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[color=#000000][size=3]For a perp with no criminal record, yes it's normal.[/size][/color]
[color=#000000][size=3]Even is this happened last week, the result would be the same under Texas law. Anyone telling you different is ignorant of the contents of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure! Thank you for your attention to this matter!! lol[/size][/color]
[color=#000000][size=3]On the one year until trial, I cannot speak for Collin County specifically, but there is nothing unusual about that.[/size][/color]
Agree a year is not that unusual. I will say that this trial should not be very long as it is not a complicated case, proof wise. And I'm comparing these circumstances to case such as Kohberger or the Waukesha Christmas Parade massacre. The former because of the amount of technical testimony required and the latter case because of the high number of deaths and people injured during attempted murder.
Those DAs in the Waukesha case presented a near flawless case in chief, in m view. That was a master class that all criminal lawyers should study. Even with a pro se BSC defendant in Brooks, the prosecution team hit all of the notes on narrative, professional yet sympathetic examinations of people still traumatized, the timeline was easy to follow with the charts, weaving in video clips to coincide with timeline and position chart. He hit this person here, video clip, he hit these people here, video clip.
But the Anthony case does not have either of those complications. One discrete incident. One victim. Not a lot of technical testimony required. Short case in chief. Matter of days, if that.