Categories
Arts

Film review: Hail, Caesar! finds humor in the absurd

Hollywood farce Hail, Caesar! is a masterstroke of screwball absurdism from the Coen brothers, as they return with the subgenre of technically impeccable yet thematically anarchic comedy they practically invented. Harkening back to their output in the 1990s, Hail, Caesar! is a satirical genre parody and period piece in the vein of The Hudsucker Proxy and The Big Lebowski. The film follows the chaos surrounding a kidnapping of movie star Baird Whitlock (George Clooney) from the set of Capitol Pictures’ religious epic, Hail, Caesar! A Tale of the Christ, by a secret “study group” of communist screenwriters. Josh Brolin stars as Eddie Mannix, a fictionalized version of a real-life executive and “fixer” for MGM of the same name, who must see to Whitlock’s return while continuing to juggle his everyday activities: parrying with gossip columnists, resolving disputes between actors and directors and the like.

Showbiz satires are a notoriously self-congratulatory game, full of inside-jokes and megastars patting themselves on the back for taking the lightest of jabs on the chin. Even at their best, they can feel like a slideshow of photos from a party you weren’t invited to, and rarely do they sink their teeth into the subject matter and really bite off a subject worth chewing. That’s not to say that Hail, Caesar! does, but it succeeds in accomplishing gags that don’t require the audience to be familiar with a narrow range of references or to have seen specific films. The Coens take many of the same ingredients that went into films such as The Player, Tropic Thunder and State and Main and reshuffle them to their own irreverent purposes with little to no consideration for anyone’s feelings.

This is, of course, how the Coens have always operated: with an utter lack of sentimentality. Although they never fully abandoned humor, the noted elasticity of their farces gave way to the more contemplative, emotionally loaded content of their recent output. For the past decade, they had been reaching new artistic heights while subjecting their characters to the darkest depths of nihilism and bleakness, even in their comedies. In reverse chronological order: Inside Llewyn Davis saw its title character, a talented 1960s folk singer with emotional baggage following the death of his partner, alternately reject or ruin anything good that happened to him, hitting rock bottom just as the genre was to be revolutionized by Bob Dylan. True Grit was very nearly a feel-good story that was also a reflection of the amoral anarchy of the Wild West and the uncaring brutality of nature. A Serious Man and Burn After Reading were both ostensibly comedies that depicted relentlessly bleak or cruel circumstances, while No Country for Old Men spared neither its characters nor its audience from the complete lack of justice or humanity in the universe.

What the Coens have brought us with Hail, Caesar! is a film that is proud of its artifice, unashamed of its staginess and obvious special effects; the whole thing is so absurd, the clear fakeness of its backgrounds only add to its charm. Even the more predictable gags land beautifully. You don’t even need to like classic films or understand dated political or academic references. Hail, Caesar! is easily the Coens’ best comedy since The Big Lebowski.

Playing this week

Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

The Shops at Stonefield, 244-3213

The 5th Wave

13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi

The Boy

Brooklyn

The Choice

Daddy’s Home

Dirty Grandpa

Fifty Shades of Black

The Hateful Eight

Jane Got a Gun

Kung Fu Panda 3

Mad Max: Fury Road

The Martian

Norm of the North

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies

Ride Along 2

Room

Where to Invade Next

Zoolander 2

Violet Crown Cinema

200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall, 529-3000

45 Years

Animated Oscar Shorts 2016

Anomalisa

The Big Short

Deadpool

Documentary Oscar Shorts 2016

The Finest Hours

Hail, Caesar!

Live Action Oscar Shorts 2016

The Revenant

Spotlight

Star Wars: The Force Awakens

Categories
Living

LIVING PICKS: To-do for the week

Non-profit

Relay for Life chili cook-off

Register your own chili or sample and vote for your favorite. All proceeds benefit the American Cancer Society.

Tuesday, 2/16. $5, 6:30-8pm. Charlottesville High School, 1400 Melbourne Rd. 978-7423.

Health & Wellness

Wine Lovers 5K

Take in mountain views while enjoying live music and post-race wine samples.

Tuesday, 2/16. $30-40, 9am. Cardinal Point Vineyard & Winery, 9423 Batesville Rd., Afton. info@corkscrewracing.com.

Festival    

Grace Tinsley Scholarship Bash

Enjoy food, desserts and dancing to Motown music to benefit scholarships for Charlottesville High School seniors.

