jillycat
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- Oct 24, 2012
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I don't understand why they won't reveal her location. Surely they're not banking on an acquittal in the absence of a body? I don't think finding the body would be as damning as it might seemif there's enough decomposition isn't it pretty likely there wouldn't be that much tying the M's to the COD, assuming the evidence found at the house didn't point to a specific method of murder? The SK angle could even advantage the defense in that case. But that would still leave the circumstantial (and direct?) evidence found at their home, which is the exact same position they're in now. So why, why, why drag this out? Their reputations are ruined. Revealing the location could only improve their image at this point, however marginally.
Am I missing some sort of courtroom strategy here? Even if they drag out the plea like Sierra Lamar's killer, that's still years of waiting in a jail cell, probably in isolation. Same outcome as facing the heat and accepting the sentence, save for a family getting to lay their daughter to rest.
There's no courtroom strategy until all the evidence is in, all the charges are made, and discovery is complete. LE may have more charges in mind, depending on what they know or will find as the investigation continues. All the lawyers know at this point is what the warrants say, and what SM and TM tell them, if anything. So they're in the dark for now as far as LE's big picture and what cards LE holds.
The M's, or perhaps one of them, might decide to seek a plea deal depending on what emerges in future charges and discovery. If they're doomed based on evidence, I would think that will be the time to talk and bargain. But I'm assuming no lawyer would advise his client to sing at this stage when what LE has, or will produce in the future, is still an unknown, and the body is still missing. This is still very early in the criminal case with a host of procedural activities to come before a trial happens.