ABSTRACT
First time I talk to people
and tell them, the first
thing they say is, "Why
don't you move?" Well, if
I could, I would. And they
don't seem to under-
stand. . . . I still have
the feeling-I had it very,
very greatly then, but every
time I had to go out and
leave that apartment empty
it made me sick. They would
be standing there. It was
not just leaving the apart-
ment, but it was knowing
that one of them saw you
leaving it. They know my
movements. They know I come
home from work at six o'clock,
they know I leave at eight-
thirty in the morning, they
know I work Monday through
Friday. If we go out
Saturday or Sunday and they
see me going out, they know
that there is nobody else
in that apartment, they see
me go out, they see [my son]
I'm no attorney, I don't know anything about the law, but I've been watching a little more carefully since this happened, and I see no real justice. For the victims. I don't know. I think that everyone should have a fair trial, a good, honest, fair trial, and a chance to question that, to appeal it. After that I think that it's stupid to keep on with this appeal, appeal, appeal. What the hell are they doing? . . .