NV - Jeff German, 69, investigative reporter, stabbed to death, Las Vegas, Sept 2022 *arrest*

  • #341
German makes public records request about communications btwn Telles & Roberta Lee-Kennett.

8/8/22: county spokesperson notifies him German’s request will start to be fulfilled.

Hamner: Four days later, in your phone, Google maps by German’s home start popping up.

Hamner: By 8/8, how are you feeling about Jeff German’s upcoming article?

Telles: I don’t recall.

Now a break.

@Vanessa_Murphy
 
  • #342
  • #343
  • #344
Back in session.

Telles messages to employee who was “Team Telles,” refers to “lies” in German’s articles.

Messages are from after he lost primary.

He tells her she’s his best employee.

This is the employee who was a witness for the defense.


Telles admits the articles were damaging.

Tells employee he is worried that the articles may follow him for years to come in this digital age.

Worried he may not have any good employment prospects.

Hamner says what follows are searches of German’s home, info, etc..


9/1/22: 5:45: Telles is notified German will receive messages about communications between Telles & Roberta Lee-Kennett.

Hamner: just a few hours later, German is dead, right?

Telles: yes.


@Vanessa_Murphy
 
  • #345
Hamner turns to 9/2/22, the day of Jeff German’s murder.

Telles says he took his brown BMW to the gym.

Hamner asks him what role Det. Jappe played in the framing.

Telles claims there is discrepancy with surveillance logs & Jappe knows he didn’t kill German.


Hamner asks why Jappe would clear Telles of wrongdoing in the bribes investigation…

Telles claims Jappe didn’t do full investigation into his concerns.

Telles said attorney general investigated for a month & didn’t do anything.Hamner says Jappe looked into it for 11 months.

@Vanessa_Murphy
 
  • #346
  • #347
@Vanessa_Murphy

Message from wife’s Apple Watch:“Where are you?”

Hamner asks if that message was on his phone.

Telles: From what you showed me, it is not.

Telles claimed earlier that he was home. Saying now he was on walk

10:30am: video of car that looks like his in German’s neighborhood.


7:09 PM · Aug 22, 2024 from Las Vegas, NV
 
  • #348
  • #349
Recess until 9:30 am PT (12:30 pm ET) tomorrow.
 
  • #350
I give Telles an 'A' for effort, and a 'G' for GUILTY.
 
  • #351
Holy moly that cross was so good, and the last about his wife's text asking where he was, and it not being on his phone (or on his wife's, according to Telles [and I wonder how he knew it wasn't on his wife's phone??]) was excellent. Can't wait to hear the jury questions after all that!
 
  • #352
It will be fascinating to see what RT's attorney does with him today!
 
  • #353
What a weird thing to bring him to tears so long after the event. It happened in the serial killer nurse Lucy Letby's trial last year too, when they showed photos of her messy bedroom after the police had searched it upon her arrest five years earlier. How does one get so emotional over a mess that has long since been tidied up?

I would say, in both these cases, they worked out in the intervening period that it would guarantee tears (and they're not emotional about anything else) and that is why it was part of the defence case, because it sure doesn't have anything to do with disproving guilt of the crimes they were accused of. A prop to try to elicit sympathy from jurors for the defendant. It serves to show that they only cry for themselves and not their murdered victims, but I am amazed that a messy house is enough to make them cry so long after. Is that narcissism at work I wonder? Or is it the memories of feeling I messed up, that is the moment they caught me?


Some quotes below from the Lucy Letby trial reporting:

Direct examination:

The court is shown a photo of her bedroom looking very tidy, with cuddly toys on the bed, including Winnie-the-Pooh and Eeyore. The duvet cover reads "sweet dreams". The court is told it was straightened up and tidied by her dad, after she was arrested.

The court now sees a photo of the same room - Lucy Letby's bedroom - immediately after she was arrested and the police had been in. Everything is in disarray.

Letby is crying as she sees the photos of her room
.

She is asked for the names of her two cats. She is crying as she replies "Tigger and Smudge".

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/uk-65431833

Cross-examination:

Nick Johnson KC, for the prosecution, has now begun his cross-examination of Lucy Letby.

"Ms Letby, is there any reason why you cry when you talk about yourself but don't cry when you talk about seriously injured children?" he asks the defendant.

Lucy Letby trial: Facebook searches of nurse accused of murdering babies read out in court

MOO
 
  • #354
It will be fascinating to see what RT's attorney does with him today!
Will he be able to do re-examination if he didn't get involved with direct?

