I don't remember that. Did Angie say in testimony that FW told her to say the shoes were for Bob? This is a big thing, it shows obstruction of justice, even covering up the murders because why else say that?
She said it to keep her family from being caught because the shoes were damning evidence. So then she knew about the murders after the fact.
If you could tell me where this information is I can look for it. Also, do you know where I can find the info about Angie writing a letter to FW to try to get on FW's good side?
She wanted to explain things to FW, get on her good side so it wouldn't make sense to say FW wanted her to lie about the shoes, just would make FW furious with her.
Yes, it came out in an tweet or something during trial. I also found it it an article that I will link. I remember it being reported at that time that Fredericka told AW to tell LE she bought them for Bob, but the article says Fredericka offered to lie and say they were bought for Bob. I do not know which is true of if AW is telling the truth.
--When agents detained and questioned the family at the U.S. and Canadian border on their way back from Alaska, Angela admitted she was caught off guard by
questions about the Walmart shoes she'd purchased. She said she didn't remember that she'd left the receipt for the shoes behind; Fredericka later offered to lie and tell investigators the shoes were bought for Billy's dad, but Angela said she declined because she'd already lied to officers about them.--
The mother of a man accused of killing eight people in Pike County in 2016 will continue testifying Wednesday, but opted out of being recorded by the media, so her testimony won't be broadcast.
www.wcpo.com
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I am not sure if the actual letter she wrote to Fredericka was shown so media could get a pic of it or not but in this article it talks about her reading the letter out loud. I will look around to see if I can find a pic of the actual letter.
Nash brought up a letter Angela wrote to her mother-in-law after she was arrested, asking her to read it aloud for the jury.
"There is so much no one will ever know," read Angela.
In the letter, she'd told Fredericka that everything she'd pleaded guilty to was a lie; Angela clarified this was because, after the deal, she'd forgotten why she faced charges for things like burglary and firearms charges when she hadn't been at the scenes of the murders. She told Nash she reconvened with her lawyers, who explained her charges to her again, which she now understands.
The intent of the writing her mother-in-law, Angela said, had been to try and explain herself to Fredericka, so the matriarch wasn't upset about her cooperation with the state.
The mother of a man accused of killing eight people in Pike County in 2016 will continue testifying Wednesday, but opted out of being recorded by the media, so her testimony won't be broadcast.
www.wcpo.com