Up and Vanished - The Trial Series: Ryan Duke’s Defense + Q&A
Episode Date: March 19, 2019For our last weekly episode until Ryan's trial, we sat down for a bonus interview with Ashleigh Merchant, plus asked Dr. Maurice Godwin and Philip Holloway to answer some of your questions. To learn... more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Payne's out working on a new project, so I'll be helping to facilitate today's Q&A,
along with Maurice Godwin and Philip Holloway. Thanks for sending in so many great questions.
We answered as many as we could. Before we get into your questions, though,
we have a surprise guest. Last week, we had the opportunity to sit down with Ryan's defense attorney, Ashley Merchant, to get her perspective. We wanted to play some of that interview for you now, before the trial begins in April. Because this is an active case on the verge of going to court, there were a lot of things she couldn't comment on, but that's to be expected. I can't talk about motions
in the respect of trying to influence the outcome.
I can't argue outside of court,
well, we filed this motion and I think it should be granted.
I can tell you that a lot of what we've done
is try to level the playing field.
I am Ashley Merchant,
and I am a shareholder at the Merchant Law Firm,
and I represent Ryan Alexander Duke.
I think that anytime you're going to take a case pro bono, you need to be morally invested in the case, if that makes sense. You need to believe in it because, you know, if someone goes
to work, they're going to work because that's how they pay the bills. But so if you're going to work
and you're not going to work to pay the bills, then you've got to have some reason to be going
to work. And so we definitely felt strong about that and about the case and about the facts of the case.
We always anticipate the case is going to go to trial because we don't like to be caught, the phrase is, you know, we don't want to be caught with our pants down.
And so we are preparing as though it's going to go forward on April 1st.
We have no reason to believe it wouldn't.
I believe that jury selection will take probably three weeks.
But in an average case, you would get probably 48 jurors summoned.
And here we have 600, I believe.
So, you know, that's very different.
This case is very different in how high profile it is because people care a lot about all the facts of the case and they're very much invested in the characters.
It's almost like it was a novel that they sort of got, you know, this character development
and stuff where a lot of times they only know things from the news.
So it's definitely unique in that the public has a different interest.
What I find interesting is being able to see what the public wants
to know about. When we try cases we don't get to find out what the jury wants to
know. I can kind of glimpse in the public's mind by looking at the
discussions and things that are going on seeing well where are the questions you
know what is it that's the people are really getting hung up on because I'm
jaded to a certain extent because when I look a case, I look at it as what can the government prove?
And so I look at it as, you know, filling up a cup with evidence
and have they filled the cup all the way?
And I have to remind myself, juries convict innocent people all the time.
But it definitely adds a different layer of scrutiny.
I practice with my husband, and I know a lot of folks have figured that out,
or a husband and wife firm.
I'm lead counsel on all the criminal defense because that's what I've always
done and that's that's my wheelhouse he's lead counsel on the civil rights
but then we're set we second-chair each other's cases which is one thing that's
funny you know watching that dynamic I think if the case is broadcast which I
assume it will be people are gonna know all about our dynamic because it comes
out in court you know you can't help it that we may interact a little bit differently and it's because we're also
married. I was surprised at the bond hearing it was a little bit surprising
for me I've never had a bond hearing that lasted that long or included that
much information at all. So you, normally you hear about the person's record
and you hear that, you know, the charges are so serious
that they're at risk of fleeing
and, you know, just because they're facing a life sentence,
the risk of fleeing is great.
And it's denied and you move on, it's 20 minutes.
So I was a little bit surprised at all of that.
We got into so much information
that would never be admissible in a trial.
Because, and one thing I can talk about is that the rules of evidence at a bond hearing
are entirely different than at a trial.
So hearsay is admissible at a bond hearing.
And a lot of pretrial hearings hearsay is admissible,
where it would never come in front of a jury because it's just not reliable.
