The trial of Cristhian Bahena Rivera for the murder of Mollie Tibbetts was supposed to start last week after years of delay, some of it necessitated by the coronavirus. But back in December there was another delay and the trial still hasn’t started. However, this week there was an argument in court over attempts by the defense to subpoena Tibbetts bank records. Prosecutors argued those attempts were an illegal “fishing expedition” because the court didn’t approve them and the subpoena was not entered into a tracking system
until days later:
Prosecutors say the defense issued the subpoena through the Poweshiek County Clerk on January 15, six days before they received a copy. A return of service was date-stamped four days later by the Polk County Sheriff’s Office.
The State says the defense didn’t notify the prosecution or get approval from the court for the subpoena, which is for Mollie Tibbett’s bank records at Bankers Trust in Des Moines.
“Prior to the service of the subpoena the defense did not file the subpoenas in EDMS which would suggest that the intent of the defense was to keep the existence of the subpoena from the State and Court. The timing of the email to the undersigned with the subpoena attached would further support this contention. On its face, the subpoena appears to be a fishing expedition into the confidential banking records of Mollie Tibbetts who is not a witness or party and is the person the defendant is charged with killing.”
Defense attorney Jennifer Frese countered, during a Thursday video hearing, that her office had not notified prosecutors of the subpoena — as required by law — because of a “clerical oversight” and not because the defense was “trying to be tricky.”…
Frese didn’t explain the effort to find Tibbetts’ banking records during the hearing but in her written argument said she and her husband/co-counsel were following up on an investigation started by the state into Tibbetts’ bank records. A tip was made to law enforcement Aug. 1, 2018, from a bank employee that Tibbetts had set up a bank account just before her death.
There also was information a transaction was made on the account at a tattoo shop after her death, according to the motion.
Argument over subpoena reveals a hint of defense strategy in Mollie Tibbetts case