Neither cared to show his hand and disclose the cards he held. It was Monday, February 4, 1907—a fateful day, coming after seven months and ten days' imprisonment for Thaw in the Tombs.
The prosecution made a most remarkable record when it presented its opening statement in ten minutes and followed it with less than two hours of testimony, closing in time for the noon recess. The defense announced it would open its case with a statement by Attorney J. B. Gleason.
The purpose of the prosecution was readily apparent—throwing upon the defense the burden of disclosing its case, reserving the while the state's hardest fire for rebuttal later when Thaw's lawyers had exhausted themselves and their material.
Opening shots of the legal battle royal were fired by Assistant District Attorney Garvan, of counsel for the state.
He congratulated the jurors on their body having been completed and then outlined the purpose of the law, which was not seeking for vengeance, but to uphold the security of the state, he said. He urged the importance of the case and a strict observance of the law in order that a verdict, fair to all, might be reached.
It was the claim of the people, he said, that on the night of June 25, 1906, the defendant "shot and killed with premeditation and intent to kill" one Stanford White. He then briefly outlined the movements of