• Jury gets case after hearing contrasting claims of how Mollie Tibbetts

    From But But Sanctuary Cities! Blue Wave@21:1/5 to All on Fri Oct 8 02:43:18 2021
    XPost: alt.fan.states.iowa, alt.politics.immigration, alt.journalism.newspapers XPost: sac.politics

    An Iowa jury began deliberating the fate of a Mexican national
    Thursday after hearing wildly contrasting theories of who killed
    Mollie Tibbetts, a University of Iowa student.

    In closing arguments in the high-profile case, a prosecutor said
    the evidence "overwhelmingly" points to Cristhian Bahena Rivera,
    whose defense attorney countered with the claim that Bahena
    Rivera actually was a victim of two armed kidnappers and that
    one of them fatally stabbed Tibbetts.

    After seven days of hearing evidence and listening to testimony
    about a murder that rocked the American Heartland, the Scott
    County jury received the case and began deliberations Thursday
    afternoon. The panel deliberated for a little over three hours
    before calling it a day and will reconvene on Friday.

    The closing arguments came a day after Bahena Rivera, a 26-year-
    old undocumented immigrant, took the witness stand in his own
    defense and for the first time claimed that two unknown men
    wearing stocking masks and sweaters on July 18, 2018, abducted
    him from his trailer house, forced him to drive to where the 20-
    year-old Tibbetts was jogging, killed her and put her body in
    the trunk of his car.

    "That's a figment of his imagination," prosecutor Scott Brown
    said of Bahena Rivera in his closing summation in the Davenport,
    Iowa, courtroom.

    Brown said "irrefutable evidence," including DNA, surveillance
    video footage and the defendant's earlier confession, points to
    the only person responsible for Tibbetts' slaying -- the one who
    led police to her body in a cornfield five weeks after she
    vanished while out for a jog in her hometown of Brooklyn, Iowa.

    "Her life was brutally taken by the defendant on July 18, 2018,"
    Brown told the jury, showing a photo of a smiling Tibbetts on an
    overhead projector screen.

    "She was confronted by this man," Brown said, repeatedly
    pointing at Bahena Rivera. "She crossed paths with him and it
    ended her life."

    Defense attorney Chad Frese told the jury that under intense
    pressure to solve the case investigators "targeted" Rivera and
    "cherry-picked" facts that fit their theory without seriously
    considering the possibility of other suspects.

    "There is serious doubt in this case," Frese said.

    Frese accused the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation of
    being "sloppy" in its probe, claiming its agents "cut corners"
    in a rush to make an arrest in a case that he said had become "a
    circus," attracting national media attention that included a
    reward for information on Tibbetts' whereabouts that ballooned
    to $400,000.

    "They had four weeks of nothing, and then they picked this man,"
    Frese said of his client. "Who better to pick than an
    undocumented immigrant, who doesn't speak the language, who has
    nobody here to speak of to help him out?"

    Video that broke the case open
    Brown, of the Iowa Attorney General's Office, was allowed to
    present his summation first, telling the jury that Tibbetts, a
    sophomore at the University of Iowa studying child psychology,
    was home for the summer and working at a day-care center.

    "She was a smart young woman. She's what you'd call a low-risk
    victim," he said, explaining that Tibbetts had no known enemies,
    didn't do drugs and was never the victim of domestic violence.

    He said that after Tibbetts went missing, investigators worked
    tirelessly to find her. He said it wasn't until mid-August 2018
    when detectives combing through surveillance video from a home
    in Brooklyn came across footage of Tibbetts jogging and noticed
    a black Chevrolet Malibu circling the same area.

    "Within 30 seconds of Mollie passing through that video we see
    that car," Brown said. "This is the video that broke the case
    open."

    He asked the jury to recall the testimony of Steve Kivi, a
    Poweshiek County Sheriff's investigator working on the Tibbetts'
    case, who said he spotted the black Malibu while driving home
    from work on Aug. 16, 2018, followed it and identified Bahena
    Rivera as the driver.

    Brown said that when Kivi initially questioned Bahena Rivera, he
    claimed to have no knowledge of Tibbetts other than what he saw
    on the news and on missing-person posters.

    Brown said it was the first of four different stories Bahena
    Rivera has now come up with, including his testimony on
    Wednesday of being abducted by masked men.

    The prosecutor led the jury through statements Bahena Rivera
    made during an Aug. 20, 2018, interview with investigators,
    including a Spanish-speaking police officer, Pamela Romeo.

    He said Bahena Rivera denied any involvement in Tibbetts'
    disappearance until Romero confronted him with still photos from
    the security video placing his car at an exact time and location
    Tibbetts was jogging.

    Romero testified during the trial that Bahena Rivera implicated
    himself in Tibbetts death, allegedly confessing that he did see
    her that day, that he found her attractive and followed her.
    Romero claimed that Bahena Rivera allegedly said he stopped his
    car and began jogging alongside Tibbetts and that she threatened
    to call the police.