I think we would have seen something similar to that had there been a probable cause hearing,
because probable cause hearings are another opportunity where you kind of get in the weeds. You know it was a unique opportunity and
it was a surprising opportunity for us to get a lot of information out and information that we
did not anticipate would be out prior to trial. Well in our bond motion we listed that Ryan needed
to get out because that way he had a job waiting for him and so it was something where he could start helping to pay for experts because we had paid
for experts we had paid for investigation and I can tell you in my practice if my client's out on
bond I have them work you know I mean I can't have them interview witnesses but they can get me
addresses and stuff and they can get certified copies of documents and so if he was out we the
fact that we didn't have an investigator we could have utilized him to get some of the information we needed.
Plus, he could work.
Also, I want to mention some recent breaking news.
We got reports last week that Beau, not Ryan, would actually be heading to trial first to face his charge of lying to the GBI about Tara Grinstead's case.
His first day in court is today, Monday, March 18th,
in Wilcox County. This was a surprise to all of us here at Up and Vanished, and to Ashley.
So a little bit of a surprise, but Bo Dukes is actually on the trial calendar, and it sounds
like his trial is going to be reached next week, which was that what that means is that he's
actually going to have a trial next week down in Wilcox County and he's got a couple charges there he's got making a false statement he's got two
counts of that he's got one count of hindering the apprehension or punishment of a criminal
and then he's got another count of concealing the death of another and I was looking at that
indictment it looks like the charges he's got in that case are all related to things he told
agent Sheldell during the course of this investigation.
So he's actually going to be on trial for Ryan, which is surprising, not something that we expected.
I'm a little bit surprised that he is going to be going to trial at all.
I figured he would resolve his case with a plea, resolve his case somehow, some type of a deal to testify, to offer evidence against Ryan. I think his new charges that he got around New Year's probably changed that somewhat.
And I think some of the defense that's been coming out through public pleadings
and through open courtroom arguments and questioning has possibly affected that as well,
some of our defense that's come out.
I would assume, just as a criminal defense attorney attorney that they're probably offering him the max. That would be my assumption because, you know, if you're going to
go to trial on a case, most of the time when you go to trial, it's for one of two reasons. You go
because you're innocent or you go because the offer is what you would get if you lost a trial.
And then it's just like gambling. You know, why would you not roll the dice? So we, you know,
as we say, so I would imagine when, I mean, just like in general for criminal
defense, we're going to trial because one, our client is innocent or two, because there's
no risk in going to trial because they're offering the same thing that we would get
if we lost a trial.
Everybody is sort of estimating that his trial will be over within a week.
I'm shocked that they think they can get a jury that quick. You know, you can not ask
questions and not find out about people and get jurors that may not be the right
people for a case, but because you didn't ask the right questions you don't know
that. So jury selection can go really fast or it can go really slow. I have not
seen a jury questionnaire with Beau's trial. I haven't heard anything about it.
I haven't seen anything about it, so I assume we would know if that was happening.
Jury questionnaires are not, I would say they're not the common place situation.
They're not something that we usually have in cases.
So absent extraordinary circumstances, you would not have a questionnaire.
I would think in Beau's case, you would probably want one because he's facing the same challenges
that we're facing in getting a jury but you know if nobody asks for it then the judge certainly doesn't have to give
it. I mean there has to be some strategy to it you know because it just boom all of a sudden popped
up on a trial calendar you know and it's it's being I don't want to say rushed because that
makes it sound like it's purposeful but it seems like it's being hurried to be heard prior to Ryan's. And I think it definitely affects the jury pool. I think that
it's strategic. I mean, I can give you what I think is happening. I think that it's strategic
because, and I've said this before on this podcast, whoever talks first usually gets the deal.
And so the police, the public, jurors, when they hear a version of the truth or a version of a story first, you're going to be working hard to disprove that because they tend to believe the first thing that you hear.
I want to see what happens.
I want to see and hear the witnesses because, you know, it's one thing to read a cold record and read a cold report and read a piece of paper.
It's a different thing to see what happens and see how they actually do.
It's just one of those things that's like reading a transcript versus listening to a podcast about a case.
You know, it's just totally different when you hear it and see it than it is when you read it.