Saturday, 2/13. $35, 6:30pm. Carver Recreation Center at the Jefferson School City Center, 233 Fourth St. NW. 242-8586.

Food & Drink 

Valentine’s Bubbles and Bites

Sample food including Rock Barn brats and buttermilk and blueberry panna cotta, and sip a variety of imported sparkling wines.

Wednesday, 2/10. Free, 5-7pm. Ivy Provisions, 2206 Ivy Rd. 202-1308.

Categories
News

Not appealing: Fourth time’s the charm for fired UVA nurse

Up until last week, everyone who has reviewed Susan Jordan’s firing, from state hearing officers to a circuit court judge to the Court of Appeals of Virginia, agrees that she was unfairly terminated—everyone except her former employer, the University of Virginia Medical Center.

It wasn’t until a February 2 appeals court decision affirming her reinstatement that UVA finally threw in the towel and decided not to appeal a fifth time. “We are not going to appeal any further, and we are not going to have any additional comment,” says UVA Health System spokesperson Eric Swensen in an e-mail.

“I’m very excited and so glad it’s ended and turned out the way it did,” says Jordan. “I’m not excited they dragged me through this for two years.”

Jordan got in hot water with the university in 2014 and was escorted from the building for looking at her ex-husband’s medical records “without authorization,” according to her termination letter.

What the letter didn’t note was that Kurt Jordan, also a hospital employee, asked his ex-wife to help him understand his medical records. He had cancer and was in an advanced stage of myeloma, and in 2012, he had made Jordan his agent for his durable power of attorney and his advanced medical directive. He’d filed a form with the medical center that authorized her to access his records, which was lost, according to the appeals court memorandum, and he filed a new one after Jordan was fired.

Four times after a clinical visit, Kurt, weak with tremors and having a hard time seeing, came to Jordan’s department and asked her to help him understand his lab results. At least two of those times Jordan’s supervisor was present. Because Jordan used her own code to access his records, she was shown the door April 23, 2014.

A hearing officer found that Kurt was looking at his own records, which is allowed, and Jordan was acting as his agent. The officer upheld Jordan’s grievance in August 2014. UVA appealed to the Department of Human Resources Management, which also found that her conduct didn’t violate medical center policies. Again the hospital appealed, and March 24, Albemarle Circuit Court Judge Cheryl Higgins ruled in Jordan’s favor.

Undaunted, the university appealed for a fourth time to the state appeals court, which again ruled that Jordan did not act improperly in helping Kurt review and understand his own medical records. Jordan violated neither federal nor state law, said the court in a 13-page memorandum, and it rejected the medical center’s contention that the power of attorney did not give her authorization to access Kurt’s records.

UVA read the state code “too broadly” and its interpretation was “wrong,” say the judges. “In short, Jordan did nothing wrong.”

The appeals court sent the case back to Albemarle Circuit Court to determine the amount UVA must pay for Jordan’s legal fees, including the foray to appellate court.

“I’m just thrilled and a little bit shocked they’re not going to go to the next step,” says Jordan’s attorney, Janice Redinger. “We’re happy they’re not appealing. This has been prolonged enough.”

“I’m glad I had the financial backing to follow it to the end,” says Jordan. “Most people in my position would not.”

She adds, “I just wish Kurt was here to celebrate. That’s the hard part.” Kurt Jordan died January 30, 2015.

UVA Health System’s decision not to appeal comes the same week the Charlottesville Regional Chamber of Commerce named it the 2016 recipient of its Hovey Dabney Award for Corporate Citizenship.

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: Invisible Guy

The bio of clarinetist Ben Goldberg bounces from klezmer accolades and Thelonious Monk covers to Nels Cline and Charlie Hunter collaborations, musical interpretations of Allen Grossman’s poetry and an ode to Elliott Smith. His latest incarnation is Invisible Guy, a uniquely talented trio, formed in the San Francisco Bay area with pianist Michael Coleman and drummer Hamir Atwal, that approaches jazz from many angles.

Thursday 2/11. $10-17, 7pm. C’ville Coffee, 1301 Harris St. 817-2633.

