Anonymous wrote:Depends on how much blood. If a certain amount of blood is found it can be established that living through it unlikely or not possible.
The narrative is to easy to imagine. It makes a step by step guilty look.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they don't find a body, don't expect a guilty verdict. Inevitably, some juror will believe that the woman is still alive and living on a secret island will Elvis and Bigfoot.
Not with all the blood found in the garage and her soon to be ex caught on surveillance tape dumping bags filled with items covered in her blood.
The jurors will understand that her body was probably destroyed and incinerated at the dump. There is ample evidence that she was harmed and that her soon to be ex and his girlfriend tried to cover it up. Guilty.
You really overestimate the intelligence of a hand picked jury.
All that blood could be planted by the police. DNA isn't 100%. That's _reasonable_ doubt.
DP- no. Plenty of people are found guilty without a body.
Yes, if you use a public defender. Apparently this guy has some money.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they don't find a body, don't expect a guilty verdict. Inevitably, some juror will believe that the woman is still alive and living on a secret island will Elvis and Bigfoot.
Not with all the blood found in the garage and her soon to be ex caught on surveillance tape dumping bags filled with items covered in her blood.
The jurors will understand that her body was probably destroyed and incinerated at the dump. There is ample evidence that she was harmed and that her soon to be ex and his girlfriend tried to cover it up. Guilty.
You really overestimate the intelligence of a hand picked jury.
All that blood could be planted by the police. DNA isn't 100%. That's _reasonable_ doubt.
DP- no. Plenty of people are found guilty without a body.
Yes, if you use a public defender. Apparently this guy has some money.
Anonymous wrote:What time you guys make of the loud banging heard in the middle of the night from a Fotis property under development in New Canaan 18 hours (give it take) JD went missing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they don't find a body, don't expect a guilty verdict. Inevitably, some juror will believe that the woman is still alive and living on a secret island will Elvis and Bigfoot.
Not with all the blood found in the garage and her soon to be ex caught on surveillance tape dumping bags filled with items covered in her blood.
The jurors will understand that her body was probably destroyed and incinerated at the dump. There is ample evidence that she was harmed and that her soon to be ex and his girlfriend tried to cover it up. Guilty.
You really overestimate the intelligence of a hand picked jury.
All that blood could be planted by the police. DNA isn't 100%. That's _reasonable_ doubt.
No. That is entirely the point of reasonable doubt. You do not need to eliminate all doubt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they don't find a body, don't expect a guilty verdict. Inevitably, some juror will believe that the woman is still alive and living on a secret island will Elvis and Bigfoot.
Not with all the blood found in the garage and her soon to be ex caught on surveillance tape dumping bags filled with items covered in her blood.
The jurors will understand that her body was probably destroyed and incinerated at the dump. There is ample evidence that she was harmed and that her soon to be ex and his girlfriend tried to cover it up. Guilty.
You really overestimate the intelligence of a hand picked jury.
All that blood could be planted by the police. DNA isn't 100%. That's _reasonable_ doubt.
DP- no. Plenty of people are found guilty without a body.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they don't find a body, don't expect a guilty verdict. Inevitably, some juror will believe that the woman is still alive and living on a secret island will Elvis and Bigfoot.
Not with all the blood found in the garage and her soon to be ex caught on surveillance tape dumping bags filled with items covered in her blood.
The jurors will understand that her body was probably destroyed and incinerated at the dump. There is ample evidence that she was harmed and that her soon to be ex and his girlfriend tried to cover it up. Guilty.
You really overestimate the intelligence of a hand picked jury.
All that blood could be planted by the police. DNA isn't 100%. That's _reasonable_ doubt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe they haven’t found her yet, especially because the gf appears to be cooperating. It is horrific.
I suppose if she's already been incinerated they might not find her. It must be like looking for a needle in a haystack among all of that crushed debris at the dump.
The girlfriend is not trustworthy. She could be lying to the investigators if she was involved in the murder and/or the cover up. Her goal is to get out of this and save her own neck, not to get justice for Jennifer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they don't find a body, don't expect a guilty verdict. Inevitably, some juror will believe that the woman is still alive and living on a secret island will Elvis and Bigfoot.
Not with all the blood found in the garage and her soon to be ex caught on surveillance tape dumping bags filled with items covered in her blood.
The jurors will understand that her body was probably destroyed and incinerated at the dump. There is ample evidence that she was harmed and that her soon to be ex and his girlfriend tried to cover it up. Guilty.
You really overestimate the intelligence of a hand picked jury.
All that blood could be planted by the police. DNA isn't 100%. That's _reasonable_ doubt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they don't find a body, don't expect a guilty verdict. Inevitably, some juror will believe that the woman is still alive and living on a secret island will Elvis and Bigfoot.
Not with all the blood found in the garage and her soon to be ex caught on surveillance tape dumping bags filled with items covered in her blood.
The jurors will understand that her body was probably destroyed and incinerated at the dump. There is ample evidence that she was harmed and that her soon to be ex and his girlfriend tried to cover it up. Guilty.
Anonymous wrote:If they don't find a body, don't expect a guilty verdict. Inevitably, some juror will believe that the woman is still alive and living on a secret island will Elvis and Bigfoot.