And we could obviously get a transcript of it, but a cold transcript is just reading a piece of paper.
is when you read it. And we could obviously get a transcript of it, but a cold transcript is just reading a piece of paper. And I want to see and hear the people and, you know, know what they're
going to testify about. I would imagine there's going to be a lot of overlap. I would imagine
because the cases are somehow related, you know, a lot of the players are related and the topics
are related. So I want to be able to see what they're going to be talking about. And I mean,
his charges reference Ryan. So, you know, there's, there's
definitely some, some reference there. And I think that will come up and I want to see what we can
expect in our case. You know, there's so many what ifs and how it could go. And I hate this, but you
never know until you're in court. And I tell clients that all the time, you never know until
the witness takes the stand, what they're going to say. And, you know, it's always, it's always sort of a gamble as to what's going to come out or what people are going
to say when they're actually on the stand under oath. People tell you a lot of things out of
court and then they get on the stand and they're sworn to tell the truth and some different stuff
comes out. So I just, I don't know how it's going to affect it, but that's one of the reasons I
want to be there so that we can gauge that. It's just ironic that he is a witness in
this case and he's being charged with lying. And I mean, if you look at his indictment,
the first and the second count, they're saying what it looks like they're going to try and prove
is that he made a false statement to Agent Sheldell. He made two statements and they're
arguing that the first statement was the false one and the second one was true.
And the reason is because he didn't talk about Ryan and he didn't talk about a friend named John McCullough in the first interview.
And then he talked about him in the second one, so they're going with the assumption that the second one must be the correct one and so he must have been lying in the first one.
You know, John McCullough I'm sure will come and testify. He was a guy that Beau I believe was in the army with and that Beau had talked to about
the case. It's like they're picking which interview they think Beau told the truth
in and they're picking the second one and so they have to prove that the first
one was a lie. It's very confusing. It's very confusing and so they're gonna have
to really break it down to a jury and that's why I'm looking forward to
hearing how they break it down to the jury and seeing
exactly how they determined that Beau was telling the truth the second time and not
the first time.
The prosecutor's name is Brad Rigby.
He is the elected DA for Cordill Judicial Circuit.
He used to work in the TIF judicial circuit, which is who's prosecuting
Ryan. So he was involved in the Tara Grinstead case early on when he was an assistant in the
Tifton office. He has since been appointed up to be the head DA in this other circuit. So he's
actually prosecuting Bo, but he's also helping on Ryan's case. So the prosecutors in Ryan's case are helping on Bo's case and vice versa, even though they're in different offices and different jurisdictions.
The problem with Bo is he's got so many different things going on that we kind of have to take it day by day.
Like what's going to happen with his case next week?
What's his defense going to be?
He could surprise everybody next week and come out with some defense that nobody expects, which could completely change our strategy. So it's one of those things that we
kind of have to deal with day by day because we don't have access to him and we can't figure out
what he's saying or what he's going to end up saying. And we can't count on that. So we have to
work around that. As much as Ashley could tell us, there was one big part of Ryan's case that
she couldn't comment on. Something that will most likely come into play in a big way during the trial.
I can't really talk about Ryan's confession, unfortunately.
That's going to be something that will be heavily litigated in court.
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Hey, I'm Tom Power.
I'm the host of the CBC podcast, Q with Tom Power.
I get to talk to artists from all over the world, writers, musicians, actors, directors,
all kinds of creative people.
And we try to have the conversations you have with really, really good friends.
The conversations you have when you share a love of something, about ideas, when you want to hear about everything.
I feel really lucky to have these conversations.
Cue with Tom Power.
Available now on Spotify.
So now let's answer some of your questions.
I'll pass that along to our legal expert, Philip Holloway, and to our favorite forensic consultant, Dr. Maurice Godwin.
Hi, Payne. Hi, Maurice. This is Candace. I'm a resident in Sylvester.
I've been following the podcast and listening to the confession, even if it is true to be false, they did say that they cremated the body over several days.
And it just doesn't make sense to me how if they get truckloads of wood, how no one had observed the smoke coming from it.
