I doubt Jason will take the stand this time, but one question I wish the prosecution had asked is: what exactly is the story about the fax? ... or ... How did one big toe get bruised? I'd like to hear again how he got lost in the mounains and arrived late at his meeting, whether he stopped anywhere for gas.
It was such a lost opportunity for the prosecution that they forgot to ask the right questions ... she seemed so emotionally invested that she lost objectivity and failed to ask the questions that police had presumably waited years to ask. Investigators claimed that Jason could not be cleared because he wouldn't talk to them ... there he was, sworn to tell the truth and there was hardly one relevant question.
I'd like to know how many miles per gallon his car had and see it mapped to the gas station where the attendant claimed to recognize Jason ... visuals with the formula for calculating no. miles given the size of the gas tank and miles per gallon. That would keep it simple for visual thinkers.
She struck me as a woman who sits high on her own morality horse and she thought jurors would view bad behavior as evidence of murder rather than wanting real evidence of things like opportunity.
I think she was utterly unprepared for Jason's testimony. Her entire strategy seemed to be built around a "bad boy's silence=guilty" theory. Even with Jason's testimony, this may have actually worked if he had been in Raleigh at the time of the murder. The time and gas such a long trip would require remains the elephant in the room.
JMO