MARCH 10, 2016, 4:54 PM|A popular football coach is serving life for killing his pregnant wife -- was evidence hidden that could set him free? "48 Hours" correspondent Richard Schlesinger investigates Saturday, March 12 at 10 p.m. ET/PT on CBS.
I just watched 48 Hours too. I really like Kelly Siegler but I have to admit that the evidence looks more favorable that the neighbor kid did it. Never thought I'd doubt Kelly's judgement but I have a bad feeling about this case and the evidence that wasn't shared with the defense. Wow.
I also watched the 48 Hours episode. I still think David is guilty. That show was very slanted. It left out a lot. An excellent book about this case, "Shattered," will fill you in if you haven't read it yet.
I can't possibly be the only person who found the prosecutor to be incredibly off-putting and acting as though she wasn't trying to pull something withholding all those reams of discovery, am I?
Personally, I think he deserves a retrial. And I think his defense team deserves to have access to everything the prosecution has... In a timely manner.
If the prosecutor is so certain of his guilt, then ensuring all parties have all the info shouldn't be a problem for her, right?
HOUSTON, TX -- A man who was convicted of murdering his wife 17 years ago, was back in court a week after being released from prison.
David Temple, 48, who was convicted in the 1999 shooting death of his pregnant wife, Belinda, was released on Dec. 28 after the states highest court overturned his conviction, based on evidence prosecutorial misconduct in the case.
Temple was back in court Wednesday to have a hearing reset in the case for March 3. . .
the family of Belinda Temple is praying that the case is retried and Temple is once again found guilty of murder.
Andy Khan, victim’s advocate for the Harris County DA’s office, said the victim’s family has no doubt the jury in the case got it right in 2007 when Temple was convicted.
A state appeals court ordered Temple released on bond and ordered that he be granted a new trial,after uncovering nearly three dozen instances where the Harris County prosecutor either failed to turn over evidence or turned it over too late. Some of that evidence, the judge said, pointed to the possibility that another person may have committed the murder.
He's guilty. The prosecutor's misconduct is inexcusable but the evidence doesn't lie and it all pointed to David Temple. Don't rely on the 48 hours episode, rely on Katherine Casey's book Shattered. This is not a David Camm case. Don't feel sorry for the guy.