Because if you create a big bonfirefire you would imagine there would be a lot
of smoke and for no attention to be drawn to that it was just confusing so any insight on that would
be helpful thanks bye the location is exactly where um they burnt the body although it was near
the pecan orchard it wasn't in exactly the pecan orchard. It was behind a big long row of pine trees.
And they dug a hole, a pit, and put her down in a pit.
And plus, it's hard to see smoke, black smoke, blue smoke, or any kind of smoke when it's pitch dark outside.
It's a considerable distance from the main road.
distance from the main road so nobody would have seen any of that especially because the pine trees from the road to the the area is probably four or five football fields long i pain in the up and
vanish crew this is steve calling from west palm beach florida my question is for uh mr hollowell
is does he have the opinion that a confession from Ryan is enough for a conviction?
Do they need more information or more evidence other than that to get a conviction? And do you
think the prosecution is overstepping itself trying to get a murder conviction on such little
evidence? Thanks very much and keep up the good work.
Hi Steve, great question. For purposes of your question, let's say that Ryan's statement amounted
to a confession and that there's no issues of that confession being possibly false. Under Georgia law,
someone cannot be convicted on an uncorroborated confession, that means that there must be at least some independent
evidence to substantiate a confession. The reason for the corroboration requirement is that the law
recognizes that false confessions are real. It does happen, and according to the Innocence Project,
approximately 25% of convicted criminals who are ultimately exonerated had, in fact, confessed to the crime. So the law
disfavors uncorroborated confessions. But just how much corroboration is needed? Well, not much.
Mere slight corroboration is enough. In the context of this case, for example, a glove that puts Ryan
at least in Tara's yard through maybe DNA near the relevant time, that would be enough corroboration,
even though the glove is, as the defense would say, consistent with their theory as well,
which is that Ryan was only there to help Bo cover up her murder.
Hey squad, this is Matt from Charlotte.
I just have a quick question, probably for Phillip, and that is the defense for Ryan
Duke right now, it seems that they are going about the manner that the confession he said is going to be
faulty or they're trying to get it thrown out or what have you.
So my question is, Philip, in your perspective, in your eyes, what do you think the defense
is saying?
Are they saying that it's completely false or are they saying that he was on drugs so
only part of it is going to count towards the
thing or they're just trying to get the whole thing thrown out? So I guess that's my question.
What do you think the defense is taking for Ryan Duke right now? So thanks for everything you guys
are doing. I love listening. I'll keep listening. Take care. Good call, Matt. The defense is
essentially saying that the roles are reversed. They're saying that Bo was the killer and that Ryan was the helper after the fact. In that sense, they are saying that Ryan's
statement is basically partially false, not completely false. For example, they're not going
to dispute the part of his statement, I would imagine, where he says that, you know, I was
involved. The defense has not completely tipped their hand, though, on exactly how they're going
to try to prove the false confession theory. We suspect that they're going to point out that Ryan took opioid
medication, so that's just one piece of it. They also may say that the statement doesn't match the
physical evidence. I do think that will be something that they argue. The defense will have to bring
that out at trial. They're going to have to educate the jury, though, because most people think that it's counterintuitive for someone to confess to something that they did not do.
As the late Justice William Brennan said in 1986, our distrust for reliance on confessions is due in part to their decisive impact on trials.
impact on trials. Juries place so much weight on confessions that the introduction of a confession means that the real trial, for all practical purposes, occurs when the confession is obtained.
No other class of evidence is so profoundly prejudicial, so the defense has their work
cut out for them to educate this jury on the issue of false confessions if they want their theory to succeed. This is why
the defense has been trying so hard to get the funds to hire the necessary expert witnesses.
Hi, my name is Regina McClain. I'm calling from Lexington, Kentucky. Love the show. I have a
question regarding Bo. If the trial for Ryan sheds light on anything that could indict Bo or make Bo look guilty,
could that be used in a trial later for Bo? Could Bo be charged with murder basically based on
things that come out from Ryan's trial? That's my question and keep up the good work. Thanks.
Hi, Regina from Lexington, and thanks for the call.
