Barry Morphew prosecution team wants witnesses reinstated | 9news.com
FREMONT COUNTY, Colo. — Documents obtained by 9NEWS from the Fremont County court clerk through a records request reveal the prosecution team in the Barry Morphew trial has asked the judge to reinstate key expert witnesses on the case, saying "these experts and their testimony are critical to the People's case."
The prosecution's motion for "reconsideration of the court's March 10, 2022 order to strike various prosecution experts due to their pattern of violations of court orders and Rule 16," is included in the court documents.
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Motion to reconsider
The prosecution filed a motion on Monday that asks the judge to reconsider his order in regard to experts Duge, Hicks, Hoyland and Stevens.
The motion reads, "These experts and their testimony are critical to the People's case."
In the motion, prosecutors say their case "relies heavily on evidence of Morphew's motive to harm his wife, the opportunity he alone had as he was the last person to see Suzanne alive, the inconsistencies in his statements to law enforcement and the ultimate coverup he perpetrated the day after and in the following months."
The team cites in the motion the importance of expert testimony on data downloaded from the suspect's truck that "disputes the defendant's initial alibi that he 'went to bed early'" on the night before Suzanne was reported missing.
The motion states there is also information downloaded from several phones included in the case – but specifically, data extracted from the defendant's phone that shows data was "deleted in bulk before the phone was seized," that included 381 text messages, 25 calls and 58 saved locations.
Cell phone data tracking information used from Suzanne's phone and information extracted from the defendant's truck, Bobcat and phone help the prosecution determine a timeline of the events between May 8, 2020 and May 10, 2020, reads the motion.
Experts from the prosecution's list also include testimony on data from the defendant's F-350 truck, other data from physical items and information obtained by search warrant.
The prosecution's motion says the exclusion of these witnesses damages their case "in a profound way." It continues, "By excluding the most damaging impeachment information against the defendant (cell phone data, truck telematics and GPS/CDR locations) the court has imposed sanctions tantamount to dismissal, with the defendant suffering a complete windfall."