I am too, but only when it points toward guilt. Let's take a look at each one of those things:oenophile ....I'm a strong believer in circumstantial evidence.
I think the videos at Harris Teeter speak volumes.....
I watched them. Several times. They look like someone going in and buying a few products. There is nothing unusual about them.
and where ARE the shoes?
By shoes, I assume you mean Brad's? It has already been demonstrated in dramatic fashion that something thought to be missing was not sought until months or years later. And in a move, with other people around the house, things go missing all the time. Had the police asked to see the shoes within a week of seeing the video, I would agree with this being circumstantial evidence. But not under these circumstances.
There is no evidence of a router in the house immediately prior to the murder. As to the router going missing, it wasn't Brad's router going missing, it was Cisco's router. There is no reason to believe that a router he took home for a weekend stayed in the house for months. And Cisco routers in the office apparently were borrowed by different groups all the time, trying to locate it 2.5 years later doesn't make something missing.Another thing for me is the router....where is it?
The deposition video is of importance to me as is his demeanor in the beginning.
This, as I mentioned upthread, is the crux of the reason people think Brad is guilty. Personally, based on the deposition video and the way that he is described to have acted, I find his behavior to fit his personality and to reflect his innocence, not his guilt. In fact, if you look at the affidavits by Nancy's friends on behalf of the Rentz's, they all describe him as socially awkward. And that is precisely how he acted.
It is his demeanor and his personality that will never allow the BDI advocates to consider his innocence, despite the evidence.
I'll note, I have not followed Jason Young or Raven Abaroa, so I cannot comment on those two cases.
BTW.....I spoke with an attorney/judge relative over the weekend. I was told roughly 5% of appeals in NC are found to be valid and a new trial granted when citing errors from the presiding trial judge. Guess we'll have to wait and see what happens.........I have a strong feeling Brad Cooper AND Jason Young will be sitting right where they are for the rest of their lives. The odds are NOT in their favor.
Out of curiosity, did the relative read the opinion? Thus far, every legal analyst in the media who has read it said that it was a correct decision.