There's no statute of limitations on murder, so if another person were to be proven to be the real killer,
that would not stop someone else from being charged.
Double jeopardy might, however, be a problem depending on how it plays out.
But there is zero chance, in my view, that the state is ever going to consider charging Bo with
murder. Their theory all along has been that Bo was merely a helper after the fact. The defense
will of course portray Bo as the real killer in Ryan's trial, but I can't conceive of any way they
could possibly prove such a thing with strong enough evidence to cause the state to reverse
course and to change their theory
of the case. The best the defense can hope for is to use circumstantial and other evidence to inject
reasonable doubt into the minds of the jurors. Hi, I'm wondering what to make of the new evidence
that Heath Dykes was a DNA match for semen in Tara's bedroom. That combined with the nearly
two dozen voicemails he left Tara the same weekend that she disappeared, seems really bizarre to me. If he had a romantic relationship with her,
wouldn't it have been beneficial to him to declare that and be truthful in the beginning when he was
being questioned anyways? It seems suspicious to me that he kept that all a secret. Thanks.
Well, I, for a long time, felt like he was suspicious, but he had nothing to do with this case or her being disappeared.
He's totally innocent.
They had an affair, and that was all there was to it.
Even though he went there and left his business card on the front door,
and he was seeing her and she was seeing him, that was all there was to it.
And he's been cleared, totally cleared, and that should be the end of that.
Hi, Payne. This is Allison from Warren, Ohio.
Huge fan of the podcast. Think you're doing a great job.
My question was, in the bond hearing when the defense, you know,
stated that Keith Dyke's semen was found on Tara's sheets,
they were also suggesting that it was mixed with blood.
Are they trying to put out there that she was potentially raped, or do we have any other information as to where they may
be getting at with that evidence? Thanks so much. Take care. Thanks, Allison. We did learn that this
DNA was found in the bedding. We don't know all there is to know about it, but I learned from a
source a long time ago that this may be the case.
If Tara's blood was also in that bedding, and it appears that it was, that could be significant, at least from an investigative perspective.
At a bare minimum, it would be something that investigators should have followed up on.
They should have moved mountains, in my opinion, to try to explain how it got there,
why it got there, when it got there, just under what circumstances did it come to exist there,
and what does it mean? I'm not sure the defense will be able to answer all those questions because it depends on what the GBI did or perhaps did not do when investigating that issue. It is the
investigator's job to answer those questions, and if it comes out at trial that they did not do when investigating that issue. It is the investigator's job to answer those questions,
and if it comes out at trial that they did not do so, that they did not answer those questions,
or to at least try to answer those questions, then that could amount to reasonable doubt as
to the guilt of the accused. In other words, it could just be another doubt in the mind of a juror
to which a reason could be attached. I don't think we know yet enough about this,
but I'm going to be watching and I know you will too.
Hi, this is Ramona from North Georgia,
and I just found the podcast two weeks ago and been listening to it.
My question is, now that all this has been put out there in the bond hearing,
when it would normally not make it into a trial hearing.
Because it is now on record, can it be used in the trial itself as evidence? Thanks. I'm enjoying it.
Keep it up. Thanks for the question, Ramona. That bond hearing was something else, and all sorts of
things came out that most likely will not be admissible at trial. Keep in mind, the rules of evidence at a trial are more restrictive.
So all of that hearsay, the rumor, the innuendo, and the speculation,
none of that should come up in trial unless something happens that makes it relevant
and, as we say, opens the door for it all to come in.
But lots of things from the bond hearing will come up in the trial.
Lots of things that were discussed at the bond hearing ironically were not relevant for the bond hearing, but are relevant to the issues
at trial. The big advantage the defense got from that wide-ranging testimony from the bond hearing
is that they have locked that witness, Agent Shadel, down to a specific version of his testimony
under oath. And if his trial testimony strays at all from his prior testimony under oath,
the defense can just whip out the transcript of that testimony
and figuratively beat the hell out of him on cross-examination with it.
We call that impeaching a witness with a prior inconsistent statement.
