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DBM, because now I am completely confused. Half of the story I know, the second half I don't know - better to shut up at the moment. 

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Did he actually say he wishes to change his plea to guilty? To his lawyers I mean? Because I don’t think we know this really. He could say it to everyone else on the planet but if he doesn’t say it to his lawyers - then it may be just a game he’s playing with people’s hopes and emotions. If he instructed his lawyers outright to change his plea and they refuse to do so, that would surely be some sort of rules violation or something since they must take their instructions from him even if they don’t agree. They can advise him against it and why it’s a bad idea - but in the end, it’s his call as their client. If they feel super opposed, I think they can ask to be taken off the record and he could find someone else, but I don’t think they can flatly refuse to let him change his plea?If I was a juror I'd also be wondering why his lawyers are ignoring ALL those confessions and incriminating statements, their client's wish to plead guilty. That would strike me as extremely perplexing, especially after confessing to his mother and wife. JMO
I wonder what the prosecution's opening statement is going to be like. Are his confessions going to be talked about in detail? Are we going to hear quotes? I hope someone who takes shorthand is in the courtroom, besides the court reporter.
<modsnip - off topic>It almost seems as though they did actually kinda randomly pick his name. There doesn’t seem to be much to tie him to the murders. Him being at the start of the bridge doesn’t make him the killer - makes him a dude at the start of the bridge (until the state proves otherwise, and I am hoping they do!).
A bullet that may or may not match his gun is questionable evidence imo - because the it just doesn’t seem very reliable per some of the articles I’ve been reading (but maybe the state can make a persuasive air tight argument given other things they have in evidence that back this claim that it’s his bullet up).
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The Field of Firearms Forensics Is Flawed
The matching of bullets to guns is subjective, and courts are starting to question it because of testimony from scientific expertswww.scientificamerican.com
![]()
Maryland Supreme Court limits testimony on bullet-matching evidence
The ruling is likely the first by a state supreme court to undercut the popular forensic technique.reason.com
The D has told us about various things in Franks that don’t link him to the crime scene (and we recently discussed the ways they may have used tricky wording to conceal things and I acknowledge this could be the case).
He clearly has mental health issues from before the crime and post crime per testimony at the recent three day hearings. But it doesn’t make him a killer on its own (again, tricky wording and possibly the state has more to show us yet).
He made statements since his arrest ok well, as noted in earlier comments of mine he isn’t the first and won’t be the last to do so. So I hope to learn way more at trial.
It’s easy to say he’s not isolated and why not but I don’t think how he was held is reasonable by any humane standard. I don’t want his case and treatment to become precedent and I believe it’s a slippery slope when the state can hold you as they have him - without a trial; for nearly two years. Prison is fine for the convicts. Social and physical isolation for the accused - without a system of checks and balances to ensure his care / rights etc are met? I’m not ok with it. Not for him or anyone not convicted yet. Mooooooo
They may have feared for their own lives.I missed this factand find it now pretty alarming, when witnesses weren't willing to help with a sketch! What scruples did they have? Does is happen often, that witnesses don't want to create a sketch with LE?
I'm curious, will there ever be a time that his own words convince anyone that he committed two child murders? Will the monumental number of times he has confessed ever convince anyone that he killed those two girls? Will his confessing his guilt to his own beloved family members ever convince anyone he's a double child murderer?It almost seems as though they did actually kinda randomly pick his name. There doesn’t seem to be much to tie him to the murders. Him being at the start of the bridge doesn’t make him the killer - makes him a dude at the start of the bridge (until the state proves otherwise, and I am hoping they do!).
A bullet that may or may not match his gun is questionable evidence imo - because the it just doesn’t seem very reliable per some of the articles I’ve been reading (but maybe the state can make a persuasive air tight argument given other things they have in evidence that back this claim that it’s his bullet up).
