In the weeks after the sentencing, the moment of his collapse became a kind of unspoken reference point, a shared memory that hovered over every conversation about the case. Lawyers who prided themselves on detachment found themselves replaying the image of his hands clawing at the edge of the defense table, as if he could hold on to the life that had just been taken from him in principle, if not yet in practice. Reporters, accustomed to distilling human lives into headlines, hesitated before filing their stories, aware that no angle could fully contain what they had witnessed.
For the families, that instant carved a permanent line through time: before the verdict and after it. Some found solace in the belief that a measure of balance had been restored; others were haunted by the sight of a human being unraveling beneath the weight of state-sanctioned finality. In the end, the case faded from public discourse, replaced by newer scandals and fresher outrage, but that image in the courtroom endured. It lived on in quiet reflections, in late-night doubts, in the uneasy recognition that justice, when it finally arrives, does not come cleanly. It shatters, it scars, and it leaves behind a silence that echoes far longer than any sentence pronounced from the bench.
