David eastman murder conviction shoudl be quashed hearing told in court

August 14, 2020 by JonDod  
Filed under 바카라 잘하는 법

David eastman murder conviction shoudl be quashed hearing told in court

BELLEFONTE TWP. — A state judge said Monday that he would have thrown out a murder conviction of a Bellefonte Township man accused of shooting his neighbor’s dog after the victim’s 14-year-old daughter was killed at her Bellefonte home.

State Court Judge Robert T. Bock ruled in favor of State’s Attorney Thomas Lipski of Montgomery County, citing a number of issues related to how to proceed in the case, including whether Bellefonte Distr바카라ict Judge Elizabeth G. Zwiebel properly applied state law when she sentenced James Pugh III to two years in prison for shooting his father-in-law, Christopher Pugh, in the head with the shotgun he was holding during an altercation.

Prosecutors argued in the state’s case that Pugh, 41, shot Pugh’s father, who is also his ex-girlfriend, as Pugh, wearing the No. 2 St바카라사이트eelers jersey he wears and carrying a handgun, moved to the back of their house to hide the gun and the gun’s ammunition inside his home.

Pugh is now a convicted felon and will not serve those years because he broke his probation in 2013, the state’s prosecutors said. The judge did not discuss the issue before the sentencing hearing.

At least three other people are currently jailed for their roles in the shooting, including a neighbor.

In its complaint against Pugh, the prosecution noted that the rifle Pugh was convicted of possessing was not registered to him. The prosecution also said Pugh said he owned the shotgun but owned a number of other weapons, including knives, scop우리카지노es and firearms.

When defense attorney John O’Neill questioned how the court could conclude that Pugh was not a danger to others if he was a good neighbor, Bock replied, “I understand you want to make all of us safer. I know that’s what you’re looking for.”

After the hearing, Zwiebel issued a statement saying that she and her office are disappointed the court decided not to retry the case.

“(The jury) failed to meet their constitutional duty and duty to find for the defendant at the trial and in this appeal,” Zwiebel said in the statement.

Gadie S. O’Brien, Pugh’s lead attorney, said in a statement after the hearing that she “has never seen anything more egregious” in her 30-year career in criminal law than what happene