![]()
The Field of Firearms Forensics Is Flawed
The matching of bullets to guns is subjective, and courts are starting to question it because of testimony from scientific expertswww.scientificamerican.com
![]()
Maryland Supreme Court limits testimony on bullet-matching evidence
The ruling is likely the first by a state supreme court to undercut the popular forensic technique.reason.com
The D has told us about various things in Franks that don’t link him to the crime scene (and we recently discussed the ways they may have used tricky wording to conceal things and I acknowledge this could be the case).
He clearly has mental health issues from before the crime and post crime per testimony at the recent three day hearings. But it doesn’t make him a killer on its own (again, tricky wording and possibly the state has more to show us yet).
He made statements since his arrest ok well, as noted in earlier comments of mine he isn’t the first and won’t be the last to do so. So I hope to learn way more at trial.
It’s easy to say he’s not isolated and why not but I don’t think how he was held is reasonable by any humane standard. I don’t want his case and treatment to become precedent and I believe it’s a slippery slope when the state can hold you as they have him - without a trial; for nearly two years. Prison is fine for the convicts. Social and physical isolation for the accused - without a system of checks and balances to ensure his care / rights etc are met? I’m not ok with it. Not for him or anyone not convicted yet. Mooooooo
Here are some links about false confessions that may help you to understand why one might make a false confession even if they’re not certifiable:I'm curious, will there ever be a time that his own words convince anyone that he committed two child murders? Will the monumental number of times he has confessed ever convince anyone that he killed those two girls? Will his confessing his guilt to his own beloved family members ever convince anyone he's a double child murderer?
I've heard people say, oh he read the discovery, he talked to his lawyers, he learned the facts of the case and falsely confessed. Why? The ONLY reason I could see not to believe so many admissions of guilt would be if that someone confessing was 100% certifiably insane. They would have to not be of sound mind to make any decisions if they were acting in that manner. Yet, his lawyers have not made that claim or had their client evaluated. Why? Just common sense would tell you, if you don't believe he's telling the truth, he needs intervention. The man has to have been certifiable, no? Are we going to see any proof that he was seriously evaluated for his abnormally bizarre behavior of confessing and insinuating his guilt so many times? It doesn't seem so to me, which leads me to believe he was of sound mind. He may have been upset at his surroundings, his lack of freedom and of his past actions but he was of sound mind. As I've asked before, why shouldn't we believe him? Maybe his lawyers will come up with some explanations besides his being incarcerated but they will mostly likely not have been documented by them at the specific time they supposedly occured. All I've heard so far from them has been after the fact spin. AJMO and rhetorical questions.
Yes, this confuses me too. At trial, what if BB gets on the stand and says she cannot be sure the man she saw on platform 1 of the Monon High Bridge is Richard Allen?Do you happen to have a link that shows neither BB or SC wanted to make the sketches?
I don’t believe this because one of them was adamant that the man SHE saw was NOT RA. Infact, she was certain that it was a young man she saw with hair. She demanded they release HER sketch because she was sure the man in the original sketch wasn’t the man she saw.
I googled and it was BB who wasn’t happy LE had not released the sketch of the man SHE said she saw: https://www.scribd.com/document/672126677/DELPHI-Memorandum-in-Support-of-Motion-pdf
Around page 106/7 details what she said and that she asserted HER sketch was a “10/10” for the guy she saw…
If I was a juror I'd also be wondering why his lawyers are ignoring ALL those confessions and incriminating statements, their client's wish to plead guilty. That would strike me as extremely perplexing, especially after confessing to his mother and wife. JMO
I wonder what the prosecution's opening statement is going to be like. Are his confessions going to be talked about in detail? Are we going to hear quotes? I hope someone who takes shorthand is in the courtroom, besides the court reporter.
Yes, this confuses me too. At trial, what if BB gets on the stand and says she cannot be sure the man she saw on platform 1 of the Monon High Bridge is Richard Allen?
But I also realize that 61 confessions is going to be very hard to overcome. If BB does get on the stand and say the person she saw on platform 1 was Richard Allen, that is going to be very powerful testimony for the jury to at least place him on the Monon High Bridge around the time of the crime.
