Do you think playing the entire recorded interviews helps or hurts the prosecution? Is the defense trying to bore the jury and hope they zone out on key points? Is the entire audio likely to make him look better because it all can't be as bad as the key points they noted?
I recall at the time the AA was written the RR telematics were not completed yet. I am assuming the defense requested those at some point after that? Is there a reasonable time for which the defense has to be provided those items? Is it as soon as the prosecution has them or a certain amount of time before trial?
I guess I want to believe the best in people (heck I even believed Barry could be innocent until the release of the AA and well I can't hold on to that possibility after reading the things he lied about, both important and really unimportant details) so I assume that if evidence exists that suggests someone was in and out of the RR or moving it after 530am, then they wouldn't be pursuing charges against Barry or at the very least they would be looking for an accomplice. Why would they withhold evidence on purpose?
The defendant's statements are the cornerstone to the State's case. So, the state wants to at least get in the statements presented in the AA. Whatever they get in benefits their case.
As a rule, if I can get favorable statements from a defendant/client in front of the jury without the person testifying and being subject to C-X, I let it in.
The defense wants them all played and IMO the judge will allow it. This will include, the good, the bad and the ugly from the defendant. The defense will try to use some parts of his statements to minimize the parts that were cherry picked for the AA. They will compare any digital data to the defendant's statements which could create questions or confusion.
And yes listening to 30 hours of statements will numb most people's minds, so this may be a factor too. A mobbed up attorney who was one of my mentors gave me some great advice about juries:
"Never use powerpoint in your closing. Whenever the government turns the lights down and powerpoint on, the juries eyes glaze over and you know you have a chance to win the case." There is something to be said about the strategy of working short attention spans.
Now, if these tapes are played in their entirety for the jury, it will likelybe in the state's case in chief. If a bunch of that is pointless and only small bits have relevance, the jury will be asking why the state wasted all thier time. They will not be aware of the pre-trial wrangling by the law-dogs about this issue and the state will get the stink-eye from the jury for wasting time.
What I am certain will not happen is the defendant taking the stand at trial. Everything that comes from him will be in those statements.
As far as discovery issues, it sounds like the judge ordered that the data from the victim's RR and other items be turned over within 14 days of the last hearing.
I am not sure what is going on with discovery, but it does appear that the state has been sandbagging on turning over some evidence. However, the judge has not sanctioned anyone that I am aware of, so they may have cause or reason for the delays.
IMO, in a case like this the state needs to shoot straight with discovery issues and avoid creating uneccessary appeal issues.