I. James Craig Trial — WEEK THREE BEGINS IN MURDER TRIAL
Court resumes for the third week in the James Craig Trial for the alleged murder of Angela Craig by the Aurora dentist.Jury's in.
II. James Craig Trial — DIRECT EXAMINATION CONTINUES
Court resumes with continued direct examination of the lead detective. Focus remains on surveillance footage, phone data, and Craig’s written timeline of events leading to Angela’s poisoning.
III. James Craig Trial — CYANIDE CAPSULES AND SYRINGE PREP
Craig's timeline note states Angela planned to ingest eye drops and cyanide. He claims she asked for the cyanide in capsules, with a syringe of potassium cyanide in water as backup. He says he filled two capsules with 300 mg each and prepared about a dozen more.
IV. James Craig Trial — CLINDAMYCIN DOSING AND COVER
Craig wrote he reserved four untainted clindamycin capsules and gave Angela doses on March 14 at 10 p.m. and March 15 at 4 a.m. A text from him on March 14 at 12 p.m. says, "Yeah to the clindamycin I ode. Just putting it together now.”
V. James Craig Trial — DRUG BOTTLE AND HOME ACCESS
At the time Craig wrote the timeline note (1:03 a.m. on March 16), he did not have access to his home. A bottle of clindamycin was found during a home search later that morning, before police were aware of the note. By March 21, the bottle was gone.
VI. James Craig Trial — SYRINGE PREPARATION AND TIMING
Craig admits preparing a syringe with potassium cyanide. He claims Angela drank eye drops and was later lethargic. He says her brother unknowingly gave her capsules with cyanide during a 10 a.m. antibiotic dose. Police confirmed eye drop content in her pink shaker bottle.
VII. James Craig Trial — HOSPITAL VIDEO VS. CLAIMS
Craig’s note says Angela asked him to “help her finish the job” while alone with her at the hospital. Surveillance shows he was alone for one minute after her brother left. Craig claims he gave her the syringe, turned his back, then saw it used by her IV.
VIII. James Craig Trial — FINAL SYRINGE ACT
Craig writes that he pocketed the used syringe, alerted nurses about her arm pain, and that “must have done the trick because I don't think she ever regained consciousness.” He also says he prepared all concoctions but did not administer them.
IX. James Craig Trial — NO FORCING CLAIMED
Craig ends this section of the note by claiming he never forced Angela to do anything. He maintains that although he researched, ordered, and prepared poisons, she made the decisions and actions herself.
X. James Craig Trial — I GAVE HER THE SYRINGE, THEN TURNED MY BACK
Craig's timeline note claims Angela asked him to finish the job. He says he gave her the cyanide syringe and turned around. Objection when prosecution implied syringe came from home. Sustained. Craig says she injected herself. One minute alone on video.
XI. James Craig Trial — NO SUICIDE “MISCALCULATION” IN TIMELINE
Craig’s timeline note (Exhibit 60) admits he made all the concoctions. He denies forcing Angela to take them, but unlike other writings, it does not claim her death was accidental or due to miscalculation.
XII. James Craig Trial — NO “GAME OF CHICKEN” IN TIMELINE EVIDENCE
Detective confirms Exhibit 60 contains no mention of the “game of chicken” Craig described to the Redferns. Nor does it support the claim, in Exhibit 43, that Angela was “setting Jim up.”
XIII. James Craig Trial — NO “SETUP” THEORY IN TIMELINE
Defense Exhibit 43 mentions Angela “setting Jim up.”Prosecutor asks if 60 includes that theory.Defense objects: jury must assess evidence, not detective.Court overrules.Detective: No, that’s not in Exhibit 60.
XIV. James Craig Trial — “MISTAKE” CLAIM ABSENT IN TIMELINE
Exhibit 73 includes: “I sincerely believe she made a calculation mistake.”Prosecutor: Is that in 60?Detective: No.Court sustains prior objections on interpretation but allows factual comparison.
XV. James Craig Trial — DEFENDANT ASKED FOR WITNESSES TO BACK “SETUP” THEORY
Exhibit 74 shows Craig asking for people to testify Angela was suicidal or setting him up.Prosecutor: Is that in 60?Defense objects again.Court: Objection noted.Detective: 60 includes neither claim.
