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ThanksMotive vs Mens Rea
Motive is often confused with mens rea which means "guilty mind" and refers to the defendant's culpability or intent to commit the criminal act.
To be clear, while motive might help the prosecution explain why Stines executed Mullins in his Chambers, it's not necessary to convict him. There was no motive presented at the PC hearing and the grand jury doesn't need one to indict him for murder.
Citing examples posited on the thread thus far, whether Stines perceived drug treatment financial fraud or wrong doing against his child, it doesn't make Stines any less guilty from acting as the judge and jury here, and following through with intentionally shooting Mullins multiple times and leaving him to die on the floor of his Chambers that the world witnessed on video.
If the defense wants to introduce claims beyond Stines relied on speculation and hearsay, he's going to have to produce specific evidence to show a nexus between his claim outlined in his defense Motion that Stines didn't intend to kill Mullins.
As we just saw in the Delphi trial, case law is quite clear that the nexus must not be based on speculation, conjecture, rumors, or hearsay, but rather on admissible evidence.
KY 507.020 MURDER