And when the prior inconsistent statement was made under oath,
it can make quite a splash. That's why I've said that it was unwise for the state to call
Agent Shadel as a witness at that bond hearing. They just handed the defense a potentially
devastating weapon to use at trial. Hey guys, this is Sam from Cincinnati, Ohio. Love the podcast.
Keep up the good work. My question is, so Ryan is saying that he
did not do this and that confession was false. I was curious, has he said anything about what
did happen? Like what is his theory? Because clearly he knows something and clearly he was
involved in some kind of way, you know, maybe not as the actual killer, but I'm curious if, you know,
what his story is of what actually did happen if, you know, if it didn't, because, you know,
it'd be hard for me to believe that he didn't do anything or didn't know anything about what
actually happened. So, yep, that's my question. Thanks, guys. And again, keep up the good work.
Bye. Well, Sam, the short answer is we just don't know yet.
Ryan's lawyers have publicly conceded that he was involved, but only that he was involved in the cover-up.
Now, that's bad enough, and it could send him to prison for a very long time.
Through his recent written notice of alibi, we know that he also claims that he was at home asleep in the nearby town of Fitzgerald,
He also claims that he was at home asleep in the nearby town of Fitzgerald along with his brother Stephen during the relevant time period, that being Saturday, October 22nd, into the early morning hours of October 23rd, 2005.
Other than that, we'll have to wait to see what additional evidence, if any, the defense puts up at trial.
They're playing these cards very close to the vest, as would be expected.
Hi, this is Logan. I'm calling from Atlanta. One of my questions was, Ryan said in his confession
that it was easy. He just popped the lock on Tara's house. But if I'm remembering correctly,
there were no signs of forced entry. Wouldn't a pop lock be considered forced entry? But that
is just my question. Love the podcast. Love you you guys thanks for what you're doing have a great day it's my understanding that he supposedly used some form
of a plastic card like a credit card legally yes that would be considered forced entry but i'm not
so sure he entered that way according to him now with his new alibi he was asleep on the couch and
he wasn't even at the terrorist house according, according to what he's saying now.
So he didn't use any card or anything according to his new alibi.
But to answer your question, if he used a credit card to go into the house, that would be included as forced entry.
Thank you for the question.
Hey, guys. This is Sam from Cincinnati, Ohio.
Hey, guys.
This is Sam from Cincinnati, Ohio.
My question is, if the trial actually does start next month, like you mentioned,
is Bo going to be a part of that trial at all as, you know, a witness?
Or is he going to be any part of that?
I know, you know, he's in some other trouble right now, too.
But I'm curious if he's supposed to be a part of that at all, if that's the expectation
for Ryan's trial, if he's going to be a part of that in any way. So just curious about that.
Love the podcast. Keep up the good work. Thank you guys for everything that you're doing for
Tara's family and for Osceola. Take care. Good question, Sam. There's no doubt at all that
Bo will be a huge part of Ryan's trial.
The real question is whether or not a jury will hear from him live and in person as a witness. The GBI has conceded that other than the statements made by these two, there is no evidence to show that Ryan is in fact the killer.
And there are problems with the statements made by each.
The defense, of course, is going to claim that Ryan's
statement qualifies as a false confession. Bo's statements are inadmissible as hearsay. Now, it's
true that Bo's statements to the GBI did cause the investigation to focus on Ryan, but in order to get
that version of the events into this trial, Bo would have to be live, in person, in court to get that
out before the jury. And let's not forget, Bo has major credibility problems. He's a convicted thief
and according to prosecutors, he's a liar of felonious magnitude. Not to mention that Bo's
version of the events doesn't exactly match Ryan's. So if I were the DA, I would do my best to try
this case without calling Bo as a state's witness. And if I had the DA, I would do my best to try this case without calling Bo as a
state's witness. And if I had to guess, that's exactly how it's going to go down. Now, that
being said, I do think we will see Bo in court because I think he's going to be a defense witness.