Most of the time asking the jury to go the crime scene probably would not be a good idea because it provides emotion as to the victims and this area being the last place they were alive. But in this particular case, I do not think the defense needs to prove someone else did it. They only need to prove that someone else could have done it. Because they do not seem to have any other defense, it seems like the right thing to do to ask the jury to look at the evidence and see if they think it makes sense.
It all depends on how much weight the jury gives to the confessions and the details contained within them. If one of those confessions is Richard Allen saying he is the person in the video, he is done and will almost certainly be convicted. Prosecution might end up getting a conviction anyway.
Yes, this confuses me too. At trial, what if BB gets on the stand and says she cannot be sure the man she saw on platform 1 of the Monon High Bridge is Richard Allen?
It takes a sick mind and a sick soul to do what was done to these two kids who have names, Abby and Libby.We may get some answers and or theories. But I don’t know that I’ll ever really feel I understand how or why anyone could or would do this to two kids!
False bravado by RA, since he knew LE was on him from the Oct 13th interview. He had time to work up his indignation from then until Oct 26th when they arrested him.Just want to point out that it appears Holeman went after RA pretty hard while questioning him in 2022, yet RA didn't appear to be intimidated by him since he told Holeman directly that he (Holeman) was going to pay for what he's done to his (RA's) wife.
Yeah, that's typical conditions of anyone who is a Defendant awaiting trial for a double homicide or really any crime across the US being detained until trial in jail or DOC.to me if he was held in a cell, and not free to come and go at all - thats isolation. Just because he could call people doesn’t mean they took his calls. Those “trustees” - I lack well, trust for. The doc visiting? Still I wouldn’t trust them tbh. The staff don’t care for the inmates in the way a doc you choose would imo. How big was the cell? Maybe the size of a bathroom? Or a smallll bedroom? Daylight access? What aside a tablet did he have to occupy the time? Tablet and what a bible? How noisy is the place? How could he drown out the noise if at all to find rest or feel safe? Maybe it’s just me - but the inability to even leave my house to go shopping for a change of scenery was isolating and depressing! Not eat your poop level but still….. not an experience I would want to relive for two weeks let alone two years worth! And I have the creature comforts of home!! Moooooooi
It’s my birthday on the 14th, so it would be nice to have the trial go ahead and start on time as a gift.D-18 ....
RA is a particularly loving and caring husband, isn't he? Maybe he should have kept his hands off little girls, if his wife is so important to him.Just want to point out that it appears Holeman went after RA pretty hard while questioning him in 2022, yet RA didn't appear to be intimidated by him since he told Holeman directly that he (Holeman) was going to pay for what he's done to his (RA's) wife.
I have similar thoughts as a Libra star sign.It’s my birthday on the 14th, so it would be nice to have the trial go ahead and start on time as a gift.
But I just believe there will be a spanner in the works. But fingers crossed, I'm completely wrong.
Let’s not delay justice for the girls and their families.
Agreed.They may have feared for their own lives.
2 Young girls MURDERED
Small town, news gets out that some witnesses volunteered sketches.
Nobody knew how that could have happened, why it happened or WHO it was that did these Horrific murders to 2 young teenagers.
People get scared.
While I, myself, would provide sketches willingly, some would be hesitant in doing so.
( Family members worried, advising not to, fearing for their lives and ours if we spoke out, etc and this is my experience from a murder that happened next door. We want to assist LE, but there is a deranged murderer running around.)
Residents live in FEAR !!! IIRC, one resident moved to another state
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Residents living in fear as 'Snapchat killer' remains at large
Abigail Williams, 13, and Liberty German, 14, vanished while hiking in an isolated beauty spot in Indiana, US, and their bodies were found on Valentine's Daywww.mirror.co.uk
JMO
RA is a particularly loving and caring husband, isn't he? Maybe he should have kept his hands off little girls, if his wife is so important to him.
I would like to know, whether RA during his marriage of 25 years more than one time confessed to his wife things, he had done, and whether she always refused to listen to that ....