aggressive and bombastic reputation. Crouch assigned him the task of marshaling the witnesses and handling law enforcement officers. Charles ''Charlie" Butts had a quiet, dignified, and deliberate courtroom manner. The results of their work, however, were similar; they put criminals in jail. Both men had brilliant legal minds and were up to the task of prosecuting Kenneth. The charge of working up the case, however, largely fell on the lap of "a quiet man who almost never raises his voice"Charlie Butts. 9
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Judge Byron Matthews presided over the McDuff trial. Before becoming a judge, Matthews was considered one of the best lawyers in all of northern Texas. He would be one of the first lawyers inducted into the Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association Hall of Fame. "He was tougher than a boot," Charlie Butts would say. In the McDuff trial, as in all of his trials, Matthews maintained control of his courtroom. 10
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During the proceedings a number of reports of planned assassination attempts reached Sheriff Lon Evans's office. As a result, security in and around the courthouse was extraordinarily tight. Evans posted four armed deputies and three bailiffs around McDuff. At one point, even a District Judge was prevented from entering the courtroom. 11
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The McDuff family attended the trial en force . "The mama was very much the matriarch," Charlie Butts remembered. "I just can't bring myself to believe Kenneth could do such a thing," Addie said. "I can only hope they are wrong about my boy," added J. A. 12 Throughout the trial, Addie, her daughters (including the twelve-year-old), Lonnie (charges against him had been dropped) and his wife, and a girl named Maryane, who claimed to be Kenneth's girlfriend, attended the trial. (Maryane apparently did not care that Kenneth had been arrested while on a date with another girl.) The family announced that J. A. suffered from a heart condition and would stay in Rosebud. (It is more likely that he stayed home to work; he lived for almost thirty more years.)
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It did not take long for Addie to draw attention to herself. She whined that Brady Pamplin had finally succeeded in getting Kenneth into serious trouble. She maintained Kenneth's innocence by claiming that he was with a young girl at the time of the murders. (This, too, did not seem to matter to Maryane.) According to Addie, Kenneth refused to divulge her identity because the girl was from his church. "He won't say anything about it. He thinks she should be the one to say." Addie concluded, "He's too good for his own good." 13
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