I was thinking RT will be by himself again.

Such a cocky [whatsit].
 
  • #355
Will he be able to do re-examination if he didn't get involved with direct?

I was thinking RT will be by himself again.

Such a cocky [whatsit].
I think he is allowed to but somebody who is better informed than me will be able to tell us for sure.

It seems the narrative testimony happened because RT's attorneys knew he was going to lie on his testimony or was this because RT is such a cocky, pigheaded egomaniac? Bit of both probably.
 
  • #356
Makes me wonder if he's going to do his own closing arguments too. How can a lawyer not partake in his giving of evidence due to ethical considerations (if that was the reason) but then deliver a closing argument based upon his testimony? Hmm. It will be interesting to see what happens. I think these will be the shortest jury deliberations ever. MOO
 
  • #357
I thought I was in touch with reading a room. I spent many years having to do that for work and was mostly successful. What blows my mind is hearing the jurors were attentively taking notes as late as yesterday afternoon. How can anyone remotely believe what he was saying after the evidence they saw? Of course we have more info than the jury however, it should be obvious he's weaving a preposterous lie, isnt it? The crazy thing is Telles believed he hit a home run with the jury. HIs posture, mannerisms, leaned back casual head leans, his arm over the back of the chair, etc. he's acting like the CEO at a new board meeting telling his subordinates how great he is, how great his company is, blah, blah blah. He can see the jurors franticly taking notes and asking for paper right? Maybe he has reason to believe he hit a home run? I hope we dont have a bunch of similar dysfunctional personalty types on that jury as Telles? I mean look, this guy is who we see, and he got elected. Fooled a lot of people right. Is he still doing it? I sure hope not because if we do there might be people on that jury believing this drivel and that poor family are going to be very upset. Please god let me be wrong....
 
  • #358
I thought I was in touch with reading a room. I spent many years having to do that for work and was mostly successful. What blows my mind is hearing the jurors were attentively taking notes as late as yesterday afternoon. How can anyone remotely believe what he was saying after the evidence they saw? Of course we have more info than the jury however, it should be obvious he's weaving a preposterous lie, isnt it? The crazy thing is Telles believed he hit a home run with the jury. HIs posture, mannerisms, leaned back casual head leans, his arm over the back of the chair, etc. he's acting like the CEO at a new board meeting telling his subordinates how great he is, how great his company is, blah, blah blah. He can see the jurors franticly taking notes and asking for paper right? Maybe he has reason to believe he hit a home run? I hope we dont have a bunch of similar dysfunctional personalty types on that jury as Telles? I mean look, this guy is who we see, and he got elected. Fooled a lot of people right. Is he still doing it? I sure hope not because if we do there might be people on that jury believing this drivel and that poor family are going to be very upset. Please god let me be wrong....
Imo, he knows this is his last appearance to show off. Narcissism at its finest.
Is he suffering from a mental health disorder? - idk, but it's sad to watch.
I've got guilty on my bingo card. moo
 
  • #359
RT can redirect after cross is done.

I could be wrong, but dont think he will be allowed to do his own closing argument.

moo
 
  • #360
I thought I was in touch with reading a room. I spent many years having to do that for work and was mostly successful. What blows my mind is hearing the jurors were attentively taking notes as late as yesterday afternoon. How can anyone remotely believe what he was saying after the evidence they saw? Of course we have more info than the jury however, it should be obvious he's weaving a preposterous lie, isnt it? The crazy thing is Telles believed he hit a home run with the jury. HIs posture, mannerisms, leaned back casual head leans, his arm over the back of the chair, etc. he's acting like the CEO at a new board meeting telling his subordinates how great he is, how great his company is, blah, blah blah. He can see the jurors franticly taking notes and asking for paper right? Maybe he has reason to believe he hit a home run? I hope we dont have a bunch of similar dysfunctional personalty types on that jury as Telles? I mean look, this guy is who we see, and he got elected. Fooled a lot of people right. Is he still doing it? I sure hope not because if we do there might be people on that jury believing this drivel and that poor family are going to be very upset. Please god let me be wrong....
You're experienced, but they're civilians who may never have been in a court before, so they take notes of everything. He ran for office so he's not new to public speaking. I don't see how anyone can believe him. IMO
 

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
66
Guests online
2,323
Total visitors
2,389

Forum statistics

Threads
633,151
Messages
18,636,436
Members
243,412
Latest member
Mother8
Back
Top