![]() It turns out Dustin was in his police uniform when they met at the park. He got his phone back, so why in such a lethal matter? Phoenix accuses Wellington of being part of a group of con artists. Payne wants to know why Wellington would kill Dustin Prince. Wellington also knew Maggey's name, or rather how it's said, because she told him in the phone call. The glasses he grabbed could be from the killer. Wellington admitted that he was looking for his glasses. There is just no excuse for him to take so long, as there was a phone booth just several steps away from the crime scene. But wait, the autopsy confirmed that the murder happened 17 minutes prior to that phone call. ![]() Wellington next testifies that he called at 6:45 PM. So why didn't he bring glasses to court? He claims that he lost them and didn't bring them with him. And it turns out he does have bad eyesight as when Phoenix presents the glove, Wellington mistakes the glove as a bunch of bananas again. He obviously must have bad eyesight because it was actually the baseball glove Maggey gave to Dustin. He testifies that he saw the victim fall from a higher place and with him a banana bunch. They were pulled from the contact list of the phone Maggey found, and they were names of people suspected of being con artists.īack in the court-room, Payne brings in Richard Wellington, who claims to be a first-class university student and is not afraid to boast how first-classly he is. Maya Fey gives Phoenix a list of names that he told her to look up. She had been trying to get a hold of him on phone but he wouldn't answer. Just then, an adolescent girl in purple robes barges in and is angry at Phoenix. Maggey gave the same phone to Phoenix yesterday. The person who presumably lost it called and told her to meet at 6PM. He decides to call in a witness that would make the Judge change his mind again.Īfter hearing about Phoenix's amnesia, Maggey tells Phoenix that she found a cell phone lying in the middle of the park. But wait, Payne has one more trick up his sleeve. Somehow this is enough to convince the Judge that Maggey is indeed innocent. So the victim misspelled Maggey's name and he used the wrong hand. Couldn't he have used his left hand instead? While it was clear Dustin's finger was used to write Maggey's name, his right hand was used to write the name. The baseball glove was made for someone who is left-handed. Phoenix then spots another contradiction. ![]() Maggey even made a custom yellow baseball glove for his birthday the night he was killed. Which doesn't make sense since they both had a thing together. The name spelt "Maggie" when it's actually "Maggey". They even have a picture, right there, written with his right hand. The reason they suspected Maggey is because the victim wrote the killer's name. In yesterday's trial, Phoenix presented a pair of glasses which became important since the victim grabbed the killer's glasses as he fell. Apparently, he and Maggey were best buds. The killer had pushed him off an upper path in a local park.Īs the trial begins, an irritable Dick Gumshoe is called up. As it turns out, she is accused for killing her boyfried and fellow police officer, Dustin Prince, who snapped his neck in a bad fall. He doesn't remember Maggey, his time as a lawyer, or anything else for that matter. There's just one problem: Phoenix doesn't remember anything. Phoenix Wright wakes up and sees a young policewoman by the name of Maggey Byrde, who is hoping that he would make her "Not Guilty" in the eyes of justice. Our spikey-haired hero awakes from a cell-phone induced nightmare only to find himself knocked on the head by a villainous man in a blue shirt. ![]()
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