Lilibet
Southern Oregon
- Joined
- Apr 13, 2013
- Messages
- 19,729
- Reaction score
- 82,791
As a Jehovah's Witness, are you forbidden to drink alcohol?
From the official website:
https://www.jw.org/en/bible-teachings/questions/is-drinking-a-sin/
As a Jehovah's Witness, are you forbidden to drink alcohol?
As a Jehovah's Witness, are you forbidden to drink alcohol?
I am exactly where you were! I just happened to listen to this podcast about the Melgar case. First I'd heard of it and landed here for more info. This one greatly upsets me. A juror stated that they were all back and forth and back forth... if you're back and forth to that degree, isn't that what reasonable doubt is??I found almost everything you need for this case. WOW. I haven't stopped reading & I can't believe this case even made it to court. You have the lead investigator that was fired (twice) from LE for lying on reports to get a conviction, and also lazy or non existent investigations... then you have a DA who was given this as her first case after returning from being disciplined.
There was absolutely ZERO investigaiton after the few hours they spent at the property when the Melgar's were discovered.
Read the Appeal. Then read the last pages that are included of the neighbor who had just been released from jail, that the News Media reported to LE as being very suspect and acting strangely. He even stayed well in to the night trying to find out what was going on w/investigation.
There were multiple things stolen. This was a home invasion gone bad. They stole Sandra's medications (hydrocodone and phenobarbital). There was 3 unidentified DNA profiles, and 1 Female DNA profile found.
Read for yourself. You can see why Kathleen Zelner volunteered (from the Innocence Project who was part of Netflix Making a Murderer). I hope this poor woman doesn't die in prison before they free her. That would be very sad.
Case Docs - Season 6 // The Melgars - Google Drive
Awww, man, I'm sorry to get your hopes up!Aw man, this thread popped up with a new post & my heart started pumping, thinking maybe she’d been released. I, too, listened to the podcast, and just can’t wrap my brain around how anyone could actually think she’s guilty. My heart really hurts for her.
I'm hoping this doesn't end up being her husband's fingerprint (trying to retrieve his gun from the safe).
I believe she is innocent. It's unbelievable that this case has made it this far to begin with.
I don't know why her lawyer didn't punch a big hole in the Prosecutor's theory by calling in one of Jehovah's Witnesses to refute the information she gave to the jury about getting divorced. We are not forbidden from divorcing (although marriage vows are very serious). There are situations that she named such as death or adultery, that was correct. HOWEVER, if for some reason you did divorce, you are not shunned or "disfellowshipped". The prosecutor said Sandy had to kill him because she didn't want to lose the relationships she had within her religion. It's simply NOT true. Her friends and family would NOT have cut her out of their lives, or shunned her.
If the defense lawyer would have called in an a representative from the congregation, that would have refuted the prosecutions "need" for her to kill her husband.
And secondly, if she was really one of JW's, she would not have desired to kill anyone. In that event, if that was in her heart, why in the world would she even want to hang out with other JW's?
Next, her daughter was likely the most important relationship outside of her marriage. Her daughter was no longer one of JW's (by choice). So let's say Sandy did get divorced and lost her friends (JWs). She still had her most important relationship on earth!
It's all just ridiculousness to me. This whole case!
They shove her in the closet and he's struggling against that and they stab him?Presime she WAS hit pver the head and it sent her into a seizure and it freaked them out... so they tied her up and locked her in.. situation sounds like to me anyway like husband was the reason they were there anyway🤷*♀️
Exactly. Bob Ruff's "Truth and Justice" podcast(s) about Melgar - there are so many episodes!) (Almost all of Season 6!) kept coming back to that conclusion. Working theory is Jaime stopped cooperating with the intruders and fought back when Sandra was put in the closet, and was killed. Ruff found evidence of a similar Houston home invasion committed nine months before the Melgar murder and an attempted one right after; victims were tied up in a similar way, didn't fight, and were not killed. (The perps were caught, and are now either dead or deported.)They shove her in the closet and he's struggling against that and they stab him?
The Wrongful Conviction of Sandra Melgar
This is a good breakdown of the horrible injustice that happened in this case. I am sincerely sad and confused why she is still in jail. With the termination of the lead detective, and the items still in his possession that were never tested, I would think this case would be a slam dunk for appeals.
So sad!
Great news: I see this as a terrible miscarriage of justice10 years later: Sandra Melgar's daughter hopes new DNA evidence will clear her mom's name
On December 23, 2012, Jaime and Sandra Melgar were celebrating their 32nd wedding anniversary. The next day, he was found stabbed to death and she was found tied up.www.khou.com
I was so very glad to see that the Innocence Project of Texas has recently taken on the case of Sandra Melgar.
Innocence Project of Texas takes up case of Houston woman convicted of killing her husband in 2012
“The state’s whole theory seemed to defy the laws of gravity, much less the laws of logic and common sense," said Mike Ware with the Innocence Project of Texas.www.khou.com
I've been following this case since Day One. So many things do not add up and seem to indicate that LE was not, well, here is a link.... I cannot believe, after what had been discovered about LE did or did not do, that there was not a new trial.This is one of those cases where it's hard to fathom how any one of the investigators ever thought she was responsible. How did a jury find her guilty? I've always thought she was innocent, but the prosecution must have had some evidence that she was guilty in order for the jury to be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that she killed her husband then tied herself up and locked herself in the closet, right?
Weren't there a series of similar home invasions in the area where the wife was tied up in a separate room?