Categories
Living

2016 LOVE ISSUE! Singled out: 14 of Charlottesville’s most eligible

The great thing about being single in Charlottesville is that, if you’re on a date, there’s already one thing you’ll likely agree on: Dating in this town is hard. There’s no lack of interesting and attractive people here, but finding the perfect partner is a lot like finding the perfect apartment: You have to know someone. With that in mind, we asked for your help. In came nominations from friends, employers, siblings—even exes! Then we narrowed it down to these 14 local bachelors and bachelorettes—from a weekend anchor and a retired nurse to a Ph.D. student and an art teacher—and asked them 20 questions about their personal theme song, what kind of shoes they wear every day and what word or phrase they hate (y’know, the important stuff). Their answers ran the gamut, but they did agree on one thing: They’re ready for love. Hey, there’s another thing you probably have in common.

Categories
News

Spycam settlement: Fired city employee gets lawyer’s fees

fired Charlottesville Fire Department mechanic, who found a bottle of booze allegedly planted in his desk and a city-installed spycam to catch him with the contraband, was reinstated to his job a year ago. It took a bit longer for the city to agree to pay the $16,000 in legal fees he racked up fighting his termination. Last week, the city’s insurance company agreed to an undisclosed settlement amount, according to his attorney.

“I’m glad it’s over with and it’s done,” says J.R. Harris, who returned to work last March. “I hold no grudge.”

“We’re happy they were willing to settle,” says attorney Janice Redinger. “I applaud the city for doing that in an area of law in which they might have prevailed.”

The city is not owning up that any payment will be made to Harris. “I have absolutely no comment about a settlement,” says Assistant City Attorney Allyson Davies, who demanded to know how a reporter was aware of one. She would neither confirm nor deny a settlement to Harris had been made. “No comment,” she reiterated.

Harris, a teetotaler who had repaired the city’s fire trucks for 15 years, as well as the personal vehicles of many in the department, received a letter of termination in October 2014 that cited possession of alcohol and shoddy workmanship.

During a 10-hour hearing February 23, 2015, attended by a couple dozen firefighters in support of Harris, Redinger said her client was set up and a paper trail created to justify the termination. His immediate supervisor claimed he found a bottle of alleged alcohol in Harris’ desk, and a decision was made to install a spycam in his office.

From more than a week’s worth of surveillance, the city provided one three-minute grainy video showing Harris taking the bottle, wrapping it and removing it. Harris contends he removed it so the person who put it there wouldn’t hide alcohol in his desk again.

The city’s case wasn’t enough to convince a three-person personnel appeals board, which issued a one-sentence statement three days after the hearing saying it disagreed with the decision to fire Harris.

Harris got his job back, as well as back pay and benefits, but still left hanging was the $16,000 he spent on attorney fees.

A year ago, Human Resources Director Galloway Beck said there’s no legal authority for the city to reimburse employees for personal legal expenses—even if the city’s actions caused the employee to require a lawyer.

Redinger filed a notice of claim, but never filed a lawsuit, which she acknowledges would have been a tough case to make. “Virginia law is not particularly employee friendly,” she says.

Harris does not report to the two supervisors who made the case to fire him, and he says things have been going well since he returned to work. “They’re treating me good,” he says. “They don’t bother me, they don’t hassle me.”

Within two weeks of Harris returning to work March 23, then-chief Charles Werner announced his retirement. He was succeeded by Andrew Baxter, whom Harris praises. “The new chief is awesome. He went above and beyond to make sure I feel comfortable.”

And Harris says his fight for his job and for attorney fees was never about the money. “I just don’t want it to happen again to any firefighter or city employee,” he says.

Categories
News

Movie monopoly? Regal faces lawsuits around the country

In 2000, Charlottesville had seven movie theaters. For most of 2015, it had one—Regal Stonefield Stadium 14 and IMAX—until the Violet Crown Cinema opened downtown late last year.

“That’s one theater too many for Regal,” says Adam Greenbaum, owner of the Visulite in Staunton and the beloved Vinegar Hill Theatre in Charlottesville, which closed in 2013, along with the six-screen Carmike Cinemas, leaving Regal Stonefield the sole first-run venue in town for two years.

Greenbaum directly lays the closing of the 37-year-old Vinegar Hill Theatre, which opened in 1976 and was Charlottesville’s art house favorite, at the hand of Regal Cinemas. For years the independent movie house staved off competition from the Regal Downtown, which opened in 1996. “When they turned the Downtown Mall theater into an art theater, they turned off the spigot,” says Greenbaum. “We couldn’t get any movies.”