That's right. This is the other dude did it defense. And think about it. What better way to
present that defense to a jury than
to parade Bo, possibly shackled and handcuffed as a prisoner, out in front of the jury? They're
going to try to point out inconsistencies in his prior versions of what happened. They're going to
show the jury, if they can, that Bo leaked the summary of Ryan's statements to the media and
online. And of course, we can't forget about Bo's rape and kidnapping charges that are now pending from January 1st of 2019. The defense,
I'm sure, would love to get into all that in front of the jury to show that Bo is just the sort of
guy who's violent enough to women and therefore capable of anything, including murder. Now, all
that's easier said than done, and there are some hurdles for the
defense to overcome. For example, Bo may take the fifth if he's called as a witness, and the DA might
try to get the judge to exclude evidence of the rape charges on the grounds that they're irrelevant.
So, I do think Bo may make an appearance in Ryan's trial, but it remains to be seen just how it unfolds before a jury.
Hey y'all, this is Valerie. I'm calling from Savannah. I just finished listening to the most
recent episode and I was just curious if all that was going on sounded a little grim. Is there any
way to undo the venue and the indigent defense? Can they go back and change their mind and change the venue
and give him the money that he's requested? Or is this kind of a done deal at this point?
Thanks. I love the show. I am sure that this is about to get a whole lot crazier. Thanks.
Hello, Valerie. I think you're right. This mess may well be on the cusp of getting a whole lot crazier. Thanks. Hello, Valerie. I think you're right. This mess may well be on the cusp of
getting a whole lot crazier. I think it's a mistake for venue not to be changed. I've said that all
along. In the event of a conviction, that issue alone may be reversible error on appeal. It's
really expensive to change venue, especially in a case like this, but as expensive as it may be now,
it's going to look like a bargain price tag compared to the cost of doing the trial all over again if it's reversed
on appeal. As much as the DA or the judge may want this trial to be over with, I'm certain that
nobody wants to have to try it twice. The same holds true for the issue of funding. On appeal,
it's just one more thing that could lead to a reversal.
The rulings on these issues are not, however, carved in stone. Venue, for example, could still
be changed if, after making a go of it with Irwin County residents, it appears that they just can't
find a fair and impartial jury there. In that event, the judge would have no choice but to
declare a mistrial and start over somewhere else. The denial of funds may not
be final either, and I'm watching out for any 11th hour attempts to address that issue on appeal.
Hey, my name is Jayken, and I live in South Georgia, and I've been following this case since
2005. But my question is kind of just a lawyer question, but with all the cases pending against
or all of the charges pending against Bo,
is there some that would trump the others?
Like which one, if he were convicted of everything
that he's been alleged to have done,
where would he actually do time?
And which charges, like I said,
would take precedent over all the rest.
Hope you get to answer my question and I look forward to the answer. Thanks.
I could talk a long, long time about Bo Dukes and his alleged one-man multi-jurisdictional
crime spree. As you know, he has federal charges. He has Ben Hill County felony charges. He has Wilcox County felony charges.
The federal case is the least of his problems because he really doesn't have that much time left on his sentence anyway, and they can only revoke whatever probation he has left.
Ben Hill County and Wilcox County both have to do with covering up Tara's death in one way or another, and he faces serious
prison time in each of those cases potentially for sure. But by far, his biggest legal problem
is the allegation of rape and kidnapping from January 1st, 2019. On those charges, he's facing
a life sentence plus a lot more. Where he would do such a prison sentence, if convicted of any
of these charges, would be up to the Georgia Department of Corrections, but it's fair to say
that it would be a maximum security prison. Hi, I've been Vanis Teen. This is Stacey from
Albuquerque, and my question may be for Philip Holloway. In regards to the questionnaire, it seems like there is no way that anybody
will be able to be selected for the jury pool because of these questions based on just the
knowledge that the public, even OSILA, the state of Georgia, that everybody has. What is the likelihood of somebody lying just to get to be
a juror in this trial? Like, is that common? Would that be considered something serious if you,
like if you were to lie under oath? Anyway, that's my question. I hope I explained it good
enough. I love what you guys are doing and keep up the good work.
I agree, Stacey.
