Today I emailed Nolan Clay, the reporter who covered Ersland's trial for the Daily Oklahoman, inquiring about the defense witnesses the judge barred from testifying. This is my email, edited for irrelevancies such as greeting and closure:
I am a member of the Websleuths crime sleuthing forum, where I have been discussing ... this trial. [Some members claim] Judge Elliott barred all defense witnesses from testifying except, of course, for the one pharmacy employee who did testify.
Is this true? I recall the judge barring testimony from another pharmacist who had been robbed, Police Officer Joe Land, and two doctors whom Box wanted to testify regarding the stress that robbery victims experience.
Were there others?
And do you recall what the judge's reasoning was regarding barring the doctors' testimony?
His response:
Ersland and his supporters like to say that the judge barred all his witnesses but one. The truth of the matter is that the judge kept out the witnesses Ersland wanted to call who would have talked about the stress of robberies. There were several. They include employees who were at the pharmacy when it was robbed before, a pharmacist from Chelsea, Okla., and the Nichols Hills officer (who actually shot an unarmed burglar.) .
Now as to the two experts, that is a little different story and one that is steeped in legal technicalities. As I remember it, the judge did not specifically bar them but probably would have. Before trial, prosecutors complained that defense attorneys didn't give them any reports from the two proposed experts. The judge told the defense attorneys to get reports from them. The judge also said he would sanction defense attorneys for missing a discovery deadline. Defense attorneys decided not to get the reports after all, probably because the judge would have kept out the experts anyway and defense attorneys wanted to avoid the sanctions. But there is a gag order so we don't know for sure.
Attached is the defense witness list. Pay particular attention to 22. [Note from Izzy Blanche: #22 reads, "Any and all witnesses endorsed by the state of Oklahoma."] Prosecutors listed dozens of witnesses and the defense could have called them
Obviously, also, Ersland could have called himself. He could have called pharmacy employee Megan West but she had testified as a prosecution witness and defense attorneys made whatever points they had from her in their cross-examination.
They called Jeanne Read, the other employee. They could have called the owner but didn't. The doctor, Choi, testified as a prosecution witness. They had planned to use Sibley, another doctor, but read a stipulation -- a statement -- to the jury about this position. So that was just as good.
They could have called another doctor, Duval, and so on and so on.
They could have called Jevontai Ingram, the other robber who was listed as a prosecution witness. (He did not testify for the prosecution after all.).
So please, no more claims that the judge barred all defense witnesses except one from testifying.