That same complaint is the basis of lawsuits filed against Regal Entertainment Group in Queens, New York; in Houston, Texas; and on January 26, by the Landmark Theatres in Washington, D.C.

A judge in Texas granted a temporary injunction to IPic, a Florida-based small luxury theater chain that opened a theater in Houston’s high-end River Oaks district in November. The court enjoined Regal from “engaging in anticompetitive and unlawful conduct, by directly or indirectly, demanding or requesting exclusive film licenses or the right to exhibit films from any studio to the exclusion of plaintiffs’ Houston theater,” according to the January 21 injunction.

Nor may Regal tell a studio it will refuse to show a film if the studio licenses it to IPic, which sounds eerily familiar. That’s why Star Wars: The Force Awakens, the biggest-grossing box office release in history, was not shown at Charlottesville’s only IMAX theater at the Regal Stonefield.

Violet Crown owner Bill Banowsky says Disney, which produced Star Wars, came to Charlottesville, studied the market, visited the two theaters and concluded that Charlottesville should have two runs for wide-release movies, not just one, and offered Star Wars to both Violet Crown and Regal Stonefield. 

“Regal elected to not play the film,” says Banowsky in an e-mail. “We understand Regal has told the major film distributors that it will not play any film that plays at Violet Crown, putting pressure on film studios to deny films to Violet Crown. Disney did not buckle under this pressure, even though it risked losing money by not playing Star Wars at the Regal Stonefield, a very large theater with an IMAX screen and substantially more seats than Violet Crown. Disney took the long view. And, by the way, Violet Crown did exceedingly well with Star Wars.”

The practice of demanding exclusivity, or “clearance” in movie distribution lingo, is not illegal, says Banowsky. However, clearances are legal only between theaters deemed to be in “substantial competition” with one another, he says. Disney determined that Violet Crown in downtown Charlottesville and Regal Stonefield, located just outside the city limits, are not in “substantial competition” with one another and elected to offer Star Wars and its other wide-release movies to both theaters, he says.

Violet Crown also snagged holiday hits The Revenant, Joy and The Big Short, which did not screen at Regal Stonefield.

Banowsky competes against Regal in six markets: Raleigh, Charlotte and Asheville, North Carolina, with his Carolina Cinemas properties, and in Violet Crown cities Austin, Santa Fe and Charlottesville. “Regal has attempted to ‘clear’ us only in Charlottesville and Santa Fe,” he says.

The original idea of market clearance was to keep theaters from all showing the same movie and to give moviegoers some choice, back in the day when most theaters were one screen, says Greenbaum.

In the case of Star Wars, Regal is “still maintaining Charlottesville is a closed market and it’s not big enough for two theaters to be showing the same movie,” says Greenbaum. “It’s more than clearance. It’s using market clout to muzzle distributors from giving product to theaters.”

In June, CNN reported the Department of Justice was investigating antitrust practices by Regal, the nation’s largest movie chain with 7,334 screens, and AMC, which has 4,872 screens.

“Officially we don’t comment whether or not something is under investigation,” says Department of Justice antitrust spokesperson Mark Abueg.

“We’re not allowed to make any comment to media,” says a manager at Regal Stonefield, who referred a reporter to Regal’s corporate media relations. Richard Grover, Regal’s vice president of marketing and communications, did not return phone calls from C-VILLE, nor has the company responded to any media inquiries about its legal travails in the past year, according to news stories written about it.

Over in Staunton, Greenbaum says business at the Visulite Cinema is good. “We’re fortunate right now,” he says, “not to be in a market with Regal.”

Categories
News

Condemned house: City prepares to take next step

house on East Jefferson Street, flanked by doors that could hardly be opened, was deemed unfit for human occupancy for being littered with items that made it “impossible to safely travel through the house in the event of an emergency,” just weeks before the emergency responders evacuated a man through a window of the home.

Neighborhood Development Services issued homeowner C. W. Rogers Jr. an order of correction on January 1, which required him and any additional occupants to leave his home at 1108 E. Jefferson St. until he or his power of attorney fixes the four safety, health and sanitation violations to the Virginia maintenance code.

Joe Phillips, a current Charlottesville Fire Department captain and member of more than 17 years, says books and other household items were scattered on the floor of the home when Rogers’ brother arrived to retrieve some paperwork and heard a man moaning from inside a bedroom. After the brother called the fire department for help, Phillips’ crew managed to enter through the front door, but was unable to take the man out that way because of the clutter, according to Phillips.

