Chapter Five: The Hearing
The courtroom was packed.
Randall sat at the plaintiff’s table between David and Maya. Across the aisle, Jesse Morrison sat with his new attorney—Carol Brennan, a sharp woman in her fifties.
Annie was there, too.
Sitting in the back row. Alone.
She looked smaller than Randall remembered. Thinner. Her hair was darker now, closer to its natural color. No designer clothes. Just jeans and a simple blouse.
She wouldn’t look at him.
Judge Whitmore entered from the side door. Silver hair. Reading glasses. A stare that could freeze helium.
“All rise.”
The bailiff called the court to order.
“We’re here for the consolidated matter of O’Neal versus O’Neal and State Bar of California versus Jesse Morrison.” The judge shuffled papers. “Mr. Okonowo, you’ve submitted an expanded complaint. Summarize.”
David stood.
“Your Honor, the evidence shows that Mr. Morrison engaged in a pattern of fraudulent conduct spanning at least six years and twenty-three divorce cases. He inflated property appraisals, initiated romantic relationships with clients, and in at least three cases, continued to accept mortgage payments after the loans were satisfied.”
He gestured to the exhibits.
“We have bank records, email metadata, property valuations, and testimony from multiple victims. Mr. Morrison didn’t just make mistakes. He built a business model on exploiting vulnerable people.”
Judge Whitmore turned to the defense table.
“Miss Brennan?”
Carol Brennan stood slowly.
“Your Honor, my client acknowledges that some of his professional judgments were questionable. But questionable isn’t criminal. Mr. Morrison made errors, yes. But he didn’t intend to defraud anyone.”
“Didn’t intend?”
The judge’s voice went sharp.
“Miss Brennan, your client represented women in divorce proceedings, slept with them, profited from their property settlements, and then bought their homes through shell companies. Are you seriously telling me that’s not illegal?”
Carol Brennan’s jaw tightened.
“Your Honor, I’m telling you that the evidence doesn’t support criminal charges.”
“That’s not your decision to make.”
Judge Whitmore removed her glasses.
“I’m referring this matter to the District Attorney’s office for criminal investigation. I’m also granting the emergency motion to freeze all assets related to Mr. Morrison’s law practice, his property valuation company, and his personal accounts.”
She turned to Randall.
“Mr. O’Neal, the divorce decree is vacated. You are the legal owner of the property at 2247 Maple Ridge Drive. Ms. O’Neal, you have seventy-two hours to remove your belongings.”
Annie nodded silently.
Tears streaming down her face.
“One more thing.”
Judge Whitmore looked at Jesse.
“Mr. Morrison, I’m recommending to the State Bar that your license be suspended immediately pending the outcome of the criminal investigation. You are not to practice law in any capacity until further notice.”
Jesse’s face went white.
His attorney put a hand on his arm, but he shook it off. He stood. His chair scraped against the floor.
“This isn’t fair.”
His voice cracked.
“I followed the law. I did everything by the book. These people—” He pointed at Randall. “He abandoned his wife. He was gone for ten years. I gave Annie what he wouldn’t. I was there for her.”
“You were there for her bank account.”
Maya’s voice cut through the room.
Everyone turned.
She stood slowly. Her heels clicked against the floor. Her eyes were fixed on Jesse with the kind of focus she usually reserved for a stopped heart.
“You targeted lonely women. You manipulated their pain. You made them believe you loved them so they’d trust you with their divorces. And then you stole from their ex-husbands and called it justice.”
She stepped closer.
“But here’s what you didn’t count on. The ex-husbands fought back. The women woke up. And now you’re going to lose everything because you got greedy.”
The courtroom was silent.
Jesse stared at Maya.
His mouth opened. Closed. Opened again.
“Who are you?”
“I’m the woman who’s going to make sure you never hurt anyone again.”
Maya sat back down.
Her hand found Randall’s under the table. Squeezed once. Let go.
Judge Whitmore banged her gavel.
“This hearing is adjourned.”