Talhaasi, Florida – The South Florida family, south of Florida, is required to be imprisoned for the killing of its former son -in -law, which was appointed by a judge for a new trial.
Lawyers for Donna Adeleson He argued that the miscarriage of jury and errors by the court should call their agent to another session.
Earlier this month, jury returned guilty rulings in the Adelesson trial for weeks on charges of first -class killing, conspiracy and petition in 2014 to kill a law professor of Florida State University Daniel Marcil in Talhaasi, where he learned.
In a proposal for a new trial presented on Tuesday, lawyers Joshua Zelman and Jackie Wolford said that Adeleson should obtain a new trial after two jury went on their stories after the trial, including the person who posted a video on Tijk about the jury service and another appeared in a real crime called “survivors of survivors.”
Lawyers also argued that the rulings were in violation of the law or the weight of evidence, that the prosecutors relied on speculation and inferred to build their case, and claimed that the judge of the department, Stephen Evert, showed favoritism to trial throughout the trial.
Lawyers wrote: “Where did the evidence agreed to Mrs. Adelesson; conspiracy; combined; or confederation with anyone else killed by Mr. Marcil?”
The case has organized the capital of Florida for more than a decade, amid harsh details about the chaotic divorce, tensions with wealthy fuse and nursery battles that lead to killing.
Marcil was closed in a bitter nursery battle with his ex -wife and the daughter of Adeleson Windy Adelesson, who had two children.
Prosecutors have argued in the trial that Donna Adelesson helped organize the death of Marcil after he stood on the way to allowing her daughter and two young grandsons to move from Talahasi to South Florida to be closer to the rest of the family.
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Kate Payne is a member of the American Press/Report for America State News. Report on America It is a non -profit national service program that places journalists in local news rooms to report secret issues.