Some highlights from closing arguments:
"We’ve got phone records. We’ve got video. If we had a witness, he would’ve needed glasses," Livesay told the jury, saying no evidence would be good enough for the defense.
Over and over again, Livesay said Moorer's actions on and after the night Elvis disappeared made no sense.
"Why are you removing the SD card?" she asked. "Why are you powering your phone off in the middle of the night?"
Moorer, who chose not to testify in his own defense, looked on.
"Why would you lie to police unless you had something to hide?" she continued. Referencing some of her favorite books, she continued: "There's no doubt who the villain is. It's Sidney Moorer."
She told them the Elvis' quest for justice would not end until they came back with a guilty verdict, and admitted she didn't have enough evidence to bring murder charges against Moorer.
"Her freedom was cut off," Livesay said. "That I know beyond a reasonable doubt."
Defense Attorney Jarrett Bouchette used his time to remind jurors that police made missteps in investigating the teenager's death before they realized they needed to launch a full-blown missing persons investigation.
"Nothing actually puts him at the [Peachtree Boat Landing]," he said. "There's no DNA anywhere."
Referencing an unexpected video that prosecutors played, showing Moorer and his wife power washing their truck after Elvis disappeared, he swept his arm at the defendant.
"We just heard that he was standing there at his house, vacuuming his car," he said. "That's their excuse [for the lack of DNA evidence]. The truck doesn't go to the landing. That's why there's no DNA."
Finally, Bouchette reminded the jury of the burden they had to overcome, telling the jurors that a verdict of not guilty would not be a personal attack against the Elvis family.
"We don't send people to prison on circumstantial evidence," he said.
'There's no doubt who the villain is:' Closing arguments in Sidney Moorer trial