Jim was not going to miss the Fabergé sale and the opportunity to add to his cherished collection of jeweled Fabergé eggs, cigarette cases, snuff boxes, etc. The court allowed Jim to go as long as his bond was raised to $100,000. Once again, he asked Joe to go with him to safeguard his health and the large sums of cash he took along for his purchases. Three days after the shooting on May 6, Jim and Joe left on a plane to London, and then later to Geneva.
As the local media became fully engaged in reporting the shooting, Danny's troubled and tarnished reputation was exposed. While a number of Jim's friends knew or at least suspected he was gay, once the nature of his relationship with a violent and marijuana-dependent male prostitute was known, it became a scandal. The acceptance by Savannah's elite that Jim had worked for so diligently began to unravel.
On Friday, June 12, Chatham County Prosecutor Spencer Lawton presented his evidence to a grand jury, which indicted Jim for premeditated murder ("with malice aforethought," in legal terminology). The indictment was shocking and very damaging to the reputation of a respected antiques dealer with no history of violent behavior. Worse for Jim, Danny's mother, Emily Bannister, the woman who repeatedly rejected her son, immediately filed a $10 million-plus civil lawsuit against Jim for murdering her son-"execution-style."
Jim did not behave like a man who was guilty. He went to Europe a second time that year to buy antiques and, as usual, hosted his famous Christmas party for Savannah's socialites. Reportedly, some invited guests did not attend because they thought having the party the same year as the shooting was in bad taste.
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