The man was lying in bed, next to an accessible window when Rogers’ brother called for help. “It was easier to slide him out [a] window than it was to carry him across items in the house,” Phillips says. The crew hitched a ladder slide up to the open window and strapped him into a stokes basket, which is designed to slide down the rails of the ladder.

The man’s relationship to Rogers is unknown, but a neighbor speculates that it was a roommate still living in the home after Rogers relocated. Refusing to give her name, she said Rogers is the street’s oldest inhabitant and that neighbors are fond of him.

Alexander Ikefuna, director of NDS, says the East Jefferson house has already been condemned and a February 15 deadline has been set to institute a plan of action for the structure. In the January notice, the home was cited for unsanitary conditions and, though utilities were activated, records showed they hadn’t been used in several months.

“It is hard to tell what is trash and what might be salvageable household belongings,” the notice reads. “There is trash, rubbish and debris amongst all the accumulation of belongings.”

The home, sold to Rogers in August 1962, was up for a re-inspection on February 5, but Ikefuna says the items in the house had not been removed, so the home was not re-inspected. It is unclear whether the home will require demolition, but in 2011, the city did demolish a structure that wasn’t maintained at 704 Montrose Ave.

According to city records, Rogers also owned that home.

Year to date, Ikefuna says 12 city properties were deemed unfit for human occupancy for various reasons. In some cases, repairs were made immediately and that designation was lifted. For example, he says that after a roof collapse on Market Street just weeks ago, the structure was deemed unsafe and owners immediately had a portion of the building demolished, making the building stable enough to allow workers inside to continue construction.

To condemn a structure, the city follows the Virginia maintenance code “to adjudge unfit for occupancy,” which Ikefuna says has two meanings.

An unsafe structure could be one with conditions causing at least a portion of the building to collapse and endanger the safety of occupants or the surrounding public—such as the Market Street roof collapse—or a structure could have conditions that are dangerous to the occupants or public by disrepair or lack of maintenance, sanitary conditions, lack of utilities or required plumbing facilities—such as the East Jefferson and Montrose Avenue homes.

“If owners make repairs then all is well,” he says. “If owners are neglectful then we can take them to court.”

Categories
Living

A lot on their plates : Local Valentine’s Day events and treats

Valentine’s Day is just around the corner, so we’ve compiled a list of ways for you and your boo to celebrate with what we all know everyone wants: food and booze.

I love brew

Three local breweries make it possible for you to spend the hours leading up to Valentine’s Day enjoying a pint (or two), plus a good meal and some sweets.

On Wednesday, February 10, Wild Wolf Brewing Company chef Chris Jack serves up a five-course meal for $50 featuring “fabulous farm-to-fork cuisine” and seasonal beers.

Down the street the next day, Blue Mountain Brewery offers a beer dinner of its own with a winter kale salad, root vegetable gratin, barrel-smoked salmon and dark chocolate raspberry trifle. Cost is $55, and each course is paired with a beer.

For something a little sweeter, head to Three Notch’d Brewing Company on Saturday, February 13, for Bitter Sweet, a chocolate-and-beer-pairing event. Five bucks gets you three Gearharts chocolates along with pairing suggestions of Three Notch’d brews.

Wine about it

Whether you love Valentine’s Day or hate it, you might as well drink some wine.

On Saturday, February 13, Veritas Vineyard & Winery hosts a Valentine’s Day winemaker’s dinner. The five-course, wine-paired meal features pan-fried gnocchi, kale and spinach salad, sweet potato bisque, chocolate and coffee chili-braised pork shank and double chocolate pot de creme for $140 per person.

To celebrate the day associated with the color pink, Pollak Vineyards releases its new rosé on Sunday, February 14. Pair a glass of the pink stuff with a mint chocolate torte or a crawfish étouffée.

What more could you possibly want on V-Day than wine, cheese and chocolate? Feast! hosts a $45 cheese class on Tuesday, February 16—wine and chocolate included.

Wine Loves Chocolate has the perfect heart-shaped box of chocolates to pair with your wine, but there’s a twist: The box is edible. A box of six chocolates is $26.

Hard love

On February 13, Virginia Distillery Company hosts A Dram of Love, which features local music, Spiked Food Truck, Gearharts truffles and malt whiskey for $10 for a flight.

