After Rejecting 40 Years, Defendant Asked for New Lawyer—Judge’s Answer Stopped the Room-rosocute

When the judge said they would see him Monday, the courtroom did not react loudly.

That was the strange part.

No gasp rolled through the benches. No one slammed a folder shut. No attorney leapt to his feet with one last objection. The room simply absorbed the sentence the way a wall absorbs cold.

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Monday.

That single word carried more weight than the thick packet of papers sitting in front of the court. It meant jury selection was no longer an abstract calendar setting. It meant the rejected 40-year offer was no longer just a negotiation point. It meant the defendant’s sudden request for a new lawyer had not moved the case backward.

It had moved nothing at all.

Andre Williams II sat at the defense table while the moment settled around him. His attorney remained beside him. The prosecutor stayed composed. The judge kept control of the room the same way she had controlled the hearing from the start: without raising her voice.

That was what made the exchange so sharp.

The earlier part of the docket had already shown everyone in the courtroom what Judge Raquel West sounded like when she decided to give someone room to try again.

Ms. Miles had stood before the court first, facing a motion to revoke probation. Her case was not treated casually. The judge walked through the missed outpatient services, the probation officer’s information, the mental health referral options, and the concern at the center of the hearing.

Was this a mental health issue that still needed treatment?

Or was the court being asked to explain away behavior that the reports described differently?

That question hung over the first hearing like a wire pulled tight.

The probation officer did not deny the possibility of mental health issues. But she also made clear that behavioral problems at an intermediate sanctions facility and disciplinary problems in custody did not automatically become mental health symptoms just because the timing was convenient.

The judge heard all of it.

Then she made a decision that was careful, not soft.

She continued Ms. Miles on probation, but only with conditions that turned the next phase into a test. Specialized mental health caseload. Tacomi referral. Required appointments. Required compliance with treatment recommendations. A step-down plan after the mental health caseload. Respect toward probation, service providers, and everyone along the path.

And the phrase that defined the whole order:

Zero tolerance.

There was mercy in it, but no looseness.

Ms. Miles was not sent away with a vague warning. She was handed a structured last opportunity. The court drew a line around the help being offered and made it clear that crossing that line would bring her back to the same place with fewer options.

That was the emotional contrast that made the next case feel even heavier.

Because moments later, the courtroom shifted from one person receiving a final chance to another person standing at the edge of trial.

The case against Williams was not described in small terms. One cause number involved a murder charge. Another involved tampering or fabricating physical evidence with intent to impair. His attorney asked for more time, explaining that he was still trying to obtain records tied to Social Security disability benefits Williams had reportedly received years earlier, from childhood into 2022.

The defense framed those records as potentially important for mitigation.

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