Tag: Jury

  • Jury finds Idaho man guilty of killing his wife and their two children

    Jury finds Idaho man guilty of killing his wife and their two children

    A man from Idaho was found guilty on Thursday of killing his wife and his new girlfriend‘s two youngest children. The case involved strange claims of apocalyptic predictions, children turning into zombies, and secret relationships.

    The jury took only six hours to decide that Chad Daybell was guilty. This ended a case that started in 2019 and involved at least four different states. Daybell stood there in a long-sleeve dress shirt and looked calm as the verdicts were read.

    Now the jury will decide if Daybell, who is 55 years old, should be punished with death for killing Tammy Daybell, 16-year-old Tylee Ryan, and 7-year-old Joshua “JJ” Vallow. The trial’s punishment phase starts again on Friday after almost two months.

    JJ’s grandfather, Larry Woodcock, told The Associated Press that he was happy because everything was taken care of and every problem was resolved. “I’m still sad about the deaths – four people died for no reason. But my wife and I are very happy with the decision. ”

    Last year, Lori Vallow Daybell, the mother of the children, was given a life sentence in prison with no chance of getting out. She was found guilty of conspiracy and murder. She married Chad Daybell only two weeks after Tammy Daybell died. She is waiting to go to court in Arizona because she is accused of killing her fourth husband, Charles Vallow. Charles Vallow was JJ’s dad.

    The judge in the case said lawyers on both sides can’t talk to the media until the trial is over.

    The case got a lot of attention from the media, so the judge decided to have the trial in Boise instead of the small town in Idaho where the crimes happened. This was done to make sure the jury could be fair and unbiased.

    During the penalty phase, the prosecutors will try to prove that the crimes deserve a death sentence because they were very cruel or met other factors specified in the law. Daybell’s lawyers will try to show the jury reasons why a lighter punishment is suitable.

    Five years ago, JJ’s grandparents, Kay and Larry Woodcock, started looking into the situation because they were worried that Vallow Daybell was not letting them talk to JJ on the phone. JJ and his grandparents lived in different places, but they were always close. They talked to each other on video calls a lot since JJ was three years old. JJ was really smart but also had autism, Larry Woodcock said. When he didn’t know what to say, he would tell his grandparents, “Mawmaw, Pawpaw, I don’t know. ”

    “During the last few years of his life, he was getting funnier and showing more of his personality. ” “I really miss his sense of humor,” Larry Woodcock said. “Every day, my wife and I always ask each other for advice and say `Mawmaw, I don’t know’ or `Pawpaw, I don’t know’. ”

    In 2019, Kay Woodcock asked the police to make sure the child was okay. Investigators quickly found out that both children were gone, and a search in multiple states started. The investigation quickly went in different directions that were not expected.

    Vallow Daybell and Chad Daybell were dating when their previous partners died suddenly, according to investigators. Vallow Daybell’s brother Alex Cox shot and killed her husband, Charles, in Arizona in July 2019. Cox said it was self-defense. He did not get in trouble.

    Vallow Daybell, her kids JJ and Tylee, and Cox then moved to eastern Idaho to be near Daybell, who is a writer of books about the end of the world that are based on Mormon beliefs.

    In October 2019, Tammy Daybell passed away. Chad Daybell first said she died from being sick and sleeping, but a later examination found she actually died from not being able to breathe. Chad Daybell and Vallow Daybell got married two weeks after Tammy Daybell died, which surprised their family.

    Almost one year later, the bodies of the missing children were discovered buried on Chad Daybell’s land in eastern Idaho. Investigators found out that both kids passed away in September 2019. Prosecutors say Cox worked with Chad Daybell and Vallow Daybell in all three deaths, but Cox died of natural causes before he could be charged.

    Lawyers brought in many people to testify in order to support their argument that Chad Daybell and Vallow Daybell planned to murder the children and Tammy Daybell. They did this because they wanted to remove anything that could get in the way of their relationship and also to get money from life insurance and survivor benefits. The lawyers say the couple believed that evil spirits could possess people and turn them into zombies. They thought the only way to save a possessed person’s soul was to kill their body.

    Fremont County prosecutor Lindsay Blake said that Daybell pretended to be a leader of a group called “The Church of the Firstborn” and told Vallow Daybell and others that he could tell if someone had become a “zombie. ” Daybell also said he could tell how close a person was to death by reading their “death percentage,” Blake said in her closing arguments on Wednesday.

    Daybell used the same pattern for each person he killed, according to Blake.

    “Chad Daybell called them ‘dark’. ” Their chances of dying would decrease. “Then they would have to be killed,” she said.

    Blake said that Daybell convinced Vallow Daybell and her brother, Cox, to help with the plan. Daybell also gave Cox spiritual blessings and warned Vallow Daybell that the angels were upset because she was ignoring him at times.

    Daybell’s lawyer, John Prior, said that the prosecution’s descriptions of Daybell’s beliefs were not true. He said Daybell was a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints who was very religious and always talked about his spiritual beliefs.

    Prior said that the police only focused on finding evidence to use against Daybell, instead of looking at the true facts of the case. He also said that the children’s uncle, Cox, committed the crimes. He remembered that Cox had shot JJ Vallow’s father in Arizona, and the two children saw it happen. He also said Cox tried to make it look like Daybell did a bad thing by burying the children in Daybell’s yard.

    During the sentencing phase, the jurors will decide if Daybell should be given the death penalty, which can be either by lethal injection or firing squad, or if he should be sentenced to life in prison. Woodcock said he will be happy with either choice.

    “You deserve it for killing kids. ” You deserve it for killing your wife. “Chad decided to do something he knew was bad,” Woodcock said.

