to meet with Abraham every couple of months at the William J. Maxey Boys Detention Facility in. Whitmore Lake. Their time together didn't have much to do with the case, Bagdade said. "We talked about sports a lot. I'd bring him up to date on what was going on in the world. He was interested. He didn't always understand. "He loves jokes. He has a great sense of humor. As he matured, we kind of talked about life in general, about how he was doing at school and in therapy." Bagdade wasn't allowed to bring him gifts. So he'd donate magazines such as Sports Illustrated and Time to the Maxey facility, hoping that Abraham would have access to them. "Nate was leading a life unlike any other young man in the United States:' Bagdade says. "His life was spent being told what to do and when to do it. "It's just unthinkable that he would come through this with such flying colors," Bagdade said. "Since he's such a smart kid, it didn't take long for him to catch up to his age level." Abraham earned his high school diplo- ma and began college classes at Maxey. "He became a leader," Bagdade says. Bagdade gives full credit to the teachers, social workers and therapists who worked with Nathaniel daily. And, he says, "his mother is tremendously involved in his life" as well as his older sister and adopted grandparents. It has resulted in Abraham becom- ing "a bright, articulate, curious, aware, hard-working, funny, interesting friend," Bagdade says. For the last six months, Abraham has been at a Bay City halfway house on a work-release program. "He socked away a good deal of money," Bagdade says. Abraham used some of it to buy the much-maligned outfit he wore on Jan. 18, when he was released from state supervision. It was the day before his 21st birthday. The white suit, pink shoes, rabbit coat and jaunty hat took even Bagdade by surprise. Ever in his corner, Bagdade says, "This was his big day in court. He was going to make an impression, and he wanted to look good. This was his orientation. In no way was he trying to make a disrespectful statement to the family [of Ronnie Green Jr.] or to the court. "He spent his entire life growing up behind bars. He thought he was being cool. Everyone in the [legal] system under- stood what the outfit was all about." Bagdade waited a day to call Abraham. "I didn't want someone from the justice system calling him his first night of true The Caseload Other highly charged cases include his 2002 repre- sentation of a 7-year-old girl in a suit to terminate the parental rights of her mother. The mother, a devil wor- shiper, had locked her daughter in a closet for extend- ed periods of time, convinced that the child was evil. In 2003, Bagdade represented a 3-year-old girl, also in a parental rights termination suit, who wit- nessed her father stab his ex-wife and her daughters in their Pontiac apartment. He is currently defending one of the youths charged with letting the air out of the tires last month in the Farmington Hills school bus case. The case has gener- ated a lot of press because it is one in a series of sub- urban school bus vandalisms. Sarita tries to monitor the news media requests when she's not teaching first grade at West Bloomfield's Ealy Elementary. "It's a little surreal to answer the phone and have 60 Minutes, or Geraldo, or Fox News or CNN on the other end," she says. In the wake of Abraham's release, Bagdade has been on the Mitch Albom and Frank Beckmann radio shows on Detroit's WJR, has been quoted in the press and interviewed by television reporters. freedom," he says. When the young man realized the furor his outfit had caused, "he was so upset and saddened," Bagdade says. "He called me a day later. He said, `Guess what, Dan? I went out and bought a new suit. It's a gray pinstripe.'" . That was the suit he wore when he made a tearful apology to the Greene fam- ily in the Chicago office of television talk show host Oprah Winfrey two weeks ago, Bagdade said. At Bagdade's insistence, "they changed the format to do the apology in Oprah's office instead of on television," the attor- ney says. "It brought closure to the Greene family and to Nathaniel." again, on-again message from the state. "I disagreed with what they wanted to do," Carley says. "But to promise him one thing and then back off on it isn't fair. I'm sure he relied on it." Still, Bagdade is optimistic about Abraham's future. He said the 21-year-old has been writing poetry and song lyrics for a long time. "He'd like to get into the music business." Asked whether that is a realistic goal, Bagdade says, "If you put a lot of talent together with a tremendous amount of passion and he gets a break ... There are people out there who are interested in helping him and want to give this boy a chance to succeed. No one wants him to State Support Promises made by the state Department of Human Services to Abraham about a par- tial subsidy were retracted, then at least partially reinstated. "It took me going straight to the direc- tor of DHS," Bagdade says. He's going to try to get more than the $1,200 for initial housing expenses, in accordance with what had been promised. At the same time, he says, "There's no justification for Nathaniel to get a free ride." Even prosecutor Carley, who spoke out against state support, was upset by the off- As for Bagdade, he hopes to remain Abraham's friend. A lack of friends, "that's one of the real holes in his life," he says. "I never really had any friends either in Children's Village or Maxey," Abraham confirms. "Dan was the one person outside of my family I could always depend on being there!' "We are joined at the hip forever," Bagdade says. I I "I never watch myself on TV," Bagdade says. "I never read the newspapers to see what they're say- ing. I never listen to myself on radio. I have a voice like Minnie Mouse. I'm my own worst critic." And, Sarita adds, "It's not the most important part of our lives." Bagdade says, "The gratifying thing, of course, is being able to help Nathaniel. "Part of what I've told him is that becoming involved in church life is the best thing he could do for himself. I've told him how much temple means in my life." Family Life Dan and Sarita are active at Temple Israel in West Bloomfield, where they regularly attend Friday night services and Sarita has served on the board. Both were excited to become grandparents on Feb. 2 with the birth of Ruby Bagdade, daughter of son Jeffrey, 30, an engineer, and his wife, Franki, a middle-school resource room teacher at Hillel Day School of Metropolitan Detroit in Farmington Hills. They live in Berkley. Other son, Michael, 27, is getting married in May. Statements by Nathaniel Abraham were transcribed and relayed by his attorney for this story. He was director of the second largest Jewish federa- tion camp in the country (behind Michigan-based Tamarack Camps). He recently left that position in New York to move to Chicago. Bagdade tries to exercise every day, but only, he says, "to get ready for the summer golf season. Golf is my passion." He was persuaded to reveal his upstairs den, which is lined with golf books and paraphernalia. "My friends call it The Shrine,' " he says. An entire wall of framed photographs show him playing at top-rated courses such as St. Andrews in Scotland and Pebble Beach in California. He belongs to Twin Beach Country Club in West Bloomfield. In his 20s, he says, he had a 3 handicap. It's now at 8. It's a sport that he shared with his father, his sons and would like to share with Abraham. "I've tried to get Nate interested in golf and he's beginning to come over," Bagdade says. "I told him a few years ago, 'I want you to come to my club and play golf with me.' " ii JI4 February 15 2007 17