The questionnaires do suggest that it may be impossible to get a jury from Irwin County.
After all, when you have to ask the potential jurors themselves if a fair jury can be selected
in Irwin County, that should be a sign that you really need to just go ahead and move it.
It just makes no sense in my mind to not just move it now.
Your question is about, though, stealth jurors, people who want to get onto a jury. My wife and
I both have jury duty coming up soon in the same week, and we really don't like it. We have other
things we want to be doing, but sometimes people do like jury duty, and sometimes people actually
want to get on trials, and we call these people stealth jurors.
Stealth jurors are people who have some type of an agenda, and we usually see this.
In fact, I think we almost always see it in high-profile cases.
People will actually lie under oath so that they can pursue some hidden agenda, whether it be to simply influence the outcome of a trial,
or maybe to write a book, or otherwise seek some type of fame or notoriety. It is a very real concern and it's
said to have happened in some very high profile cases, including the Scott Peterson murder trial
out in Los Angeles and even the Martha Stewart trial. Best-selling author John Grisham wrote a
book about it called The Runaway Jury. So this is a very real problem and one that all the lawyers, lawyers for both sides and the judge, need to be aware of and to look out for.
Hi, Up and Vanished team. This is Sarah from South Carolina.
I had a quick question for you guys as well as Maurice about the role of social media in legal proceedings.
Maurice about the role of social media in legal proceedings. Nowadays, I feel, especially, you know, listening to a variety of podcasts, a lot of the cases that are covered are a little bit
more dated, and so social media isn't as big of a presence. However, in the last episode, when
they went through the paperwork that the jurors had to write about, there was a lot of inquiries
about social media.
Is it possible that someone could go into detail about how that might influence the case and juror selection and just the big changes that social media has brought into legal proceedings? Thank
you. Y'all are doing such an awesome job and I look forward to hearing more episodes. Bye.
Social media such as Instagram or Facebook or Twitter plays a huge role in trials and the selection of jewelry.
Just reading it, not just posting, but reading it because people could post the information and a potential jewelry could be influenced by what they read.
But what they're reading could be completely false. It could be third and fourth and fifth hand information. It could be just rumor mill and they could believe that it could be true
and it not be true at all and influence the way they think about a case. So it's best that they
be ordered by the judge to refrain from reading or looking at any social media during the time
that they're on this trial or talking to anybody about what's posted.
So yes, it's very important that a potential jury refrain from participating or reading any kind of social media.
Sarah, you make a great point, and it's one that I make all the time.
So many people rely solely on social media now for information that there's no way that it could
not impact criminal trials. This stuff spreads like wildfire on social media, particularly in
this case. Social media has certainly changed how lawyers pick juries and how they try cases
altogether. There's no way to pick a jury in almost any case these days without asking at
least something about social media influence. One thing that
happens though that many people don't think about is the use of social media by the jurors themselves.
Lawyers will try to learn as much as they can about the potential jurors through the
voir dire or jury selection process, but sometimes this type of questioning isn't enough.
There's a lot of information about these jurors out there in the
social media world, and the lawyers will look into it. They're going to look at their Twitter feeds.
They're going to look at their Facebook accounts where they can. When someone has tweeted about
something or posted about it on Facebook, this can sometimes give lawyers an insight into their
personality, and it also can expose biases. And in any particular case,
it can show that possibly they've prejudged the case.
Anyone who may be on this jury had better believe
that their social media history will be under a microscope.
Thanks so much for joining us on the trial series.
This is our last weekly episode for now,
but with Beau's trial currently underway
and Ryan's just around the corner,
we'll be back soon.
Keep an eye out, and thanks for listening.
Up and Vanished is an investigative podcast produced for Tenderfoot TV Thank you. and Lindsay. Voice over by Rob Ricotta. Our intern is Hallie Badal. Original score by Makeup and
Vanity set. Our theme song is Ophelia performed by Ezra Rose. Our cover art is by Trevor Eiler.
Special thanks to the team at Cadence 13. Visit us on social media via at Up and Vanished or you
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