You make fine arguments, but I still have unanswered questions and that makes me have doubts about this case. I see so many loose ends that the prosecution has failed to tie up. I'm still playing devil's advocate and waiting until after the closings are finished. One thing though. Either DP was a smart cop able to make a murder look like an accident or he was just stupid. He can't be both and that's the impression I'm getting.
But it was the middle of the night in a small sleepy neighborhood. Where is he supposed to go and dispose of the bloody evidence without being seen by someone he know? He cannot get caught being out at 3 am or he is done for.
The safest thing was for him to go home and throw the clothes in the wash, imo.
I think the DT really failed to bring a good closing argument. I am curious to hear the rebuttal from the prosecution.
Thank you to those that have been doing such an awesome job in keeping us updated!
I still think DP will walk.
I don't think I would be able to find someone guilty based on hearsay.
So if the jury comes back with a not guilty verdict, I will not be mad.
going by the law, I would have to find him not guilty.
JMO
BBM
Why can't he be both? Jails are full of people who think they committed 'the perfect crime'.
There are many other things he could have done rather than take the chance of bringing the crime scene into his home. Plus, he would have to dispose of that particular evidence 2 times vs 1 time. Doesn't make a lick of sense. Guess we have to agree to disagree on this one.
In Session Kathy and Steve had a midnight quarrel, and Kathy hung up on Steve . . . thats around midnight [on Saturday]. We know the Pontarellis come home, in two different vehicles at two different times . . . they saw the light on from inside the bedroom. And Mary [Pontarelli] is her best friend . . . so Mary assumes shes studying. That evening, no dogs bark, no neighbors overheard [anything]; the neighborhood is nice and quiet.
He can be both if thats what you want him to be. But having been a cop for as many years as he was, I have to give him a little more credit than that.
There are many other things he could have done rather than take the chance of bringing the crime scene into his home. Plus, he would have to dispose of that particular evidence 2 times vs 1 time. Doesn't make a lick of sense. Guess we have to agree to disagree on this one.
There are many other things he could have done rather than take the chance of bringing the crime scene into his home. Plus, he would have to dispose of that particular evidence 2 times vs 1 time. Doesn't make a lick of sense. Guess we have to agree to disagree on this one.
In Session The State gets the last word, if they want. They dont have to have a rebuttal, if they think their case is so great . . . they go last because they have the burden of proof . . . I just ask you to do one thing: growing up as a kid, I never got the last word in with my mother, never! But think what our response would be to their rebuttal . . . what would Lopez and the others say? Thats deliberations. Youre going to go back, and then you can start your deliberations. You dont have to come back at 5:00. You can come back whenever you want to . . . but when you go back there, I want you to think of that, how that lawyer [Harry Smith] laughed in this courtroom. Think about that! That ends the defense summation.
I can't believe Lopez really said that. The cat ate the pie? OMG. Wow, does the DT think they lost the case? Because this closing thus far, awful.
One last thing for me on this. DP was on foot that night, not in a car. Where in the world was he going to run to, on foot, to dispose of bloody clothes?
He couldn't drop it off in a backyard of a neighbor as it would have been discovered by someone else. Also, in that scenario, he would not be able to go back to that yard during the day to retrieve it as he would be seen.
This is a subdivision, not a strip mall with a multitude of garbage cans. He has no choice to bring the clothes back, IMO.
He can be both if thats what you want him to be. But having been a cop for as many years as he was, I have to give him a little more credit than that.
Where could he have put them at 3 am in that neighborhood? I can only think of a few places. Some random garbage cans, or dumpsters maybe. But that seems much more dangerous than just going to the safety of his own home.
I am not sure why you think it was so dangerous to wash the clothes there. She was not going to be found for a few hours so he knew he had plenty of time to dispose of the evidence.
Won't they be sequestered during deliberation? Not sure I understand what he saying. If he predicts a verdict by 9:30, the jury would have been sequestered? :waitasec: