Prosecutor: Tim Ferriter's son didn't have bedroom in house
Coakley explained to jurors how they would see video from a Ring camera that was placed in the corner of the box-like structure.
"The evidence is going to show that that room was not a room that he could come and go as he pleased," she said. "He was locked inside from the outside over and over again."
During her opening statements, Murad explained how the boy had been "engaging in dangerous behaviors" while the family was living in Arizona and they wanted to keep their toddler safe, so they decided to put a lock on the door of his room.
"It was for the purpose of monitoring him when they couldn't," Murad told jurors. "Because, unfortunately, they're in a situation where they cannot leave this child unattended. There has to be someone constantly watching him and they cannot do that as two working adults."
Murad said they built a room for the boy in their garage in Arizona once the baby was born and constructed a similar room for him when they moved back to Jupiter
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Defense attorney: Tim Ferriter's son had been 'engaging in dangerous behaviors'
"Both the room in Arizona and the one in Florida had one very big design flaw – and that is that it did not include a bathroom," she said.
Murad said the boy had been allowed to use the bathroom in the house during the day and used the bucket "a handful of times" during the night.
"This was not some big secret life like the state is presenting," Murad said. "These people went to doctors. They went to therapists. The schools were emailing them back and forth about [the boy's] behavior. They had family members and friends see the room in Arizona. In Florida, they were only here for about four weeks right before Christmas and then school started."
A prosecutor says there was no bedroom and were no toys in the Jupiter home of a father accused of keeping his adopted son locked in a windowless, box-like structure in the garage.
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