What’s cookin’? 

If you’d rather cook for yourself for the holiday, check out the Charlottesville Cooking School’s Valentine’s Day events.

During Dinner in Paris, Tom Whitehead will teach you everything you need to know to prepare a delicious, romantic French meal. Cost is $125 per person.

The next day, at Soledad Liendo’s Valentine’s Day dinner, you’ll make crispy shrimp, pancetta-wrapped filet mignon, scalloped potatoes, spinach-and-mushroom salad and white chocolate mousse. Price is $110 per person.

Prix fixe

If you’re feeling indulgent, treat yourself to one of the many multicourse meals that restaurants around town are preparing for V-Day.

Commonwealth Restaurant & Skybar offers a $50 prix fixe dinner on Saturday, February 13. Seatings are at 6 and 8:30pm, and menu items include lobster bisque, Timbercreek filet mignon and white chocolate cheesecake.   

All weekend, Old Mill Room at Boar’s Head has a special four-course Valentine’s dinner for $100 per person (plus tax and gratuity). The menu features venison carpaccio, cream of apple and celeriac soup, saffron tomato seafood risotto and passion fruit panna cotta. And on Sunday morning, the brunch menu will include omelets and eggs to order, banana bread French toast, a seafood station, a salad station, a carving station and a selection of desserts.

Valentine, schmalentine

Not inclined toward the romantic-for-two dinners? We get it—and so do some others around town.

Kick off the weekend on Friday, February 12, with a speed-dating event at Commonwealth Restaurant & Skybar. Spend five minutes with each eligible local and enjoy cocktails and a $5 Skybar coupon.

Check out Firefly’s Lonely Hearts Club Singles Night starting at 8pm on Saturday, February 13.

Beginning at 11am on Sunday, February 14, Jack Brown’s Beer & Burger Joint encourages fellow curmudgeons to help drain a keg of AleSmith My Bloody Valentine and tape pictures of their exes to voodoo dolls at its Stupid Cupid Anti-Valentine’s Day event.   

Categories
News

Quick trial resumes

Brothers have testified against each other and an ex-girlfriend has been pitted against her former boyfriend in a retrial for the suspects in the murder of Waynesboro Police Reserve Captain Kevin Quick after a May mistrial.

Quick, a 45-year-old father, was reported missing January 31, 2014, and his body was found in Goochland County a week later.

Suspects Daniel Mathis, Shantai Shelton, Mersadies Shelton and Kweli Uhuru (aka Travis Bell) are charged with kidnapping, robbery, racketeering and murder and are alleged members of a gang called the 99 Goon Syndikate, which has connections to the Bloods and is responsible for about a dozen robberies across Central Virginia near the end of 2013 and into 2014, according to the prosecution.

After the mistrial in Charlottesville’s U.S. District Court when one defendant obtained a list of potential jury members, the newly selected 12-member jury was chosen in a Roanoke federal court February 1, with opening statements beginning on February 3.

Former gang member and brother of Uhuru, Shaquan Jackson, testified that he was aware of Uhuru’s and other suspects’ affiliation with the gang. In November 2014, Jackson pleaded guilty to taking part in gang activity and agreed to testify against several of the defendants, according to NBC29.

Jackson referred to a 99 Goon Syndikate meeting, or “bee hive,” in summer 2013 after members in the Louisa County area had joined. That was shortly before the reported violent spree in Central Virginia.

The defense argued that this wasn’t necessarily gang related. And though Jackson testified that Uhuru had called him after murdering Quick, saying he needed to “lay low,” the defense got Jackson to admit that he has lied before to get what he wanted from police and argued that Jackson is hoping for a more lenient sentence in exchange for testimony.

On the fifth day of the trial, Devante Bell—another brother of Uhuru who has already pleaded guilty to the federal gang conspiracy charge—testified that he and Jackson were asked to help get rid of “some car,” which he believed to be Quick’s SUV.

Dierre Lloyd, Mathis’ former girlfriend, testified that he told her about killing a police officer and, though she initially tried to cover for him, she changed her mind when she was charged with two counts of conspiracy to commit robbery and two counts of robbery. She is currently on house arrest and has been granted immunity in exchange for her testimony, NBC29 reports.

After the defense cross-examined Lloyd, she admitted to the jury that there’s no reason to believe what she says and attorneys have questioned the credibility of all of the convicted witnesses, including Lloyd.