MeadowMuffin
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These murders were indescribably heinous and abhorrent. If any crime demands the DP, this is it.
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I'm assuming this case won't be streamed anywhere? I really wish it could be!
Cameras are banned in PA courtrooms.I'm assuming this case won't be streamed anywhere? I really wish it could be!
That was several years ago --I think DA dropped DP when they were negotiating the plea agreement. Currently, they are seeking life sentence.The DA is seeking DP.
Seattle1 said:snipped by me...
That was several years ago --I think DA dropped DP when they were negotiating the plea agreement. Currently, they are seeking life sentence.
Son testifies against Berks mom accused of killing his 2 siblings: 'I just don’t see her as my mother anymore'
Testifying for the prosecution on the second day of Lisa Snyder’s murder trial in the hanging deaths of two of her children, her adult son made it clear he did not believe his mother’s story.…www.mainlinemedianews.com
9/17/24
Testifying for the prosecution on the second day of a bench trial in front of Berks President Judge M. Theresa Johnson, Snyder’s surviving child made it clear he did not believe his mother’s story.
Owen Snyder said his little brother wasn’t suicidal, indicating that claims made by his mother that he had been suffering from bullying at school weren’t true.
“He was a happy-go-lucky kid,” he said. “He always wanted to be doing something. He was always playing with his little sister.”
The picture he painted of his brother was one similar to the one shared by employees of the Kutztown School District on the first day of the trial Monday. Those employees — a teacher, counselor, bus driver and therapists — said Connor was a cheerful child who gave no indications that he was suffering from depression or suicidal thoughts.
That’s why, Owen Snyder said, it came as a shock to him when his mother told him about a month before Connor’s death that the child was struggling with bullying. Owen Snyder said he asked his little brother about his mom’s claims, and that Connor seemed confused.
Connor, according to Owen, said he loved school, riding on the bus and playing with his friends.
“He was always the kid everyone loved,” Owen Snyder said.
Owen Snyder said he had a close relationship with his younger siblings, in particular with Connor. His brother would get excited to see Owen when he would get home from his after-school job, often wanting to play video games with him on his XBox.
That’s why Owen Snyder said he believes Connor would have told him if he was dealing with depression.
He said he also believes that his little brother had physical limitations that would have made setting up the hanging of him and his sister difficult, if not impossible.