If you are new to this thread, every night of the #Delphi murders trial, I’ll be posting about what I observed inside the courtroom. Here we go with the Day 3 edition. Lots to share from a tough day in the Carroll Co courtroom…
13 Things To Know From The Delphi Murders Trial Today - Oct 21 🧵
1. I spoke to one of the victims’ relatives Sat after court. The families had just had a private viewing of the crime scene photos. Seeing the graphic pics was devastating but helped prep them for today. #wthr
2. Today was the day jurors got their 1st look at dozens of bloody crime scene photos. They were as horrible as you might imagine. I’ll warn you: the details I’m about to share are disturbing. I’m providing them here simply because when seeking justice, facts are important. #wthr
3. Jurors saw 147 photos taken by State Police CSI investigators. Pics show the girls’ bodies lying in the woods w their throats slit. Libby’s body was naked, her face & hands covered in blood. Abby was wearing a sweatshirt & jeans, blood visible on her neck w deep wound. #wthr
4. All 3 ISP investigators who took pics/collected evidence at the crime scene testified. They showed photos of the ground near the bodies “saturated in blood.” Another pic showed blood on a nearby tree. The photos were shown on that large video screen in the courtroom. #wthr
5. Several jurors outwardly struggled as they viewed the graphic photos. One put his hand over his mouth & his face turned bright red. Another took slow, deep breaths, trying to settle herself while viewing the evidence. After 90 minutes of pics, jurors were given a 90-min break.
6. The families of Abby & Libby were also shaken. Both moms cried. At times, they turned away or put their heads down to avoid seeing the most graphic images. Pics of the girls’ faces, Libby’s hands & feet, the aerial & low angle shots…it was a LOT to take in for everyone. #wthr
7. The point of today’s testimony wasn’t just to show jurors the crime scene pics but to allow investigators to explain how & where they collected evidence at “ground zero.” That’s the immediately area around the bodies where nearly all evidence was collected. #wthr
8. The investigators discussed where they found blood, sticks on the girls’ bodies, notable disturbances on the ground, etc, and jurors saw a CSI diagram of the crime scene. This is a rendering that I drew in my notes today based on the diagram shown to jurors. #wthr
9. The investigators were calm, professional & methodical as they answered questions, walking jurors through the crime scene. During cross exam, the defense challenged them on several photos & pieces of evidence—specifically honing in on the sticks & a bullet cartridge. #wthr
10. Defense attorney Brad Rozzi questioned the ISP investigators on why sticks on the bodies were not taken as evidence right away rather than returning later to gather them & place them into evidence. One CSI agent said it’s hard to get DNA off a stick so they saw little value.
11. Rozzi also grilled investigators about an unspent bullet cartridge they discovered between the bodies. He asked why they took no pics/video showing the item being removed from the scene, questioning the chain of custody and integrity of the evidence collection. #wthr
12. The ISP investigator who found the cartridge testified he brushed away leaves near the evidence very gently. Another said there’s no reason to video the evidence being removed from the ground. The bullet, which the state later tested & linked to Allen, is central to the case.
13. For a full rundown of Day 3 testimony & evidence, here’s the 13News Delphi Debrief with more details from me & @EmilyWTHR & insight from our brilliant 13News legal analyst Katie Jackson-Lindsay. We do this every night after testimony is complete. #wthr wthr.com/mobile/article…
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Leaving #Delphi tonight after being here for nearly 4 full weeks. Just a few things to pass along…
1. From a visual standpoint, things are starting to return to pre-trial Delphi. The barricades & barriers have been hauled away and courthouse square is now fully open. #wthr
2. How strange to be able to walk into any Carroll County courthouse entrance freely with no signs of police, sheriff deputies or security anywhere. Inside the courthouse, security has returned to how it was before the Delphi murders trial. That would be no security at all.
3. The metal detectors purchased for the trial are no longer being monitored. I’m told they don’t need to be. No metal detectors used at the CC courthouse prior to this trial. No need for them now.
13 Things To Know From The #Delphi Murders Trial Today - Nov 8🧵
1. No verdict today. On the first full day of deliberations, jurors arrived around 8:55am & left the courthouse at 3:50pm. For those keeping score at home, that’s roughly 9 hours of deliberation time so far. #wthr
2. A lot of folks I spoke to outside the courthouse expected a verdict today—especially since it’s Friday & the assumption is the sequestered jurors (understandably) want to reunite w their families in time for the weekend. It’s just not that simple. SO much evidence to review.
3. Making this case so complex: multiple timelines the jury must review (time of murders vs witness statements & forensic data, dates of confessions vs dates of RA mental health diagnosis) and 100% opposite testimony from state & defense experts on ballistics & RA mental health.
13 Things To Know From The #Delphi Murders Trial Today - Nov 4🧵
1. Important day for the defense. Their star witness was a neuropsychologist who presented compelling evidence that Richard Allen was mentally ill at the time he confessed to killing Abby & Libby. #wthr
2. Dr. Polly Westcott told jurors that she met with Allen in prison to conduct a series of psychological exams on him. She also reviewed prison videos, phone calls Allen made in prison, medical records & staff notes to write a 127-page report with a detailed set of conclusions.
3. Among her conclusions: Richard Allen suffered from Major Depressive Disorder and Psychosis, had significant mental and physical decline, and was not faking or exaggering his mental health problems during the time period that he confessed to killing Abby & Libby.
13 Things To Know From The #Delphi Murders Trial Today - Nov 2🧵
1. The jury got to see the jail videos we discussed yesterday: 15 camcorder videos taken by guards at the Westville prison. The defense says they show the harsh conditions Richard Allen was subjected to. #wthr
2. The defense contends those conditions caused Allen to be psychotic, prompting him to make 60+ false confessions to the murders. The jury spent about 2 hours watching these videos, but no one else in the gallery was allowed to see them. Theoretically. More on that in a moment…
3. Only jurors got to see these videos bc some of them show Allen naked in different areas of the prison. A large video screen in the courtroom was angled & moved close to jurors to prevent others from viewing the videos. But a few reporters in the 1st row could see them anyway.
13 Things To Know From The #Delphi Murders Trial Today - Nov 1🧵
1. Today was the first full day of testimony for the defense. They had a strong strategy to counter Thursday’s damaging jailhouse confessions played for the jury. But that strategy blew up in their face. #wthr
2. They called Max Baker to testify. He’s a defense team intern who compiled months of prison video obtained through discovery, including video of Richard Allen in & out of his cell—highlighting his treatment & mental decline. Could have been powerful, but the jury never saw it.
3. Prosecutor Nick McLeland objected to jurors seeing the IDOC videos bc the defense couldn’t verify the dates they were recorded. Judge Gull ruled the jury CAN see the videos at a later date—IF the defense can prove the videos are from the same time period of RA’s confessions.
13 Things To Know From The #Delphi Murders Trial Today - Oct 31🧵
1. This afternoon the State rested its case against Richard Allen, but not before presenting its most powerful evidence. The jury got to hear more confessions — this time, in Allen’s own words and own voice. #wthr
2. To say these recorded confessions were damaging to Allen’s defense would be a gross understatement. Hearing a man saying over & over again that he killed two girls — making the incriminating statements to his wife & mother — is something the jury cannot un-hear.
3. Let me first show you some of the confessions so you understand the words Allen spoke, then we’ll discuss the tone & context — which are both very important. These images represent portions of 4 calls as I tried to create transcripts in real time as they played for jurors.