The trial of Kendall Felix, the man accused of helping to murder Brooklyn-landlord Menachem Stark, is coming to an end. The jury is deliberating as of Friday morning. Attorneys delivered their closing arguments yesterday, and it was a tense day for nearly everyone involved. The only exception? Felix himself, who fell asleep during court, The New York Post reported today.

It was during the prosecutor Howard Jackson’s summation that Felix decided to doze.

Jackson acknowledged that the state does not yet have sufficient evidence to convict the two people they suspect Felix worked with. However, Jackson said that this wasn’t a concern for Felix’s own trial. “The defendant is the only one you can place at each critical and important step [of Stark’s murder],” he said. The New York Daily News says that Jackson went on to detail the many phone calls they know Felix made from outside Stark’s office on the day he was abducted. Felix had also made a confession to police, which he has since recanted.

Felix was more alert for his own lawyer’s arguments. Attorney Jack Goldberg said that Felix had been manipulated into making his confession and that he’d been railroaded by the City. “This case, the death of Menachem Stark, needed resolution. Kendel Felix was the resolution,” Goldberg said.