She has the right to remain silent but she obviously doesn't have the ability.
Haha. I agree! Someone said no offense attorney would touch her with a ten foot pole? There is always a lawyer who wants the national spotlight!!
I don’t necessarily think some lawyer she says her friend Laura knows necessarily wants her as his client. Just because he might not be licensed in the right state or even have the right kind of expertise. But it’s absolutely possible when she gets back to Colorado that a defense lawyer might volunteer to take on such a high profile case!
IMO, everybody above a certain level of status, calls their "attorney friend"/generic attorney (estate planning, etc.) if anyone they know gets thrown into jail.
Most people have not got a criminal attorney on speed dial; and everybody under a certain level of economic, etc. privilege, thinks every lawyer knows everything about every court and discipline of law (not true).
My lawyer (corporate) would have known the names of a handful of criminal lawyers, to whom they have personally referred cases in the past. I doubt he would have said anything to any client he didn't represent; so yes, it takes time.
This is my problem. I don't understand how someone can say he is going to come home, and I am going to be owed an apology; knowing that he is dead. It boggles me. Is there still a possibility that she didn't do this?
But then I go back to the lies and the haunting videos. I'm just so lost.
Don't be. I had a friend in middle school who was a compulsive liar, and I've done a fair bit of studying about "what we can psychologically learn about compulsive liars".
Firstly, the overarching principle is, "Compulsive lying, in and of itself, is more a symptom than a disease."
Not all compulsive liars are sociopaths.
Nor are they all psychopaths.
Nor are they all children of alcoholics/drug addicts (though they absolutely can be, which is the primary category I think my friend belonged in).
They lie as simply as breathing; because the goal is "not to be wrong".
It doesn't matter whether the lies are true; or make any sense. It just matters that they keep on lying; because if they get pinned down, they can't get punished about anything.
Look at this case just for an example. The primary suspect, now in jail, has said the word "CLEAR!" in connection with this case, more often than your average SWAT team member does in an entire month (which is probably what she's thinking of when she pronounces all her nonsense "cleared").
We now know, just for one example, that LE never said a single thing to her about being "clear" or "free" in connection with any of her activities.
Also, I stop to add that it's now overwhelmingly likely that zero, that's right zero, of her babble about "shadows" and "shadow technology", means a damn thing; because we now all know that she never stopped being a suspect to LE, and LE doesn't go around talking about techniques they use to clear suspects, to any of said suspects.
That's why LE continually says things like "nobody has yet been ruled out in connection with this investigation"; and why you should be suspicious of anyone that tells you that they have been.
If it helps, think of Tee and her ilk as more like "lying sharks".
Much like how if a shark stops swimming, it dies in the water; Tee-splainers think if they stop lying, they die. Therefore, they will continue to throw up "tornadoes of word salad" (TM poster who came before me) in the hopes that nobody manages to see through it to the tornado's eye; they're talking simply because they are compelled to keep talking.
If you're compelled by an internal engine to never stop talking, eventually you, too, run out of things both coherent and possible which can be said about any given situation.