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    Richard Allen appears in shackles for 3-day hearing

    By Scripps News Indianapolis,

    2024-07-31

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=43D1IB_0ujAxdcO00

    DELPHI, Ind. (Scripps News Indianapolis)  — Double murder suspect Richard Allen was in court this week for a three-day hearing at the Carroll County Courthouse.

    Allen is accused of killing Libby German and Abby Williams in Delphi in 2017. He was arrested in October 2022.

    Richard Allen’s Safekeeping

    On Tuesday, Special Judge Fran Gull decided to take the decision of Richard Allen’s safekeeping and the motion to compel and motion for sanctions under advisement.

    Richard Allen is seen in shackles during a 3-day hearing in July 2024. (Scripps News Indianapolis)

    Allen’s defense argued that Allen should be transported to Cass County Jail through the start of his trial due to logistical issues of travel and their client-attorney privilege.

    READ MORE | Prosecutor asks judge to ban specific words from Delphi murders trial

    Cass County Sheriff Ed Schroder spoke to the court and issued his thoughts on housing Allen and also noted logistical issues with giving Allen solitary confinement among the crowding in the jail.

    The prosecution argued against Allen being moved, saying Allen will be in solitary confinement at the Cass County jail as he is at the Wabash Correctional Facility. The prosecution also voiced concerns about that jail’s ability to provide around the clock medical care for Allen.

    On Thursday, the judge decided to grant the motion by the defense to vacate the safekeeping order in full. Allen will now go back into the custody of the Carroll County Sheriff.

    It is the Carroll County Sheriff’s authority to keep Allen safe. The judge had the change of commitment in her hand but has not actually signed the official order yet.

    Sheriff Tony Liggett says he will not disclose where he is going to send Allen.

    Because of the safekeeping order being lifted, Allen does not have to stay in solitary confinement.

    Sheriff Liggett says solitary confinement will now be based upon his behavior while inside custody.

    In the hearing for the motion to compel and motion for sanctions on Tuesday, Allen’s defense attorneys asked for guidance on navigating the 26 terrabytes of evidence that was given to them by the state.

    According to the defense, the information came in unlabeled and has made it difficult to disseminate.

    The prosecution argued that all information given to the defense was provided in the same manner.

    Motion to dismiss the entire case

    The final motion on Tuesday’s agenda was the motion to dismiss the case completely.

    The defense is accusing the Indiana State Police of withholding evidence in the case.

    The defense says if they don’t receive it, Richard Allen loses this case and is not given a fair trial.

    The information the defense claimed is being withheld or destroyed is a suspect’s interview(s), data from the suspect’s phone extraction that the defense believes occurred, and concerns about the honesty of ISP on the witness stand.

    WATCH | Delphi Murders: The Case Against Richard Allen

    The prosecution argued there is nothing to prove that the state lost, had or destroyed evidence.

    Tuesday’s hearing was the first time Allen’s arms weren’t bound to his chest, as he was escorted into court. He wore an orange jumpsuit but this time he had one free hand.

    Motion to Suppress

    The defense is looking to suppress multiple statements of guilt made by Allen in the Westville correctional facility.

    On Wednesday, testimony was head from former Westville warden John Galipeau and an internal investigator at the facility.

    The hearing brought forth the notion that Allen had admitted guilt to the crime of murder as many as 61 times during his months at Westville Correctional Facility.

    Judge Frances Gull appears at hearing in the case of Richard Allen. (Court TV)

    A majority of Wednesday’s testimony came from Allen’s clinical psychologist while in the Westville Correctional Facility regarding Allen’s mental breaks.

    But much of that testimony was disputed by the state’s witness and a state police investigator saying that many officers inside Westville believed Allen’s actions were fake.

    The clinical psychologist’s intentions were also questioned by the defense after learning that she posted on social media about the case and admitted to talking with Allen about the case.

    Motion in Limine

    On Thursday, the court spent hours hearing from Ritualistic Killings expect Dawn Perlmutter.

    Perlmutter explained her stance of believing the killings of Libby German and Abby Williams were committed by Odinists — something Allen’s defense team has claimed in the past.

    The hearing was filled with emotions from family of the girls as details about the crime scene were discussed. A blood spatter expert described how Libby’s neck was cut in a way that her carotid and jugular were compromised.

    The hearing was set to determine whether certain topics should be excluded from the trial and jurors.

    Testimony from people like Perlmutter are set for the defense to show the validity and need for the topics in the trial.

    Nine total witnesses spoke in the nearly 12 hours of testimony.

    All other motions that have been heard over these three days of hearings are being taken under advisement by the judge and she will issue when she is able.

    This story was originally published by Scripps News Indianapolis, an E.W. Scripps Company.

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