This is my response to the latest Picture it and Write prompt on Ermlia’s blog~
http://ermiliablog.wordpress.com/2014/06/01/picture-it-write-yesallwomen/#more-6024
The image is provided thanks to Ermlia
SMASHING JUSTICE
By John Yeo
The courtroom was packed with supporters for this victim of an alleged horrendous assault. There was much to get through, reams of evidence to be presented and debated. Morals were discussed and heartfelt pleas for justice were heard from many learned people. Our highly esteemed judge was very well thought of in the city and indeed he had been the recipient of a splendid gift of a cut-glass gavel in recognition of his contribution to justice and the law. This was a very sensitive case and many people, the judges wife included, thought it should never have been brought to court. Of course the judge would never discuss the case with his wife, but she was very sensitive to his mind after 40 years of marriage. After many days of discussion and listening to much legal debate, with countless witnesses from many disciplines and areas of thought, the learned judge announced his decision. To everyone’s horror the judge pronounced the case unproven and the accused: Not Guilty! There was uproar in the courtroom, the judge raised his gavel: Order! Order in the court! There was a splintering of glass as the cut glass gavel that the learned judge’s wife had deliberately substituted, smashed into a thousand fragments. The police moved in to clear the courtroom. Justice and the system of justice had certainly been symbolically smashed today.
Copyright (c) Written by John Yeo
All rights reserved

Nice piece! Showed what the judge’s decision meant!
Thanks Joetwo~A difficult prompt to follow 🙂
It’s always difficult when we feel one thing in our hearts, but we can’t prove it. That’s always been something that interests me about law. Thanks for contributing this week.
Thanks Ermilia~Keep challenging everyone with these interesting, excellent prompts
The sense of the senselessness of the law is potent in your writing. Justice is not blind in the eyes of the Judge’s wife. She is one wise woman.
Thanks for your response Lee-Anne~ 🙂
Glass gavels are great when everything is apples and oranges! Nice courtroom scene, John.
Thanks Anne~Ermilia’s prompt was a hard one to follow I thought~ 🙂
:
When following looks difficult, lead! 🙂
Hmm! Yes~~ 🙂
Very nice! Thanks for following my blog.
My pleasure~ Thanks for the return follow of my blog~ 🙂