His educated estimate is that she was in the water for at least 30 to 40 minutes. That differs substantially from what the defendants said. They said the car went under and it took maybe 10 to 13 minutes for the rescue people to get there. |
I just think those are two circumstances that they considered heavily. |
I'm sure it's going to take a while; there's a lot of evidence. This is a circumstantial case, but I think that we've proven murder. |
If this was indeed an accident, we don't think there would have been any reason for him to have within two hours of the incident tell one version to the sheriff and change it within a couple of days. |
It will be all or nothing. There won't be any middle road. |
It's either murder or an accident. We say murder. |
It's gone the way I thought we wanted it to. I'm satisfied with the evidence that we got in and I'm hopeful that it's enough. |
It's tough for the jury to come to a conclusion. I think they will come to one, but it's going to take awhile. |
The facts won out and the three little kids got justice today, I think. |
The judge basically said ... can't you guys get together and decide which ones really you can perhaps agree on? So we're delineating that down to a few statements. |
The judge is indoctrinating the jury, telling them what to expect. Tomorrow, we'll be taking notes as to what each prospective juror is saying and what our sense is as to their fairness and their ability to be jurors. |
The three little kids got justice today. It was a long trail to justice. |
These were three young children who were as innocent as can be, and it's our job to do justice for them. |
This is either an accident or murder. It can't be anything else. |
This isn't like it plunged into the lake. This rolled into the lake and there was plenty of time for him to get out and tend to business. |