There was a moment in Courtroom 108 when time ground to a halt, the way it only can during a long morning sacrificed to the legal system. On the bench, Cook County Circuit Judge Shelley Sutker-Dermer stared silently at a document, her lips pursed. A dry cough. Keys clanked in the hands of a sheriff's deputy. The shoes of a bow-tied attorney squeaked across the gray carpet. The ventilation system cycled air tinged with a hint of dust and sorrow; 10:38 a.m. on a recent Thursday at the Skokie courthouse.
A group of 21 people shifted in the beige wooden pews. They'd been here for 90 minutes, and would be here for 90 minutes more. Unlike everyone else in the room, they were not employees of Cook County, nor accused criminals, nor their lawyers or family.
Rather, they were court observers from the Garrido Stray Rescue Foundation, a group founded by former Chicago cop John Garrido and his wife, Anna. Silent witnesses for abused animals like Betty, the dog we met Wednesday, whose former owner, Anita Damodaran, slipped into the courtroom and took a back pew with her father, her face hidden by a medical mask.
She was arrested in Florida in December and brought back to Illinois to face a charge of aggravated animal cruelty, accused of leaving her dog to suffer uncared for in a plastic bin for a month.
Three hours is a long time to sit in court on behalf of a dog you never met. Why do this?
"Just to make sure the animals have a voice," said Paula Conrad, who took a half-day off from her job at Exelon to be here. "The folks from Garrido handle 10 to 12 cases actively. Dogs and cats — if they're being abused by the people who adopted them, there's no one else going to be there."
A lawyer representing the defendant in another abuse case that morning — a woman whoaccused of stabbing? stabbed a chihuahua being walked by a stranger — smiled at the group as he walked out of the courtroom.
"They're good people," said the lawyer, Tod Urban, quickly adding, "I'm a dog owner." A Great Dane named Penny Lane. He said his own client "is not an evil person. Just has some mental health issues."
That also seems to be the choice regarding Damodaran. Is she, in the words of one observer, "an evil heartless monster" who should be in prison? Or a woman with mental problems who needs compassion?
"I require information regarding her mental health," said Sutker-Dermer, denying the prosecution request that she be jailed, but imposing a curfew.
"I think she deserves jail time for what she did to that animal," said Conrad. "This was sustained torture of this dog, to keep it sealed in a box. It survived by eating its own feces and drinking its own urine."
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