Sworn Affidavit
Sworn statement of Carl, described in the file only as 'day-one believer,' entered into file PP-08-21-9420. The witness has no official relationship to the defendant and asked that this be noted as proof he has 'no reason to lie and every reason to be believed.'
I'm not family. I'm not a cop. I'm not a heron or a gnat or a mother. I'm just Carl, and I've believed in PeePoo since day one, and I want to explain to this court exactly what 'day one' was, because it's evidence. Day one was the day I dropped my whole week's mayflies in the current and watched them float off, and a frog I'd never met dove in after them. All of them. Came up soaked, handed them back, and said 'you dropped these.' That was PeePoo. I've believed in him ever since. You would too.
Here's the thing the prosecution doesn't want to hear: the frog literally cannot tell a lie. I know because I've tested it. Repeatedly. I've asked him if my croak sounds good — it doesn't, and he told me so, kindly, at length, with suggestions. I've asked him if he liked a rock I painted. He said the rock was 'a brave choice.' A frog who can't even lie about a rock did not forge seventeen checks. Forgery is a lie you sign. His tongue doesn't bend that way. I've watched it try to be polite and fail. It cannot bend toward a lie to save its own life.
I would vouch for PeePoo in any court in any swamp, and I've made a point of saying so in several. I'm not under any obligation. Nobody paid me in mayflies. I'm here because when a frog dives into a current for a stranger's groceries, you spend the rest of your life ready to dive into a courtroom for his. That's the whole economy of it. Kindness compounds. He made a deposit on day one and I'm just paying the interest.
I've never met the twin and I don't want to. But I've heard the transmissions — the smug ones, the ones nobody signs. A frog who won't sign his own boasts is a frog who knows what his signature's worth in a courtroom. PeePoo signs everything. Notes, cards, confessions of finding a nice gnat. If he'd done it, he'd have signed it and turned himself in by lunch. That's not a defense strategy. That's just Carl telling you who the frog is.