No, definitely not. I could never convict in this case. I would have so many questions about whether there was further evidence that was destroyed. If they didn't notice spatter, what else did they miss? I just couldn't convict anyone in this case because of the lack of investigation. Absolutely and then when you add in the investigative screw ups... I honestly don't think there was enough here to bring this case to trial. However, I do have higher standards than the law requires. Which is why I don't work for a prosecutor!
I am quite fascinated by your post - and I should warn you I have a thing for circumstantial evidence!
I wonder what you make of the following questions
1. Do you believe that it will be proven to evidential standard that it was CM who entered the deleted cheques in Quickbooks?
2. Do you believe that it will be proven to evidential standard that CM backdated the cheques to 4 Feb?
3. Do you believe that it will be proven to evidential standard that CM was the one who created a deleted cheque from a computer at the McStay house?
Remember these are only factual inferences a jury must make. Each individual item need not be proven to BARD standard.
Assuming the answer to the questions is yes - do you agree a jury properly instructed might make the following factual inferences? Again it is not required to BARD standard on each point. A jury instead may make natural and obvious inferences on each point.
- The deleted cheques of 2 feb were the first fraudulent activity - only 48hrs prior to the disappearance. From this a jury may infer a contemporaneous motive.
- Backdating to 4 february demonstrates knowledge of what day the McStays were murdered. If CM is innocent of murder, why do this? The cheques of 2 and 3 Feb are not backdated. But if you know that the McStays have been murdered, you know that a cheque dated after 4 february will ring alarm bells.
- The call to Quickbooks from CM's phone fraudulently impersonating McStay asking to delete all data implies knowledge McStay is dead. McStay is not yet seriously missing. Deleting Quickbooks would be insanely dumb if McStay were to come home two days later and discover this! It implies an attempt to cover tracks not from McStay but from investigators, before McStay is even seriously missed.
- The creation of cashing of fraudulent cheques by CM before the deaths provides a motive for murder
- The quickbooks & phone log activity of J McStay to his bank and CM after the cashing of the cheques supports the inference he discovered the fraud.
- CM makes 13 "frantic" phonecalls in 9 minutes following the last call from J McStay. This implies an urgent problem for CM.
- The creation of the deleted cheque from McStay's house at 7.56 pm invalidates CM's story about how he discovered the McStays were missing and a jury may correctly infer the only logical conclusion is that it places him at the crime scene at the time of the disappearance before anyone knew they were missing. Indeed if we put aside speculation, only the murderer can have created this cheque.
In handling circumstantial evidence, we shall first ask ourselves what facts are proven, and then from those facts, what logical inferences can be drawn.
In my opinion, the evidentially sound inference is that the person who created the deleted the cheques is the murderer.
So then we step back and say, having regard to the total web of circumstantial evidence, is there any reasonable doubt about that?
In my opinion not.
Given CM was caught redhanded with the cheques (in his own name) - that means CM is the murderer.