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.
4. The defense was still able to get the jury info suggesting Allen was mentally impaired at the time of his confessions. IDOC behavioral health director Dr. Deanna Dwenger testified RA was diagnosed with Serious Mental Illness & designated Gravely Disabled around that time.
5. She also said solitary confinement can be toxic for mental health & could have made RA worse. So while jurors didn’t get to see prison videos to help counteract the powerful audio statements, the defense did start planting seeds about RA’s mental health at time of confessions.
6. Before discussing the other witnesses, it’s important to mention what Gull ruled at the end of today’s testimony. She ruled (again) the defense CANNOT introduce evidence & witnesses related to their Odinism & alternate perpetrator theory—a big part of the defense strategy.
7. Former Delphi police chief Steve Mullin & former Carroll Co sheriff Tobe Leazenby also testified today. The defense blasted Mullin for erased suspect interviews early in the investigation & got Leazenby to acknowledge he originally thought there were multiple killers.
8. Local residents Brad Heath & David McCain told jurors what they saw the day Abby & Libby were killed. Baker said he saw a blue car that seemed out of place near the trail & McCain took photos on the Monon High Bridge the afternoon of the murders. Said he didn’t see Bridge Guy.
9. Chris Goote, a police officer who helped interview possible suspects right after the murders, said he didn’t recall anything from his interview with Brad Weber (now of interest to the defense). Even after being shown a report about his interview, he still recalled nothing.
10. Former Delphi fire chief Darrell Sterrett testified he helped search along the creek the night the girls went missing, but he & others didn’t see the bodies in the woods or the clothes recovered the next day from the creek. Were they just hard to see in the dark or not there?
11. Today’s testimony was punctuated by frequent objections, sidebars & delays. Don’t expect that to change. McLeland seems very willing to fight to prevent jurors from seeing evidence & testimony that he wants excluded. And some of today’s testimony was ripe for objection.
12. Jurors continue to be engaged & ask great questions. My favorite of the day was a question that led the DOC mental health expert to explain to jurors how to tell when an inmate has a real mental illness & when they are faking it—something these jurors will be asked to decide.
13. I’m getting comments asking why I didn’t mention X or why I left out Y & Z.
It’s hard to include a day’s worth of testimony in 13 brief points. To see more, check out the 13News Delphi Debrief — Day 13 edition. We can fit in a lot in 48 minutes.
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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 - 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.
2. The first witness Monday was Stacy Bozinovski (pictured right). She’s an ISP DNA analyst who tested dozens of evidence samples from the #Delphi crime scene to see if any DNA could be detected from those samples that would reveal the identity of the killer(s).
3. Bozinovski said she tested clothing; the cartridge at the crime scene; blood found on the girls, on the ground & on a tree; Libby’s cell phone; & items from Richard Allen’s house (among other items) while looking forDNA — specifically from a male. She found lots of DNA but…