“Who is your leader?” I can hear someone say. To me it appears like an extreme lack of leadership. In most professions heads would roll. Unfortunately, here we’re not talking about loss of company sales, but a murder case.
When this case is over a outside party should be brought in to dismantle this team (I use team in a generic sense) and get to the bottom of the incompetence. They cannot be permitted to operate like this with another case. IMO
I think there are/were a variety of issues that put us in this situation. We had the change in DA, a prosecutor left for another jurisdiction, various investigators leaving for other assignments, questionable integrity, retirement, etc. We had optics that looked like BM was going on the lam; selling properties, assuming guardianship, packing all his possessions etc. We had the prosecution falling behind on discovery deadlines and on top of everything else we had coronavirus.
You absolutely need a team leader for any big case especially one with as many moving parts as this one had. The team leader needs to have an analytical mind, needs to be able to see the whole picture, to recognize what steps need to be taken at any particular time in an investigation, to see holes that need to be plugged, and to delegate tasks that need to be followed up on.
The team leader needs an “assistant”; someone who can organize all the facets of the case in digital and hard copy form. This casebook should include every report starting with the initial 911 call. There needs to be several timelines: 1) The timeline leading up to the offense, 2) The investigative timeline, 3) The court timeline to include court hearings and discovery deadlines. The casebook needs to be collated, indexed, and organized in such a manner that the Team Leader can pick it up at any given time and know everything that is going on in a case.
I think this case faltered because the arrest was made prematurely. They had all the documentation, but they didn’t have it organized so they just threw everything they had in the AA. This resulted in 130 pages of floating information. The story wasn’t clear.
Any case relying heavily on digital forensics from cell phones, computers, gps systems, telematics, cctv etc. generates mounds of paperwork. That paperwork takes hours upon hours to analyze. Some of it is not relevant. Some witness interviews result in learning about important circumstantial evidence, some of it is hearsay, some of it is not relevant. A lot of superfluous information went into that AA. Once the decision to make the arrest was made, the prosecution’s back is against the wall. You no longer have the luxury of time and of putting the case together on your terms.
Luckily both judges saw enough to believe that there was enough evidence to charge BM with 1st degree murder, but they were not going to just hand it to the prosecution. Now along comes a highly paid, smart, and cunning defense team.
The prosecution has less than 2 weeks to get its act together. It is really hard to do this in such a short timeframe without knowing which evidence you will be able to present. I think if they lose their appeal on the expert testimony, they have to request a delay which will be loudly objected to by the defense team. A delay is the only way they will be able to put together a decent case without much of their expert testimony to explain the evidence to a jury.
The only other option they have would be to request a dismissal without prejudice.
If they win their appeal, let’s all hope they have put together that clear, concise, irrefutable case that we have all been praying for.