Close participated in making, this property is actually divided into five parts.If Sunny dies, Cross and the three children will each get $15 million, with another $15 million left to a charitable foundation.According to the stipulations in the will, if Kloss is removed from the name for whatever reason, the three children, including the von Osberg siblings, will not be able to immediately obtain Kloss’s share. That $15 million sum will be sealed in the bank for 21 years. Twenty-one years later, the money is divided again in three, and if the children have another child, Alexander, Anne Loreen and Cosima's $5 million each will be directly inherited by Sunny's grandchildren, only if there is no child. They will only get the $5 million if they don't.

"So, you see," Steven spread his hands to the jurors, "There is absolutely no need for Alexander and Anne Rowling to go to great lengths to frame Mr. von Prow for the $5 million they may never get." Net txt novel upload and share
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