    "What does that do to him? It makes him angry," Brown said. "He
    admits that he was angry. He admits that she slapped him at one
    point."

    He alleged that anger is what motivated Bahena Rivera to stabbed
    Tibbetts nine to 12 times.

    Brown said Bahena Rivera told Romero that he "blacked out" and
    didn't remember Tibbetts was in the trunk of his car until he
    looked down and saw her wireless earbud in his lap. In his
    testimony, Bahena Rivera admitted that he removed Tibbetts from
    his trunk and dumped her body in a cornfield.

    Romero testified that after 11 hours of questioning, Bahena
    Rivera led investigators to the cornfield, where they found
    Tibbetts' badly decomposed body about 500 feet down a row of
    tall corn, covered in leaves.

    Brown said Tibbetts' DNA was collected from the trunk of Bahena
    Rivera's car. He reminded the jurors of Bahena Rivera's alleged
    words to Romero after Tibbetts' body was located: "I brought you
    here, didn't I? So, that means that I did it. I don't remember
    how I did it."

    "He's telling the officer that he did it. It's his confession.
    He's telling officers that he killed Mollie Tibbetts," Brown
    said.

    He pleaded with the jury not to believe Bahena Rivera's new
    story of being kidnapped by Tibbetts' so-called real killers,
    saying Bahena Rivera has had ample opportunity to tell
    investigators.

    "He didn't tell them that because it's not true," Brown said.

    Brown added, "Justice in this case, ladies and gentlemen, is a
    verdict of murder in the first degree."

    'Unlimited resources'
    Frese, who's defending Bahena Rivera along with his wife,
    attorney Jennifer Frese, also began his closing argument by
    speaking about Tibbetts.

    "This young woman was a spectacular young woman. She was
    destined to do great things. She was destined to become the
    change she wanted to see in the world," Frese told the jury.
    "She was just about to spread her wings and fly. We acknowledge
    that. We sympathize with her family."

    He said the loss of Tibbetts has evoked a lot of emotion.

    "That could be a problem when you're sitting as a juror, because
    when you're sitting as a juror emotions have no place in that
    deliberation room," Frese said. "Don't decide this case based
    upon emotions. It's not your job to right a wrong."

    Frese told the jury that local law enforcement working on the
    Tibbetts' case had the "unlimited resources of the federal
    government," including the FBI and the Department of Homeland
    Security.

    "Think about that. Now that is unprecedented," Frese said.

    Yet, Frese said, every lead investigators had chased in the
    first four weeks they searched for Tibbetts came up empty.

    "Imagine the pressure to close this case," Frese said. "Imagine
    the pressure to put this case to bed, because that's the context
    in which this arrest and this charge happened."

    He said some of the investigation was "sloppy" and that "it
    really got sloppy when Cristhian Bahena Rivera got targeted."

    "Folks, what happened here was they closed a case. They didn't
    solve a case," Frese said.

    He said "we wholeheartedly disagree" with the prosecution's
    description of Bahena Rivera's statement to Romero as a
    confession. He said that Romero and other investigators forced a
    "false confession" from Bahena Rivera, who wanted to "get them
    out of his hair" after he worked a 12-hour day at a dairy and
    was interrogated for 11 hours.

    He noted that prosecutors never played the video during the
    trial of Bahena Rivera's confession to Romero and left it up to
    Romero, an inexperienced police officer who had never previously
    conducted an interview in a homicide case, to tell the jury what
    was said. He also said there was never a video of Bahena Rivera
    leading investigators to the body.

    Prosecutors said they didn't play the video in court because the
    interview was conducted in Spanish.

    Frese said investigators also didn't seriously consider other
    suspects, including Tibbetts' boyfriend, Dalton Jack, who
    testified that Tibbetts had found out he was cheating on her and
    that she discussed breaking up with him a month before she was
    killed.

    Prior to the start of opening statements, prosecutors called
    Nick Wilson, Jack's work supervisor, as a rebuttal witness.
    Wilson testified that on the day Tibbetts went missing Jack was
    with him working on a construction project in Dubuque, Iowa,
    about 140 miles from Brooklyn.

    Brown said police investigators looked at six different people,
    including Jack, and cleared them all.

    Frese asked the jury to consider Bahena Rivera's testimony that
    two men kidnapped him, forced him to drive to where Tibbetts was
    jogging and that one of them stabbed her to death. Bahena Rivera
    testified that the assailants told him they knew his former
    girlfriend, Iris Gamboa, the mother of his 5-year-old daughter,
    and threatened to harm her and the child if he told the police
    about them.

    Frese asked the jury to acquit Bahena Rivera, saying his
    testimony "makes as much sense as the state's theory."

    https://abcnews.go.com/US/jury-case-hearing-contrasting-claims- mollie-tibbetts-killed/story?id=77939061

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