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I just don't see the defense putting BM on the witness stand to badmouth his wife, or offering a defense based on a story he didn't present in his interviews with investigators. Those strategies would blow up in BM's face.
It seems unlikely that the prosecution would introduce evidence of such a story in their "case in chief", so it seems to me if the defense is based on mercy killing or SM running off with the milkman and going into hiding, the defense would have to introduce credible evidence such events occurred.
I'm not even sure such evidence would be allowed. These stories do not seem to be "affirmative defenses" to the charge of First Degree Murder after Deliberation - at least I can't find any such defenses.
For more on affirmative defenses, check out Colorado Revised Statutes, Section 18-1-407 and Nolo's article, Affirmative Defenses in Criminal Cases.
I'm not positive (there are others here, @MassGuy, @Seattle1, @gitana1, @Alethea who may remember the exact answer), but I believe Colorado is a state where, if the defense intends to try and pin the crime on another person, they have to present the evidence at the preliminary or as soon as they are aware of it - and they can't use the defense if the Judge doesn't believe there's sufficient evidence against the Milkman).
IOW, they can theorize in their opening or closing arguments that "maybe" Suzanne did X, but they cannot imply someone else specifically did this crime unless they have presented evidence of said person's involvement to the Judge prior to ever mentioning it in court.
Does anyone think that "someone else could have done it" will create sufficient doubt in any jurors? It does worry me a bit that it's possible one juror could ignore the actual evidence and merely prick up his/her ears at the words of the defense team. At any rate, the evidence has to be presented now, in August, for the defense to have any such affirmative defense at trial - that's my understanding.
I have no clue whether the defense will be allowed to hint strongly at this but provide no evidence...I don't put it past them to go find someone they could put on the stand to introduce the vague idea of "another person," specifically an abduction scenario.