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...members met to consider the Delamora case several months before the trial, which was held last July. The death committee struggled with this question: Did Delamora know he was firing at a cop? Getting a capital-murder conviction would require proving he did. Meyer, the trial-division director, explains the reservations in the room this way: "The defendant was at home with his wife and children, and it was dark, and they were in the bedroom watching TV, and there was this loud banging on the side of their mobile home. The defendant felt there was evidence that these were...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Guarding Death's Door | 7/14/2003 | See Source »

...though, most members sided with the cops. Other police officers at Delamora's trailer that night said they had clearly and repeatedly made their presence known. Barrera, the devout Catholic, voted against seeking death, as she usually does, but she was in the minority. Most people in the room went with their prosecutorial gut: "It's really difficult for prosecutors to be fully objective about cop killers," says assistant D.A. Case. "Some of us had doubts, and we knew Ronnie would have to make an effort at resolving them in that particular case... I don't know everything that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Guarding Death's Door | 7/14/2003 | See Source »

...these are still supporting roles in a genre where actresses come and go while the male stars go on forever. This month, Schwarzenegger will celebrate his 56th birthday, and Harrison Ford, who starred in this summer's flop cop comedy Hollywood Homicide, his 61st. Both actors were stars before the co-stars of their current films were born. Ford is planning another Indiana Jones movie for 2005, when he'll be 63--older than Sean Connery was when he played Ford's father in the last Indy adventure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Babes In Boyland | 7/14/2003 | See Source »

...scene begins like any number of classic Hollywood crime dramas as maverick detective Shunsaku Aoshima swaggers along Tokyo's glittering waterfront, headed for action. With disheveled hair, necktie loosened rakishly and a cigarette dangling from his lips, he looks every bit the renegade cop. But when Aoshima reaches his destination, he hesitates and looks around sheepishly?there's no place for him to flick his cigarette! It's not nice to litter. What if someone sees him? Or complains? He sighs, pulls an ashtray from his coat, stabs out the butt, rolls his eyes and heads inside...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Crime Fighters Unbound | 7/14/2003 | See Source »

...This scene from Bayside Shakedown 2, a Japanese cop drama debuting on July 19, is a terrific movie moment precisely because it's so charming and modest. But are charm and modesty the stuff of a box-office blockbuster? Chihiro Kameyama, producer of some of Japan's most memorable TV and film hits over the past 15 years, is banking on it. In a conference room high atop Fuji TV's futuristic Tokyo office building, he seems positively serene just days before the highest-profile movie release of his career. Kameyama predicts that Bayside Shakedown 2 will...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Crime Fighters Unbound | 7/14/2003 | See Source »

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