You know that I'm not going to agree with you when you call these people “bandits” and things like that. I often say, come on with me after this meeting and we'll go over to a hospital and we'll go into the delivery room, and you point out which ones will be victims and which ones will be my clients.
Quite frankly, you're forgetting something, with the greatest respect, and I say it with the greatest respect because I know you. A lot happens from release to trial, and what appears to be a bad guy and a “bandit” in the front end—and we can't make those statements because of the environment they come from, which is a lot tougher. It's a lot more in keeping with the dignity of this country to say that even those people who look like they're bandits and bad guys have a right to be presumed innocent and have a constitutional right to release. The measure of a great country, I guess, is how we treat the people who may not deserve it.