Just curious. What happens when the $$ run out?^^bbm
Yes -- Just as BM is about to receive his progress billing and view his retainer dwindling...![]()


Just curious. What happens when the $$ run out?^^bbm
Yes -- Just as BM is about to receive his progress billing and view his retainer dwindling...![]()
I agree Oviedo...never underestimate a calm and meek demeanor. The quiet ones can be just as powerful as the seemingly self-assured ones. While I do tend to prefer attorneys with a strong and confident approach, it's sometimes the quiet ones that sneak up on you when you least expect it. Let's pray this is the caseiDK hmm is This a tactic? A strategy? I think it is…
JMO
Gonna go fast. JMOJust curious. What happens when the $$ run out?![]()
I don’t think the lawyers would have referred to the defendant as “witness” in any scenario.
Absolutely not IMO. Fiduciary implies legal responsibility. The age at which a child legally becomes an adult varies from state to state, but in most states that age is 18. Colorado is 18. Most states that have parental responsibility laws have established the rule that parents can be held responsible for the acts of their child only until the child reaches 18 years of age. As @Ontario Mom stated much earlier millions have been on their own at 18.Lets muddy the waters a bit....is he spending only his money on Dru and Iris...or is he spending his and Suzanne's? And if its the latter...is there a fiduciary reponsiblility being violated, somehow...
There are a lot of tragic persons in this story.....I might get sanctioned for changing the subject or being off topic or whatever....but I live less than an hour from the Moorman, and Morphew families in Indiana....and I have very close family ties to Purdue University....this story is in my zip code...However this case is resolved....there are many victims....whose lives have been ripped apart. Andy and Melinda Moorman are giants...they have done such an incredible job of deflecting their personal pain and loss...and have steadfastly focused on the Morphew daughters' welfare, Suzanne's successful retrieval and recovery for closure...and most notably for me....Gene Morphew. This guy not only loved his family and daughter...but died not knowing her whereabouts, while battling terminal cancer....after bestowing an inheritance to Suzanne....followed by a request from Barry, allegedly, for Gene to sign away her remaining rights....guardianship to Barry, which he apparently refused. The perceived alienation between the Morphew daughters and the Moormans is probably the single most egregious of casualties in this story. They have to go on, somehow, when this is all said and done. Who do they rely upon, confide in, depend on for material, emotional and social support? I surely hope it is the Moormans.Just curious. What happens when the $$ run out?![]()
They have intimated he is a victim, so why not a witness? “Mr. Morphew has been sitting in a jail cell, a cage while this is going on,” said attorney Iris Eytan. After all Barry himself has stated "People don't know the truth, so they're gonna think what they're gonna think," Honestly to me personally, "no questions asked" has always implied Suzanne was complicit to me.
my reference to fiduciary has nothing to do with the daughters...when BM was granted guardianship over Suzanne's assets and interes....did Barry have a legal responsbility to maintain records of their respective interests?
I'm not a lawyer but have been a client and ultimately a friend of impressively ethical lawyers, an observer of criminal proceedings, and an avid reader of appellate briefs and decisions.Just curious. What happens when the $$ run out?![]()
Given the length of the AA, it looks like the prosecution decimated the probable cause requirements and went directly to proof evident/presumption great all at once!I've been wondering if/how "Proof Evident/Presumption Great" differs from probable cause finding during the preliminary and found the following:
Article II, § 19 of the Colorado Constitution allows a judge to refuse bail in capital cases “when the proof is evident or the presumption great.” Capital cases are those cases that are punishable by execution. [Note: Judge Murphy confirmed the court does not differentiate capital cases here after the abolishment of the death penalty to define First Degree (Capital) murder].
“The proof is evident or the presumption great” refers to those cases in which the evidence against the defendant is very strong and the judge believes that the likelihood of conviction is very high.
The “proof evident/presumption great” standard requires something more than probable cause but less evidence than is required for conviction.
In 1982, the citizens of Colorado amended Article II, § 19 of the state Constitution to expand the types of cases in which a judge can deny the defendant the right to bail. This amendment allows a judge to deny bail to persons who are charged with a crime of violence and are on probation, parole or bail for a previous crime of violence, or who previously have been convicted of two felonies, one of which was a crime of violence. The judge must hold a hearing before denying bail, and also must find that the “proof is evident or the presumption great” and that the public would be placed in significant peril if the person were released on bond.
The procedure established by this amendment is known as “preventive detention.” Supporters of preventive detention believe that it helps keep dangerous criminals off the streets. Opponents argue that preventive detention is inconsistent with the fundamental notion that a person is presumed to be innocent, and fear that the government can misuse preventive detention to lock up people on inappropriate grounds.
https://www.criminal-lawyer-colorado.com/overview-of-colorado-criminal-law.html
In criminal cases, withdrawing from representation requires court approval. I think we can trust that the contract between BM and his defense team provided for their full representation for his initial trial - beginning to end.Just curious. What happens when the $$ run out?![]()
BBM:I am mentally prepared to hear BM referred to as “an innocent bystander”, next time, by his lawyers/s
Not again?BBM:
Brace yourself.
I think we're going to hear TeamBarry refer to him as "a victim."
Imma need to be placed in four-point restraints if that happens.
JMO.
Bit of sarcastic irony here......but the defense whining about the faulty evidence sounds about like Barry's claim about the sheriffs dept screwing up the bicycle scene. When they got you dead to rights...just claim the evidence is damaged?
BM is a victim of his “moronicity.” Or, is it moronedness?” I’ve misplaced my GK dictionaryBBM:
Brace yourself.
I think we're going to hear TeamBarry refer to him as "a victim."
Imma need to be placed in four-point restraints if that happens.
JMO.
I tend to think the “witness” is BM.
My guess is, they were still working on the 120+ pages of the AA. No doubt BM rattled off a few more lies that day that provided more fuel for the fire that is going to burn him to a crisp! JMOWhy didn’t FBI arrest him on April 5th after they presented to him the 26 pieces of evidence?
BBM:
Brace yourself.
I think we're going to hear TeamBarry refer to him as "a victim."
Imma need to be placed in four-point restraints if that happens.
JMO.
Re: Barry's dumpster-diving behavior at the store, I've always been of the opinion that he was discarding something vs. trying to retrieve something.
I'm convinced he was burying evidence in the trash, not recovering it.
On account of, that's what Barry does.
He hides stuff.
JMO.
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