But again, that makes the assumption they have not provided everything they know.
Do the Spierers have a prepared list of questions they could present to the attorneys? That's probably the best they should hope for and I'd be curious if they've tried that or not. It would help if they could go to the media and say here are the questions we want answers to and they are refusing to answer these questions. Assuming the public looks at the questions and says... "Why wouldn't they answer those questions? They are simple questions that the family needs answers to" then that puts pressure on JR, MB, and CR. This back and forth about whether they've been cooperative or not doesn't sway me. Particularly when it sounds to me like they were cooperative to some point, allowed searches, JR had a meeting, etc.. I'd need to know what the Spierers think they aren't answering.
I don't know what the consensus of the forum was but I'd be shocked if any attorney would advise his client coming back to Bloomington was a good idea unless they were certain they are not guilty. It's pretty easy to say (quite truthfully) that this case would haunt them as students here at IU and they'd be dogged by questions and innuendo regardless of guilt. And if guilty, the IU campus would provide a pressure cooker and countless situations where they would always be under suspicion and their words watched and parsed continually that would eventually lead to their apprehension.
So, I cannot see an attorney advising them to return to Bloomington. You'd rather have the people of Bloomington thinking them guilty for not returning and a clean start on a campus far away where this story isn't in the news and without all the personal connections. Let alone without the watchful eye of law enforcement always nearby. If any attorney advised them to return, he's a fool IMHO.
Do the Spierers have a prepared list of questions they could present to the attorneys? That's probably the best they should hope for and I'd be curious if they've tried that or not. It would help if they could go to the media and say here are the questions we want answers to and they are refusing to answer these questions. Assuming the public looks at the questions and says... "Why wouldn't they answer those questions? They are simple questions that the family needs answers to" then that puts pressure on JR, MB, and CR. This back and forth about whether they've been cooperative or not doesn't sway me. Particularly when it sounds to me like they were cooperative to some point, allowed searches, JR had a meeting, etc.. I'd need to know what the Spierers think they aren't answering.
I don't know what the consensus of the forum was but I'd be shocked if any attorney would advise his client coming back to Bloomington was a good idea unless they were certain they are not guilty. It's pretty easy to say (quite truthfully) that this case would haunt them as students here at IU and they'd be dogged by questions and innuendo regardless of guilt. And if guilty, the IU campus would provide a pressure cooker and countless situations where they would always be under suspicion and their words watched and parsed continually that would eventually lead to their apprehension.
So, I cannot see an attorney advising them to return to Bloomington. You'd rather have the people of Bloomington thinking them guilty for not returning and a clean start on a campus far away where this story isn't in the news and without all the personal connections. Let alone without the watchful eye of law enforcement always nearby. If any attorney advised them to return, he's a fool IMHO.