The courthouse was already buzzing with activity by 8:00 a.m. Attorneys hurried through hallways balancing case files, clerks shuffled paperwork at their desks, and security officers nodded respectfully as familiar faces passed by. It was the type of day where everything moved with a smooth, predictable rhythm—until an unexpected interruption disrupted the order of Courtroom 3B.

Judge Margaret Collins, known for her strict punctuality and keen attention to detail, had just taken her seat to begin the morning session. As she glanced over the docket, she noticed movement near the front of the room. A man in a simple button-down shirt, holding a stack of documents and what looked like a cleaning rag, cautiously stepped toward the counsel tables.
He wasn’t wearing a suit, didn’t carry a briefcase, and didn’t resemble any attorney she recognized.
Judge Collins raised an eyebrow. “Excuse me, sir,” she said sharply. “The cleaning staff completed their duties earlier. You’re not supposed to be in the courtroom during session.”
The man looked up, caught off guard. “Oh my apologies, Your Honor. I was told to come straight here.”
The judge, unimpressed, gestured toward the exit. “Please leave. We are about to begin proceedings.”
The man hesitated. “Your Honor… I believe there’s been a misunderstanding.”
A Mistaken Identity Unfolds
The courtroom spectators stirred, some exchanging amused glances. Judge Collins’s patience grew thin. “Sir, I don’t have time for this. Which department do you work for?”
“Well,” the man said awkwardly, “technically… the legal department.”
The courtroom fell silent.
Judge Collins stared at him for a moment, unsure whether he was joking. “Are you suggesting you’re an attorney?”
The man reached into his pocket and pulled out a state bar ID card. “My name is David Carlisle. I’m the new defense attorney assigned to the Henderson case.”
Gasps and whispers filled the room. The judge blinked, realizing her mistake. The man she had mistaken for a cleaner was, in fact, the newly appointed attorney—one she had been expecting but had never met in person.
David gave a small, uncomfortable smile. “It’s my first day,” he added.
The Attorney’s Unusual Background
During a brief recess, Judge Collins called David to her chambers. She wanted to better understand who he was, how he appeared in a courtroom without the typical attire, and why the misunderstanding had unfolded so strangely.
David explained everything honestly.
He had grown up in a low-income neighborhood, working part-time custodial jobs through high school and college to pay for textbooks, bus fare, and groceries. For years, he worked night shifts at office buildings—cleaning floors, emptying trash bins, and polishing desks—while attending law school during the day.
Even after graduating and passing the bar, he occasionally returned to cleaning jobs when legal work was slow, never feeling ashamed of the path he’d taken.
“Today was supposed to be my first day in a new chapter,” he said. “I bought a suit, but it’s being tailored. So I came in the nicest clothes I had ready.”
Judge Collins listened quietly, processing the humility and resilience his story revealed. She realized her assumptions had come from her own biases—expecting attorneys to look a certain way.
“I misjudged you,” she admitted. “And I appreciate your professionalism despite the situation.”