XVI. James Craig Trial — DIRECT RESUMES AFTER LENGTHY SIDEBAR
Following a sustained objection and bench discussion, direct examination picks back up. Prosecutor returns focus to Craig’s writings and communications, contrasting Exhibit 60 with later letters and texts regarding Angela’s intent and cause of death.
XVII. James Craig Trial — DEFENSE TIMELINES ADMITTED
Detective confirms a connection between Craig and Roger Crittenden. Defense moves to admit Exhibits 185–194: a series of timelines showing Angela’s symptoms, Craig’s searches, and poison purchases. Prosecution objects under evidentiary rules. Sidebar follows. All exhibits ultimately admitted.
XVIII. James Craig Trial — PHONE SEIZED, STILL TEXTING DETECTIVE
After investigators seized Craig’s iPhone on March 16, 2023, he continued texting the detective using another device. Exhibit 272 is introduced to show this post-seizure communication. Admitted after a sidebar.
XIX. James Craig Trial — DIRECT ENDS ON A HIGH NOTE FOR PROSECUTION
Direct examination concludes after a series of admissions, including 185–194 (timelines) and 272 (post-seizure text). Detective confirms Craig kept communicating with law enforcement even after his phone was seized.
XX. James Craig Trial — CROSS EXAM OPENS WITH MEDIA LEAK CONCERNS
Defense begins cross by pressing lead detective on the impact of the public affidavit. Detective admits the March 15 arrest affidavit—widely circulated in news and online—limited the ability to verify independent tips. Detective agrees that typically, withholding key info helps test credibility of informants.
XXI. James Craig Trial — JAILHOUSE NEWS AND MEDIA COVERAGE
Detective confirms news of the allegations reached the jail and was discussed openly. Defense argues media exposure tainted witness pool, referencing Mr. Bohannon's knowledge. Detective concedes Bohannon knew details that were both public and some not in the affidavit, like Craig's truck type.
XXII. James Craig Trial — VIDEO FOOTAGE AND FRONT DOOR CAMERA
Defense confirms detective viewed extensive surveillance, including outdoor camera footage showing movement through the front door. Detective acknowledges camera visibility varies depending on lighting.
XXIII. James Craig Trial — FRONT DOOR CAMERA FOOTAGE
Defense confirms with the detective that video footage shows the street in front of Craig’s home. If Craig’s truck was parked there, it could be captured by the camera—depending on lighting and angle.
XXIV. James Craig Trial — FOUR AFFAIRS, ONE MARRIAGE
Detective testifies to four women Craig was intimately or romantically involved with from October to March: Jordan Ivy, Kerry Hagerath, Elizabeth Gore, and Karin Cain. Timeline confirms overlapping contacts. Defense says another unnamed woman also exchanged flirtatious texts with Craig.
XXV. James Craig Trial — MICHELLE POPE & THE PATTERN
Defense introduces Michelle Pope, another woman Craig communicated with. Though not physically involved, his tone matched the flirty pattern seen with the others. Detective agrees Craig used the same “demeanor” in all messages, though it was “deeper” with Karin Cain.
XXVI. James Craig Trial — AFFAIRS SPAN YEARS, NOT MONTHS
Detective concedes this wasn’t a new marital issue. Information suggests Craig’s affairs go back at least a decade. Defense mentions Angela Craig’s journal referenced long-term infidelity. Detective thinks first affair began roughly 10 years ago.
XXVII. James Craig Trial — ANGELA’S JOURNAL & THE STORAGE UNIT
Angela’s journal was found in a storage unit rented by the family after Craig’s arrest. Detective never physically saw the journal nor searched the storage. He received a copy from Tony Kofed and confirms it is the same journal now submitted as Defense Exhibit AAA.
XXVIII. James Craig Trial — DEFENSE CALLS SIDEBAR
Just as the journal copy is confirmed and Defense Exhibit AAA moves toward admission, the defense requests a sidebar. Proceedings pause for private discussion at the bench.
XXIX. James Craig Trial — COURT BREAK UNTIL 10:30
At 10:10 AM, Judge announces a break until 10:30. Jury reminded: no discussions, no outside research, no forming opinions until all evidence is presented. Court temporarily adjourns.