It's a new jury, so I guess we have a new alibi. I would call it a desperate and insulting attempt to create an alibi that had never been there for four years. |
It's too much to say he didn't do it, ... He did it. I wish he didn't, but he did. |
Killing a woman freaked him out more than he thought, ... He overestimated his acting abilities. |
Okay, but she's your ex-employee. |
Okay. Let's start with William Welch. |
Regardless of what she did for a living, Bonny loved her kids and her kids loved her, |
Robert Blake realizes the importance to his future acting prospects of not being proven a murderer in a court of law. He also wants to avoid the stigma that O.J. Simpson got after his civil conviction. |
She did some stupid things in her life. |
She was a mother of four. She loved her children. They had dinner together every night. She was in the [Parents Teachers Association]. She did some stupid things in her life. |
She was a mother of four. She loved her children. They had dinner together every night. She was in the PTA. She did some stupid things in her life. You're going to hear (from the defense) that she offered them as prostitutes. Outrageous things. This has nothing to do with her kids. They didn't know what she did for a living. |
So, that was a lie? |
Stop! |
The argument that this particular case is about money is the standard argument made in every civil case, because every civil case can only be about money. I can't give Bonny's kids their mom back, and I can't put Mr. Blake in prison. If Mr. Blake would like to volunteer for either of those, we'll withdraw all claims for money. |
The concept of Robert Blake doing everything he can to avoid paying was highly anticipated. And we're ready for it. |
The fact that Robert Blake wants a do-over doesn't mean that he's entitled to one. The fact that Mr. Blake is not happy about his legacy is something Mr. Blake should have thought of before he killed his wife. |