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- Mar 9, 2015
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Snipped by me
Of the many questions I have, I am right now thinking about this latest supposedly 2 hour interview. Do we know the answers to any of the following?
1) at what point did WH get an attorney and has this attorney advised him to hold or not hold these tv interviews;
2) is it a public defender;
3) how much counsel could an attorney give a client on charges that have not been filed against him;
4) what is the process for an incarcerated person to call for a reporter and be allowed to have one? I mean, that doesn't happen often, does it? What are the steps to be allowed an interview?;
5) why does WH get these interviews and other prisoners don't (or do they)? Is it just the salacious nature of the case that the media wants it? Does LE hope he will further incriminate himself or others? If this, why don't they allow other prisoners to have on-air interviews? Does his attorney hope to use it in a future trial, as Dexter suggests?
Admittedly, I do not watch local news often, but the fact that these jailhouse interviews are allowed to continue seems curious to me. Is LE actually so forward thinking that they allow the interviews to occur just to ratchet up the tension in the others who are (probably) involved? That seems too much like an episode of Law and Order, doesn't it?
If I am correct in assuming interviews with prisoners are not usually allowed, then there must be a purposeful reason that interviews with WH are. What is it?
He is just giving recordable reasonable doubt that his future lawyer can edit and work with.
It only takes 1 juror.
Of the many questions I have, I am right now thinking about this latest supposedly 2 hour interview. Do we know the answers to any of the following?
1) at what point did WH get an attorney and has this attorney advised him to hold or not hold these tv interviews;
2) is it a public defender;
3) how much counsel could an attorney give a client on charges that have not been filed against him;
4) what is the process for an incarcerated person to call for a reporter and be allowed to have one? I mean, that doesn't happen often, does it? What are the steps to be allowed an interview?;
5) why does WH get these interviews and other prisoners don't (or do they)? Is it just the salacious nature of the case that the media wants it? Does LE hope he will further incriminate himself or others? If this, why don't they allow other prisoners to have on-air interviews? Does his attorney hope to use it in a future trial, as Dexter suggests?
Admittedly, I do not watch local news often, but the fact that these jailhouse interviews are allowed to continue seems curious to me. Is LE actually so forward thinking that they allow the interviews to occur just to ratchet up the tension in the others who are (probably) involved? That seems too much like an episode of Law and Order, doesn't it?
If I am correct in assuming interviews with prisoners are not usually allowed, then there must be a purposeful reason that interviews with WH are. What is it?