Sorry but that sounds farfetched since everything at the prison was video recorded per testimony.Didn't someone(s) employed at/by the prison go through every page and make copies of it first? I thought I remembered that.
Sorry but that sounds farfetched since everything at the prison was video recorded per testimony.Didn't someone(s) employed at/by the prison go through every page and make copies of it first? I thought I remembered that.
Imo Gull ruled against SODDI because the defense did not meet the nexus by providing the ADMISSABLE evidence required. There is absolutely no admissible evidence to show that SODDI. Unless you can point me to said evidence.
Sorry but that sounds farfetched since everything at the prison was video recorded per testimony.
Oh, I see. I have to check the transcripts because I am fairly certain they spoke of RA's prison mail and how well it was protected but I will say no more until I actually locate it.I'm not implying it was done secretly. I thought I remembered this was procedure because of certain types of drugs being smuggled in on paper.
I am guessing it was "Paper" documents JMOI don't disagree with your post re the dumping an unknown number of discovery documents on their client by an intern of the DT. But the mechanics of that dumping it is not clear to me. In general, I know that legal mail is exempt from being searched in Indiana unless it is opened and searched in front of the inmate and only for the purposes of looking for contraband. I would assume that to be true for discovery as well but do not know this to be fact. Which is why I am curious.
I will drop it because nobody seems to know the specifics about exactly how much and in what form that discovery was delivered.
Millions of pages, actually. 26 terrabytes as of April 30, 2024. And counting.I would like to understand this process better too.
We're talking about potentially hundreds of documents here. How long would it take a person to do that?
I need to take some time and go back to some articles and motions around this time. I seem to recall many mentions of voluminous discovery, but I'd like the sources to be sure of myself.
Earlier this week, McLeland said the state has shared all of its information — 26 terabytes worth — with Allen's attorneys and denied claims of lying to the defense team.
I am guessing it was "Paper" documents JMO
the same ones RA was " Wetting down and Eating" after they were sent to him by his Defense team. IIRC
JMO
That’s an interesting point. Maybe he was high on K2 when he killed the girls, as well. Would explain a lot.After I heard about paper having drugs on it sometimes, I wondered if he was doing that hoping to get high. Maybe he thought (or someone told him) the paper had drugs on it? Or maybe what he ate wasn't Discovery but actually WAS paper with drugs?
IMO MOO
My version: they sent the intern because his pay was a lot lower. The attys did not want/need to spend hours and hours going over 1000 pages of discovery with RA when there were terabytes yet to go through. Westville kept the discovery. His attys checked on the situation on April 3 and then went to visit the next day. IMOI think the important issue is that a box of discovery, big or small, was sent to RA in prison. He was left to go through it all by himself, by his idiot lawyers.
This was discussed at the hearing last summer about the motion the defense filed claiming RA was being treated like a prisoner of war. Their intern testified that he took the discovery to RA. He said nothing about going over it with him. The defense attys apparently never did…it was too far to drive.
After I heard about paper having drugs on it sometimes, I wondered if he was doing that hoping to get high. Maybe he thought (or someone told him) the paper had drugs on it? Or maybe what he ate wasn't Discovery but actually WAS paper with drugs?
IMO MOO
RSBMETA: Jailed inmates also don't have unlimited access to legal docs but reasonable access where it's collected by DOC and returned to their personal property locker.
RSBM
This makes a lot more sense than allowing inmates (at any level of jail or prison except maybe death row) to keep Discovery in their cells. Although, maybe since RA was in solitary confinement for over a year he was allowed since he didn't share a cell and no other inmates would be entering it?
I don't disagree with your post re the dumping an unknown number of discovery documents on their client by an intern of the DT. But the mechanics of that dumping it is not clear to me. In general, I know that legal mail is exempt from being searched in Indiana unless it is opened and searched in front of the inmate and only for the purposes of looking for contraband. I would assume that to be true for discovery as well but do not know this to be fact. Which is why I am curious.
I will drop it because nobody seems to know the specifics about exactly how much and in what form that discovery was delivered.
IMO, that quote is not accurate. Harshman said that a correction office heard Allen talking to himself and while talking to himself, apparently apologized for killing A.W. (according to the correction officer.) If the prosecution wants the jury to hear this, they will have to call the correction officer to the witness stand, IMO, unless Judge Gull is going to allow heresy testimony.There's these quotes from Harshman's testimony reported on MM. So no "maybe" or "might"
"Harshman said a corrections officer overheard the defendant “apologize for killing Abby,” and that Allen wanted to, “tell the truth and be honest."
https://fox59.com/news/detective-te...nfessed-more-than-60-times-to-delphi-murders/
Exactly right; Harshman can't testify to that, the correctional officer would have to. It's an out-of-court statement used to prove the truth of the matter asserted, thus hearsay. Hard to argue any of the 23 hearsay exceptions apply.IMO, that quote is not accurate. Harshman said that a correction office heard Allen talking to himself and while talking to himself, apparently apologized for killing A.W. (according to the correction officer.) If the prosecution wants the jury to hear this, they will have to call the correction officer to the witness stand, IMO, unless Judge Gull is going to allow heresy testimony.
"but it was somewhere along the lines of he was talking to himself and he apologized for maybe killing A.W."
Why do you think it would be challenging for them to call the corrections officer as a witness? If they want whatever statement it is, subpoenaing a law enforcement officer is about the simplest thing they could do.IMO, that quote is not accurate. Harshman said that a correction office heard Allen talking to himself and while talking to himself, apparently apologized for killing A.W. (according to the correction officer.) If the prosecution wants the jury to hear this, they will have to call the correction officer to the witness stand, IMO, unless Judge Gull is going to allow heresy testimony.
"but it was somewhere along the lines of he was talking to himself and he apologized for maybe killing A.W."
You mentioned that in this post. I have been unsuccessful in a search for a link to that information. Only can find a doc stating the 1000 pages were delivered.Didn't someone(s) employed at/by the prison go through every page and make copies of it first? I thought I remembered that.