  • Jury deliberations in criminal case involving Trump’s hush money has begun

    Jury deliberations in criminal case involving Trump’s hush money has begun

    The jury has started thinking about their decision on Wednesday in Donald Trump’s hush money trial. The outcome of the trial is now in the hands of twelve New Yorkers who promised to be fair and unbiased.

    A group of seven men and five women on the jury went to a private room before 11:30 am to start thinking about their decision in the first trial of a former U. SLeader of a country. The jurors’ talks will be private, but they can send notes to the judge to ask for a repeat of what was said or to see the evidence again. That’s also how they will tell the court about their decision, or if they can’t decide.

    “I don’t have to decide if the evidence is true or not. ” “It belongs to you,” said Judge Juan M. Merchan spoke to the jury.

    Trump is accused of lying about his business records to cover up bad stories about him during the 2016 election. He is facing 34 charges for this.

    The crime is a serious one and it’s about paying back money to Donald Trump’s lawyer Michael Cohen. He paid him back after he gave $130,000 to porn actor Stormy Daniels to keep her quiet about her saying she had sex with Trump in 2006. Trump is being accused of lying about paying Cohen for something secretly, by saying the money was for legal fees.

    Trump said he didn’t do anything wrong and he believes the money he paid Cohen was for real legal work.

    To prove Trump guilty, the jury must be really sure that he made or had someone make false records for his business on purpose, to trick others, and to hide or do another illegal thing.

    According to the law, if the prosecutors do not prove some parts, then they have to say Trump is not guilty. Prosecutors say Trump lied about his business records to hide breaking campaign finance and state election laws. They accuse him of trying to manipulate the election.

    Just before the jury started talking, Trump wrote all in capital letters about the trial, the judge, and Cohen on his social media. Then he went from Trump Tower to the courthouse on Wednesday morning.

    He said it was a unfair trial and falsely said the judge wouldn’t let him defend himself by saying he did what his lawyer, Cohen, told him to do. In March, Trump’s lawyers told the court that they would not use that defense.

    Trump said there was no crime, except for the person who got caught stealing from me. He was talking about Cohen. He wrote, “In God We Trust. ” in big letters again.

    The people on the jury in the trial were from different places and had different jobs. They seemed very interested in what Cohen and Daniels were saying. Lots of people wrote down information and paid close attention as people who saw what happened answered questions from Manhattan prosecutors and lawyers representing Trump.

    The jurors began discussing the case after hearing the final arguments from both sides and receiving instructions on the law from the judge. The judge also gave them some advice on how to decide if a witness is telling the truth, like considering if their story makes sense, if it matches with other witness accounts, how they acted when testifying, and if they might have a reason to lie.

    However, the judge stated that there is no set way to determine if someone is telling the truth or not.

    The rules he explained are normal but maybe even more important now that Trump’s defense focused a lot on doubting the truthfulness of important prosecution witnesses, like Cohen.

    Every person must agree on the decision. During the discussion, six extra jurors who watched the whole trial will wait at the courthouse in case they need to take the place of a juror who gets sick or can’t come. If that happens, discussions will begin again when the new juror is ready.

  • Jury members return to court after ending strike

    Jury members return to court after ending strike

    Jury members who had stopped showing up to court because they had not received their allowances for 13 months have returned to work after the strike was called off.

    After making a partial settlement with their underpaid allowances last week, they returned to court this week.

    On April 18, persons who were seconded by their respective institutions to serve as jurors to assist the Judicial Service of Ghana resolve high-profile cases at the High Court abandoned their duties over 13 months of unpaid allowances.

    They complained that, since March 2022, their allowances have been outstanding, making it impossible for them to commute to and from the court.

    On Tuesday, April 25, the jurors are back in court serving their duties in the various murder cases.

    EIB Network’s Legal Affairs Correspondent, Murtala Inusah, who is in court, reports that the jurors have so far been paid about four months of their allowances.

  • Danny Masterson: Jury in rape case against That 70s Show actor fails to reach a decision

    In a rape case involving US actor Danny Masterson, a jury in Los Angeles was unable to reach a decision.

    Mr Masterson, best known for his role in the sitcom That 70s Show, was accused in the early 2000s of raping three women at his Hollywood home.

    He had denied the charges, claiming that he was being persecuted because he was a member of the Church of Scientology.

    The Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office stated that it was considering its next steps in the case.

    Mr. Masterson’s lawyers did not immediately respond to an Associated Press request for comment.

    A retrial has been scheduled for March.

    Mr Masterson, 46, was charged in 2020 with raping three women, who were all in their 20s, between 2001 and 2003.

    The accusations were made in 2017, during the #MeToo movement which saw many Hollywood stars accused of sexual assault.

    As a result, Mr Masterson was written out of the Netflix show The Ranch. He responded by saying that he had not been charged or convicted of a crime, and that in the climate at the time “it seems as if you are presumed guilty the moment you are accused”.

    If convicted, he could face 45 years to life in prison.

    Deliberations in the case began in mid-November, but soon reached a deadlock which could not be resolved.

    In a statement, the attorney’s office said: “While we are disappointed with the outcome in this trial, we thank the jurors for their service.” It added: “We also want to give our heartfelt appreciation to the victims for bravely stepping forward and recounting their harrowing experiences.”

    Two of the women involved in the case alleged that the Church of Scientology, to which they and Mr Masterson belonged, had discouraged them from reporting the alleged rapes.

    The Church has strongly denied pressurising victims.

    The charges came after a three-year investigation by the Los Angeles Police Department. Prosecutors did not file charges in two other cases because of insufficient evidence and the statute of limitations expiring.

    Mr Masterson played the role of Steven Hyde in That 70s Show between 1998 and 2006, alongside Ashton Kutcher and Mila Kunis.