Judge Stops Plea Deal After Crossed-Out Evidence Clause Derails Theft Restitution Hearing-QuynhTranJP

The altered paperwork landed back on the defense table with a soft slap, and for one clean second, everyone in the courtroom stared at the same thing.

Not the defendant.

Not the prosecutor.

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The crossed-out lines.

The defense attorney, Linda Corley, kept one hand near the file as if touching it might make the problem smaller. Her client, Jan Madura, sat beside her in a cream blouse, shoulders pulled in now, her earlier courtroom posture gone. At 10:04 a.m., the fluorescent lights washed every face flat and pale, and the air conditioner pushed cold air across the wooden benches with the patience of a machine that had seen worse.

Judge Velasquez did not raise her voice.

That made it heavier.

“You need to reprint the entire document,” she said. “That document has been sworn to.”

The clerk’s fingers paused over the keyboard. The prosecutor, Chandler Bone, looked down at his notes but did not write. Behind the rail, a man in a navy work shirt shifted his boots under the bench and stopped the moment the judge glanced toward the gallery.

No one wanted to be the sound in the room.

The defense attorney inhaled through her nose.

“We can do that, Judge.”

The judge gave one small nod, the kind that ended the conversation without needing a gavel.

Then she called the next case.

That was the strange part. Court did not stop because one plea collapsed. The system moved on. Another defendant stepped forward. Another file opened. Another charge was read. But at the defense table, the failed plea sat like a broken lock.

Jan did not leave right away.

She looked at the document once more, then at the blank space where a clean copy would have to be made. Her attorney gathered the marked pages, careful not to wrinkle them further. The edges trembled slightly in her hand.

The prosecutor finally moved.

He took the state’s file and slid a yellow note onto the top page. It had three numbers written on it: $1,077.01, $9,799.42, $227.71.

Three numbers. Three different weights.

The first had been paid. The second and third were contested. And the judge had just made clear that contested did not mean erased.

In the hallway outside Courtroom 4, the noise came back all at once. Shoes squeaked on the polished floor. A vending machine hummed. Someone laughed too loudly near the elevators and then lowered his voice when he saw a bailiff pass.

Jan stood close to the wall, her purse tucked under one arm. Her attorney spoke in a low voice, one finger tapping the top of the file.

“We’ll correct it,” she said. “We’ll make the language clear.”

Jan’s mouth tightened.

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