"That's how I keep my sanity," said the mother of the man who won $43 million on Tuesday from Bernhard H. Goetz, the subway gunman whose bullets paralyzed Darrell Cabey.
So Mr. Cabey may be collecting more than a 10 percent slice of the subway gunman's income.
He supported Robert H. Bork's nomination to the Supreme Court, and came to the defense of Bernard Goetz, the subway gunman.
The man accused of being the subway gunman who asked, "Remember me?"
Mr. Goetz, the 39-year-old electrical engineer from Greenwich Village who gained national attention as the "subway gunman," faces charges of attempted murder and assault.
"I am not sure that it should be the weapon of choice for the Police Department," said Barry Slotnick, a criminal defense lawyer who represented Bernhard Goetz, the subway gunman.
Bernhard Goetz, 49, former subway gunman, non-Friar, guest of Cindy Adams.
HOW did Bernhard Goetz's lawyer, Barry Slotnick, win acquittal for the subway gunman on charges of attempted murder and assault?
Bernhard Goetz, the subway gunman, became the emblem of people's fears of subway violence.
For a Gentler World Undeterred by his unsuccessful 2001 run for mayor, Bernard Goetz, the "subway gunman," is back, this time seeking an office a little bit lower.