1:10:08
I turn the witness over to the defense.
1:10:12
Miss Grant. According to
the fact of psychology...
1:10:15
...that under great emotional stress
the mind sees what it has expected to...
1:10:19
...whether the thing
is actually there or not...
1:10:22
...is it not possible that you
did not see Joseph Wilson...
1:10:26
...but only the image of him your
imagination had created in your head?
1:10:30
No, I saw him. I saw him
burning to death there!
1:10:33
You can see that picture now
too, can't you?
1:10:37
- I'll always see it.
- So perhaps after all...
1:10:40
...it was an hallucination of your tortured
mind that you saw there...
1:10:44
...just as you see it here.
1:10:46
What do you want me to say,
yes or no? I tell you I saw him.
1:10:50
Can you, from your
own personal knowledge...
1:10:54
...swear that Joseph Wilson is dead?
1:10:57
Why, no. That is, yes.
1:11:00
- I mean, one can assume.
- Excuse me...
1:11:03
...but that is exactly what must not
be assumed, but proved!
1:11:07
The state is asking the lives
of 22 people for one.
1:11:10
I don't care about the lives of 22 people!
1:11:13
They can't bring back
the life I cared about.
1:11:15
I only wish I hadn't fainted. I wish I could
have gone in there to him. With him.
1:11:21
That's all, Miss Grant.
1:11:30
I will remind the jury
that under the law...
1:11:33
...lives must not be taken on
assumptions but on facts!
1:11:38
Where is the corpse of Joseph Wilson?
1:11:40
The law is that the corpus
delicti must be established...
1:11:44
... at least by fragments
of the human body...
1:11:46
... or of articles known and proved
to have been worn by the deceased.
1:11:50
And in the absence of convincing proof
of the corpus delicti...
1:11:54
...I move this indictment
be wiped off the records...
1:11:57
...and the charges against
these defendants be dismissed.