IMO although perhaps having a female detective try to interview the killer to appeal to her woman to woman to insert a level of compassion or kinmanship ( or maybe kinwomanship, it turned out to be a huge misstep through noones fault as the police could not have realized the killer felt more comfortable with speaking to males vs females. When you listen to Rachel Bs conversation, the killer picked up many ideas to begin to formulate more lies in her defense and to have the basis for to blame someone else, thus again, deflecting responsibility for her actions. For instance- the disgusting letter she wrote to Travis family (dated on his birthday). Rachel gave the killer the idea to write them a letter.
There were, for me, several cringe worthy moments in that interview where Rachel provided food for thought for the killer to chew on.
Another example of the shell of the killers personality, her ability to mold herself using the good intentions or words of others to justify her own evil self.
Also I knew the Freemans brother killed himself but not why. Yet another example of what I mean above.
Her appeal will be denied. There were no procedural errors made in her trial. Nurmi did not provide ineffectual council. They cant prove this if only on the basis of the killed being saved from death row. There could have been no better outcome for the killer; there was more than enough evidence to convict.
Killer will do anything to stay in the spotlight.
Karen Clarks motive, IMO, is setting up the killers PCR case. Wonder if Clark is representing the killer pro bono. Maybe Clark is using the killer for her own notoriety to present herself in the community as an esquire brave enough to take on the case of those who think they had ineffective council & she can take in money for her practice.
What would motivate Clark? Narcissism? Money?
About what might be motivating Karen Clark, Esquire...
Nothing has changed my opinion that Ms. Clark genuinely feels righteous contempt & anger for attorneys she believes have acted unethically.
IMO, holding attorneys accountable for unethical conduct is both honorable and necessary. Prosecutors wield the fearful power of the State to deprive defendants of their liberty, and even of their lives. Dirty prosecutors represent an intolerable abuse of power by the State.
Defense attorneys have the solemn obligation to defend clients against the State's attempt to deprive the accused of their liberty or lives. Unethical defense attorneys not only fail their own clients and violate their due process rights, but as do dirty prosecutors, they erode the public's trust in our judicial system. (Climbs down off soap box.
).
But....that said, I'm thinking Clark's actions over the past year are more than a tad over zealous, and seem to reflect more than largely justifiable pursuit of attorney conduct she finds wicked.
In writing the book that he did, Nurmi disgraced himself and his profession, and Clark was right to accept nothing less than his disbarment. Her civil lawsuit against him, though, goes so far beyond that severe punishment as to be inexplicable, especially given the many frankly bogus charges and allegations she flings, wildly, for no less than over 40 pages.
Same thing with her pursuit of JM. JM made some not very smart personal choices during trial, including communicating with juror #3 in the retrial. Bringing that conduct to the Bar's attention wasn't an out of bounds decision by Clark. But.....accusing JM of leaking #17's name to the public, and of using sex with trial watchers/blogger to influence public opinion? That isn't only overreach by Clark, but egregiously unethical, as the charges are baseless (as multiple investigations and the Bar have concluded).
I don't think Clark has succumbed to the 's manipulations or that she necessarily believes the 's lies. Sooooo....all I can conclude is that Clark may well have political aspirations, or has dreams of judge-ships dancing in her overheated mind, and/or she, like so many others, is using the notoriety of this case as springboard.
(PS. Every single time I've spoken to COA clerks or Maricopa County law librarians, every single one of them has expressed grim humor or just plain exasperation about how long and how resource-consuming and how ridiculously messy 's trials and appeal have been.
When I spoke with a COA clerk this past week, for example, and told him it looked like 's attorneys weren't going to delay filing their opening brief yet again, his immediate reply was an emphatic "THANK GOD!"