:33:00
You know, your friend Louis...
:33:05
his supervisor back in the home office
is about to fold his napkin, right?
:33:10
- Sorry?
- Starkman, in New York.
:33:14
He's through.
:33:15
Looking at huge federal time.
Big, ugly, dark dungeon underground.
:33:19
No chance of parole, never ever. Time.
:33:27
Yep. I'm sorry to say.
:33:30
I hear he's a good guy, but, you know...
:33:33
In any event, here's my problem...
:33:35
and if you know any of this,
feel free, jump in, shut me up.
:33:39
This federal prosecutor out here...
:33:43
the one with Starkman's testicular matter
clutched in his fist...
:33:47
this very federal prosecutor's
little brother...
:33:50
Any of this sound familiar?
:33:53
To me? No.
:33:55
No. Well...
:33:57
This very federal prosecutor's little brother,
a bit dopey from what I gather...
:34:01
may have been absconded with...
:34:04
which, as you can imagine,
would be to the dismay of our prosecutor.
:34:11
I think...
:34:13
But I could be wrong about this because
it's almost too stupid for a mind to grasp.
:34:17
But I think maybe someone...
:34:20
in your professional community...
:34:23
might be participating
in these shenanigans...
:34:27
to, I don't know...
:34:29
help squeeze a little friendship...
:34:33
altruism, whatever,
out of this particular federal official.
:34:36
Maybe in the hopes that Starkman...
:34:39
will wake up one morning...
:34:47
And wake up one morning
to find all charges mysteriously dropped.
:34:52
The school of thought of my colleagues
is that this kid is already way out of town.
:34:55
I alone am of the opposite school.
I think he's still here. That's what I think.