The Chronicle

HAVE A LAUGH

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LAW AND ORDER

IF YOU ever testify in court, you might wish you could have been as sharp as this policeman.

He was being cross-examined by a defense attorney during a felony trial and the lawyer was trying to undermine the police officer’s credibilit­y.

Q: ‘Officer, did you see my client fleeing the scene?’

A: ‘No, sir. But I subsequent­ly observed a person matching the descriptio­n of the offender, running several blocks away.’

Q: ‘Officer, who provided this descriptio­n?’

A: ‘The officer who responded to the scene.’

Q: ‘A fellow officer provided the descriptio­n of this so-called offender. Do you trust your fellow officers?’

A: ‘Yes, sir. With my life.’ Q: ‘With your life? Let me ask you this then officer. Do you have a room where you change your clothes in preparatio­n for your daily duties?’

A: ‘Yes sir, we do!’

Q: ‘And do you have a locker in the room?’

A: ‘Yes, sir, I do.’

Q: ‘And do you have a lock on your locker?’

A: ‘Yes, sir.’

Q: ‘Now, why is it, officer, if you trust your fellow officers with your life, you find it necessary to lock your locker in a room you share with these same officers?’

A: ‘You see, sir, we share the building with the court complex, and sometimes lawyers have been known to walk through that room.’

The courtroom exploded with laughter, and a prompt recess was called.

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