defense grasping at straws. no one who commits a crime has any ownership of any dna the left behind. if you commit a crime you know you left your dna - your choice, decision. throw out your trash and you have abandoned it and your dna. time to end the ridiculousness and move to trial.
you go into a store touch a glove to feel how they feel.. next thing you know someone walks in there and buys the same gloves that you touched then goes and commits a crime and leaves a glove there.. and your touch dna is on it.. did you commit the crime even though you were no where near the crime scene? no... cmon.. use your brain 🤣
@@pmabroukunbelievably, this type of thing happens! A man who was an alcoholic had overdosed...he subsequently had an O2 saturation test in the ambulance. The next ambulance call was a murder. The ambulance crew then used the O2 saturation tester on the finger of a murder victim, to be sure she was deceased. When the murder victim was swabbed by crime techs, at autopsy, this alcoholic man's DNA was collected from this victim's hand! It is almost unbelievable...thank GOD he was in the hospital with a nearly deadly alcohol level in his blood(tight alibi), because otherwise, he'd be in prison for life. They found the actual murderer, eventually. DNA tests are quite sensitive, these days.
It's his parents house so how do they know that the trash collected was his and DNA runs in the family so the trash could have had his father's DNA 🤔 so the court shouldn't allow it in court 😊
@ashleagardenhire191 it could have been his sister's trash haaa unless they witnessed him drinking from a container on video even and pick up that excat container within two seconds of him discarding it their grasping at a challenge my theory is that he went there to rape have sex and got caught in the middle of the action and he killed his way out that is what I think 🤔
I was wondering why the judge seemed not to understand criminal law. That's because he only practiced tort/civil law prior to his appointment by the governor. This case needed either an ex-prosecutor or an ex-denfense litigator was who was able to understand criminal law. I found this online: Steven J. Hippler was admitted in 1991, Idaho and U.S. District Court, District of Idaho. His practice areas include: Health Care; Regulatory Law; Business Law; Corporate Law; Medical Malpractice Defense; Commercial Litigation.
I know. He looks deeply depressed and medicated. I'm praying he is not being broken to illicit a false confession as happened in the Delphi case. I'm diligently praying for the judge, the prosecution, the defense, and Mr. Kohberger that they might all receive strength, guidance, discernment, and that all act under rule of law defined by Aristotle as, "The law is reason-- free from passion." I also pray that the truth wins out irregardless of what that may look like.
ALL evidence should come in and be used
defense grasping at straws. no one who commits a crime has any ownership of any dna the left behind. if you commit a crime you know you left your dna - your choice, decision. throw out your trash and you have abandoned it and your dna. time to end the ridiculousness and move to trial.
you go into a store touch a glove to feel how they feel.. next thing you know someone walks in there and buys the same gloves that you touched then goes and commits a crime and leaves a glove there.. and your touch dna is on it.. did you commit the crime even though you were no where near the crime scene? no... cmon.. use your brain 🤣
@@deathgamer8921 as an analytical chemist I can tell you that is nonsense!
@@pmabroukunbelievably, this type of thing happens!
A man who was an alcoholic had overdosed...he subsequently had an O2 saturation test in the ambulance. The next ambulance call was a murder. The ambulance crew then used the O2 saturation tester on the finger of a murder victim, to be sure she was deceased. When the murder victim was swabbed by crime techs, at autopsy, this alcoholic man's DNA was collected from this victim's hand! It is almost unbelievable...thank GOD he was in the hospital with a nearly deadly alcohol level in his blood(tight alibi), because otherwise, he'd be in prison for life. They found the actual murderer, eventually.
DNA tests are quite sensitive, these days.
If Kohberger didn't do it. Whoever did will never get caught.
Of course the judge is goin to allow it....they have no other suspect....
I hope they don’t let the Grim Reaper back on the streets
It's his parents house so how do they know that the trash collected was his and DNA runs in the family so the trash could have had his father's DNA 🤔 so the court shouldn't allow it in court 😊
It came back as a 100% match to it being a child of BK dads that's how they caught him
@ashleagardenhire191 it could have been his sister's trash haaa unless they witnessed him drinking from a container on video even and pick up that excat container within two seconds of him discarding it their grasping at a challenge my theory is that he went there to rape have sex and got caught in the middle of the action and he killed his way out that is what I think 🤔
I was wondering why the judge seemed not to understand criminal law. That's because he only practiced tort/civil law prior to his appointment by the governor. This case needed either an ex-prosecutor or an ex-denfense litigator was who was able to understand criminal law.
I found this online:
Steven J. Hippler was admitted in 1991, Idaho and U.S. District Court, District of Idaho.
His practice areas include:
Health Care;
Regulatory Law;
Business Law;
Corporate Law;
Medical Malpractice Defense; Commercial Litigation.
Not Guilty
Judge is not going to take it off, He's guilty ❗ the DNA stays
Here comes the Franks hearing.
@@mrsentinel4911 I sure hope so.
@@RayAnnetteP-c1j The general population has no idea how corrupt the Idaho government is, but they're going to find out pretty soon.
I think the people in the house did it the other roommates and they’re trying to pin it on him
Im worried, about Bryan. He doesn't look good.
I know. He looks deeply depressed and medicated. I'm praying he is not being broken to illicit a false confession as happened in the Delphi case. I'm diligently praying for the judge, the prosecution, the defense, and Mr. Kohberger that they might all receive strength, guidance, discernment, and that all act under rule of law defined by Aristotle as, "The law is reason-- free from passion." I also pray that the truth wins out irregardless of what that may look like.