This is just a comment on the trial system (for the lawyers to respond to), where each side can put forth a scenario of the events for the jury, neither of which is in full accord with the evidence and/or with common sense. And it's left for the jury to see where each side is trying to mislead them.
On the defense side, we have the Arias version of events on June 4, which obviously doesn't hold water. But they are the defense. Supposedly (or hopefully) the State is held to a higher standard of forthrightness. But such was not really the case here. Martinez, in his very effective closing argument (brought me to tears), put forth a detailed scenario of the events of June 4 which also does not ultimately hold water. Nurmi pointed some of these things out in his closing argument. She apparently had multiple opportunities to shoot him earlier, such as when she was watching him in his office, or when he was asleep, or when his back was turned in the shower. Yet, even though she had planned to kill him for a week, she let those go by. Then she has him seated in the shower, and she still avoids using the gun. She instead chooses to engage this strong male in hand-to-hand combat to the death with a knife, for some illogical reason. Even though she has coldly been planning it for a week, she stupidly takes this huge risk just to make the killing more 'personal' with a knife, or some such reason, and happens to get lucky with a strike to his vena cava. (Yeah, she studied how to get a knife strike right between the ribs or whatever, haha.) This is, IMO, not what really happened, because it doesn't really make sense. The real truth is probably somewhere between Arias' and the State's versions. And if so, how would that match up to the definitions of the various crime designations?
So, IMO, neither the State's nor the defense's proposed versions of the events are likely accurate, and they had to realize that. Yet, because Martinez was simply a more effective storyteller than Nurmi, his questionable version is accepted by the jury. Remember that when JM gave his rebuttal to Nurmi's closing, he avoided dealing with these issues I have discussed above. He didn't talk about why she didn't shoot Travis while he was sleeping, or with his back turned in the shower. (Yes I realize that the evidence of the pre-June 4 things that JA did is also important. I am only speaking here to the events at Travis' house on June 4.)
Why is the State allowed to be an obvious advocate and give a version which has obvious logical holes in it, instead of being an unbiased reporter and interpreter of events?