Did you hear what CJ, the mother of his children , said to him in her rant about his cold, callous obstinate behavior?
All of the above, and some want to label him a loving caring father? It is a riddle to me
Also, IMO, they decided NOT to test the sledgehammer because they did not want to risk the extremely low possibility of it coming back positive for CMs DNA. It would be hard to explain that one away with the touch DNA theory.
Suzanna wanted to test the limits of what we know about DNA and where it could be found and how long it would last. Why stop at the sledgehammer? Oh yeah, right, they were constrained by the budget and couldn't afford the $900.
In the last couple of days I have seen a couple of posters suggest that we don't yet know if Chase created the deleted cheques and we have to wait for all the defence evidence.
But please let's remember that in the middle of the day on 5 Feb, someone created, deleted, printed and banked a cheque with memo line Paul Mitchel.
That person was Chase.
It can not have been Joey that created that cheque on any reading of the defence evidence.
Chase did not see Joey on the 5th and according to the defence case, Joey was lured from the house on the morning of the 5th.
Logically therefore, it was also Chase who created, printed and deleted the cheques after Joey's death, it was also him who did the others - e.g. 2 Feb.
Testing the sledge was the responsibility of the PT. The question should be why they chose not to test it. As pointed out up-thread, there would be crevices where the head and handle meet that should retain DNA. Why wasn't it tested as soon as the bodies were located. The PT excuse is cost and "no need to test it". The DT has no reason to test it because the PT didn't release any evidence, from the sledge, that needed to be refuted. jmhoFgs, what a lame excuse. Imo, I'm sure CMs supporters would have been happy to contribute the $900.00 needed.
Imo
This gives good insight into who Joey was. I'm so sad how he was brutally tortured and murdered. I pray that somehow, he did not have to see what was done to his family.
I think the prosecutors should have the jurors read this. It shows what a human he was, instead of just a name. Imo
He was back in time to insist that she get her favorite prom dress, no matter the cost.RSBM
CJ even testified that CM wasn't a part of TJ's life (his oldest daughter) for many years. It was only after CM and CJ got back together that he was in TJ's life. Loving father???
sts
MOO
I think it was smart lawyering on their part. They had so much CE and knew they had their man. It's even more interesting to me that the DT didn't do it. Neither side wanted to touch it.Testing the sledge was the responsibility of the PT. The question should be why they chose not to test it. As pointed out up-thread, there would be crevices where the head and handle meet that should retain DNA. Why wasn't it tested as soon as the bodies were located. The PT excuse is cost and "no need to test it". The DT has no reason to test it because the PT didn't release any evidence, from the sledge, that needed to be refuted. jmho
Also, IMO, they decided NOT to test the sledgehammer because they did not want to risk the extremely low possibility of it coming back positive for CMs DNA. It would be hard to explain that one away with the touch DNA theory.
Suzanna wanted to test the limits of what we know about DNA and where it could be found and how long it would last. Why stop at the sledgehammer? Oh yeah, right, they were constrained by the budget and couldn't afford the $900.
Testing the sledge was the responsibility of the PT. The question should be why they chose not to test it. As pointed out up-thread, there would be crevices where the head and handle meet that should retain DNA. Why wasn't it tested as soon as the bodies were located. The PT excuse is cost and "no need to test it". The DT has no reason to test it because the PT didn't release any evidence, from the sledge, that needed to be refuted. jmho
I'm not sure if I'm interpreting this correctly but in cross examination of Dr Perlin it appears that on more than 1 item of evidence...Cybergenetics did not include (or purposely excluded) some individual/particular alleles in their report...and these particular alleles just happen to be alleles found in Merritt's DNA profile.
Great post. Totally agree. Both sides had reason not to go there. I think the PT was smart. They had the QB's and the backdated checks. Very damaging. If the DT is so confident of their client's innocence why didn't they do it?Someone slap me if I'm out in the ether on this, science not being my baliwick and time to thoroughly consider the plethora of DNA-related testimony not available, but is this the answer?
In some ways, DNA is a double-edge sword. The "public" -us lay people, have been sort of trained to maintain the notion that DNA is everything. Everything you need for a conviction/acquittal is represented by the presence or absence of DNA. Yet, it's incredibly complex, and there are other pieces of evidence that usually need to be addressed, often of far greater than importance than DNA and, sometimes, DNA just isn't very useful, especially in some trials.
Hence, PT's and DT's often approach and handle it with trepidation. In this case, I would think that maybe the PT thinks that, after so much time buried in the desert, the sledgehammer, a key piece of evidence, wouldn't yield any DNA, or at least no "viable" DNA, especially if he had used gloves. What would the jury think? "Well, obviously this is the murder weapon, and guess who's DNA isn't on it?" We'd better acquit. (Sort of like "If the glove doesn't fit, you have to acquit". Nonsense of course, but effective nonsense.)
Now, the DT is trying to use the lack of testing to say the dirt bag didn't do it -that the PT is afraid it wouldn't reveal DNA, so didn't have it tested. If they are trying to say/intimate this, shouldn't they have to test the sledgehammer? They are the ones putting forth that the lack of testing and, therefore, DNA, on it is evidence for innocence. The PT isn't putting forth any such argument. I don't know the answer to that question legal-wise, but I do think that this is the crux of it.
Think about it: The PT is between a rock and a hard place with respect to the hammer. Had they tested it and it came back negative for DNA (fairly likely, given the circumstances, apparently) the jury would, simply by social conditioning, think that this information acquits the defendant. Likewise, the DT would beat this like a drum: "Why would the PT test it for DNA if they didn't expect any to be on it? Surely, they expected it to result in DNA if they tested it, so this key piece of evidence, which the PT expected to yield the defendant's DNA, came up clean."
The PT decides not to test it to avoid this problem, and the DT uses the lack of testing to posit innocence -they were afraid to test it because they knew it wouldn't show any DNA. Rock, meet hard place.
Geevee - it was briefly but yep, that's what I interpreted.
no, sorry..I would have to re-listen to it. I can try to do that later today.Any idea about what time on the video it was?
BBM Do you have a source for testimony that the PT did not test the sledgehammer please.Testing the sledge was the responsibility of the PT. The question should be why they chose not to test it. As pointed out up-thread, there would be crevices where the head and handle meet that should retain DNA. Why wasn't it tested as soon as the bodies were located. The PT excuse is cost and "no need to test it". The DT has no reason to test it because the PT didn't release any evidence, from the sledge, that needed to be refuted. jmho