Saturday, January 4, 2014

Jodi wants to kill Juan

1/4/14

As I've always suspected, Jodi is in love with Juan. She loves him so much, she wants to kill him. We all know how Jodi's "love" works.

"Juan, you will be mine:




Jodi Arias wanted to kill prosecutor Juan Martinez if she got the death penalty in her trial, her former cell mate says.
The first phase of the trial ended without a definite sentence, prompting a second phase that begins on Friday. Arias could still get sentenced to death.
Arias “is very dangerous,” Cassandra Collins, the former cell mate, told Fox News.

Ms. Collins sure is stylish.

Collins said that Arias vowed revenge if Martinez succeeded in getting the death sentence.
“She said that if she was given the death sentence, she wanted to get her revenge,” Collins said. “She knows inmates on the outs to do a mafia bow tie, cut his throat.
"Those bitches are just jealous of me"
Collins said that Arias underwent a prison-wide campaign to convince the other inmates of her innocence. “She’ll try to suffocate you with her version and her side,” Collins said, adding that it was a form of manipulation.
In addition, Arias seemed to have a strange fascination with Martinez.
She asked me questions like ‘why doesn’t Juan Martinez love me?’  And I’m like, love you?  He’s your prosecutor.. he’s there to prosecute you for a crime.. and I’m like why doesn’t he love you?”
Poor Juan. He has a super fan.

Collins said that Arias appeared to be “out of her freakin’ mind.
On the other hand, Arias later told Fox News that the claims were not true. She tweeted that ”to comment on the babblings of a lunatic is lunacy itself. (oops).”
And her defense team asked for a change of venue because of what Collins said. However, that request was not given.

However, the actual trial isn’t due to start until mid-February, he said.
“We believe this is a tactic to try and get us to throw in the towel. We will not! I say again it won’t happen,” he said via the “Justice for Travis Alexander” Facebook page. “Our family will come together and see it through until it is finished. There is a monster that haunts us, but once the correct sentence is given, it’s her who will be haunted until the most the most humane punishment comes to her. Nothing compared to the sentence she gave to a good man. Anyhow, the entire Alexander family thanks all of you. Thank you for having our backs.”''

A hearing in the Jodi Arias trial on Friday, January 3 yielded no re-trial date.
The closed door hearing–the public and media have been barred from the trial since late last year–did not end in a set date for which to re-start the trial.
The next oral argument regarding the set date is scheduled for January 13 at 9:30 a.m., according to the blog Court Chatter.
“As parties emerged from the courtroom, prosecutor Juan Martinez looked pleased while [Arias attorneys] Kirk Nurmi and Jennifer Wilmott did not,” the blog said.
Troy Harden of Fox 10 in Phoenix commented via Twitter on not being allowed into the court room again, a recurrence that has frustrated reporters and some members of the public.
Judge Sherry Stephens has held hearing after hearing behind closed doors as the next steps of the case unfold almost entirely under a shroud of secrecy after the trial began with complete transparency and easy access, reported AP.
“Over the last several months, she has heard arguments over sequestering the new jury, moving the case out of Phoenix, Arias’ desire to fire her lead attorney and allowing live television coverage of the retrial, among other issues,” it reported in December. “She has denied each request, but quietly with orders released days after the secret hearings as the case languishes without public scrutiny even as Arias’ legal tab is being picked up by taxpayers at a cost exceeding $1.7 million.”
“The trial court has gone from transparency to blackout and bewilderment,” said attorney David Bodney, who represents several media outlets, including the Arizona Republic, fighting for transparency. “There have been repeated flagrant violations of the public’s constitutional right to attend proceedings.”
But Phoenix defense lawyer Mel McDonald, a former Maricopa County judge and federal prosecutor, said that Stephens likely didn’t expect the nationwide publicity and coverage that the trial garnered, and is trying to maintain a court room that can find “an impartial jury” and not risk “prejudice and error.”

Read more: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/425310-jodi-arias-wanted-to-kill-prosecutor-if-she-got-the-death-penalty-former-cell-mate/#ixzz2pQiBBzTI


Read more: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/425310-jodi-arias-wanted-to-kill-prosecutor-if-she-got-the-death-penalty-former-cell-mate/#ixzz2pQi40Zxl

1 comment:

  1. Just found your Blogger Blog' and reviewed All (about 25) I've been following trial from the beginning' and enjoy how you opinionate, as a invite I post on Just Da Truth Jodi Arias Yuku as Lunarscope and his Blogger Blog as *_&!

    Anyways' I will be following your Blogs!

    ReplyDelete