Blue Shakehead
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 13, 2021
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Right. Generally speaking, joining cases together is an advantage for the prosecution - not only do they get to save time and money but they get to put the same case together to try multiple defendants for the same offence using the same fact pattern.Attorneys for Lori Vallow attempted to play this game in that high profile and complex case. She petitioned the court to have her trial in October after her co-murdering husband's case got bumped to next year. Fortunately, the judge denied her motion and is making her go to trial joined with Chad Daybell next year. I do think they need to charge Donna in the near future to assure they CAN try them together.
However, in the 2019 trial, I think the joinder of Magbanua and Garcia was an advantage for Magbanua's defense in that the State's attention was divided between the doers and the planner and both defendants had different and opposing Defense theories. Another advantage of course is that the Defense gets multiple opportunities to cross-examine the State's witnesses and sow a lot of confusion into the case by arguing the minutiae.
Its also very possible that I am putting too much weight into the unlikely outcome of that trial. Not only did the State's case improve significantly in the Magbanua cross in the 2022 trial, the presentation of Sgt. Corbett's cell phone evidence was a mess in 2019 and a masterful display in 2022.
In a hypothetical case against CA and DA, where both defendants are the planners but the evidence is stronger against CA - are there any disadvantages to joining? Does the prosecution's normal advantage to joinder still apply when they are up against two separate OJ-calibre defense teams? I am curious on your views....