Jury begins deliberating fate of Indiana man charged in 2017 killings of
2 teenage girls
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[November 08, 2024]
By RICK CALLAHAN
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The fate of an Indiana man charged with murder in
the 2017 killings of two teenage girls who vanished during an afternoon
hike near their small hometown was in the hands of a jury Thursday.
Richard Allen, 52, faces two counts of murder and two additional counts
of murder while committing or attempting to commit kidnapping in the
killings of Abigail Williams, 13, and Liberty German, 14. He could be
sentenced to up to 130 years in prison if convicted of all the charges.
The seven women and five men began deliberations Thursday afternoon
after hearing closing arguments in the weekslong murder trial.
Deliberations ended after about two hours and will resume Friday
morning.
Carroll County Prosecutor Nicholas McLeland told jurors that Allen is
the man seen in a grainy cellphone video recorded by one of the girls,
known as Abby and Libby, as they crossed an abandoned railroad bridge
just before they vanished on Feb. 13, 2017.
“Richard Allen is Bridge Guy,” McLeland told jurors. “He kidnapped them
and later murdered them.”
He noted that Allen had confessed repeatedly to the killings — in
person, on the phone and in writing. In one of the recordings he
replayed for the jury, Allen could be heard telling his wife, “I did it.
I killed Abby and Libby.”
Allen's defense cast doubt on the confessions, putting up witnesses,
including a psychiatrist who testified that Allen was delirious and
psychotic after months in solitary confinement.
Attorney Bradley Rozzi closed by saying that Allen is innocent.
No witness explicitly identified Allen as the man seen on the hiking
trail or the bridge the afternoon the girls went missing, he noted. No
fingerprint, DNA or forensic evidence links Allen to the murder scene,
Rozzi said.
And for more than five years after the teens were killed, Allen still
lived in Delphi while working at a local pharmacy.
“He had every chance to run, but he did not because he didn’t do it,” he
told the jurors.
The case has drawn outsized attention from true-crime enthusiasts, with
repeated delays, some surrounding a leak of evidence, the withdrawal of
Allen’s public defenders and their reinstatement by the Indiana Supreme
Court. It has also been the subject of a gag order.
The 12 jurors along with alternates were sequestered throughout the
trial, which began Oct. 18 in the girls’ hometown of Delphi, a small
northwest Indiana city where Allen also lived and worked as a pharmacy
technician. A special judge oversaw the case. Superior Court Judge Fran
Gull, along with the jurors, came from northeastern Indiana’s Allen
County.
In his closing argument, McLeland recapped evidence that an unspent
bullet found between the teens’ bodies “had been cycled through” Allen’s
.40-caliber Sig Sauer handgun. A firearms expert called by the defense
questioned the state police analysis, and Rozzi dismissed it as a “magic
bullet,” saying investigators had made an “apples to oranges” comparison
of the unspent round to one fired from Allen’s gun.
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In this courtroom sketch, Richard Allen, left, is seated next to one
of his defense attorneys, Andrew Baldwin, inside a courtroom at the
Carroll County Courthouse in Delphi, Ind. on Saturday, Nov. 2, 2024.
(Li Buszka via AP, Pool)
The prosecutor also said a state trooper who had listened to more
than 700 phone calls placed by Allen had identified Allen's voice on
German’s cellphone video telling the teens, “ Down the hill ″ after
they crossed an abandoned railroad trestle called the Monon High
Bridge. McLeland showed jurors a digitally enhanced version of the
cellphone video and said Allen was the man recorded walking behind
Williams.
McLeland said Allen, armed with a gun, forced the youths off the
trail and that he had planned to rape them before a passing van made
him change his plans. Gruesome crime scene photos showed how the
girls were found with their throats cut the next day, about a
quarter-mile (less than half a kilometer) from the bridge.
The defense questioned the state's timeline with witnesses including
a digital forensics expert who said headphones or an auxiliary cable
were plugged into Libby’s cellphone for nearly five hours after she
and Abby disappeared, raising doubts about the investigators’ belief
that the girls were killed and left in the woods around 2:32 p.m.
that day.
Attorney Andrew Baldwin argued during trial that one or more other
people must have kidnapped the teens and returned them early the
next day to the spot where they were found.
Prosecutors directed jurors again to Allen’s own words, in
confessions he made to his mother and wife and also to a prison
psychologist, correctional officers and the former warden of the
Westville Correctional Facility, who said Allen wrote him claiming
to have killed the girls with a box cutter that he later discarded.
Prosecutors said Allen's incriminating statements contained
information only the killer could have known.
Defense attorneys argued that Allen's confessions are unreliable
because he was facing a severe mental health crisis while under the
pressure and stress of being locked up in isolation, watched 24
hours a day and taunted by people incarcerated with him. A
psychiatrist supported the argument, testifying that months in
solitary confinement could cause a person to become delirious and
psychotic.
Before the trial began, Allen's lawyers had sought to argue that the
girls were killed in a ritual sacrifice by members of a white
nationalist group known as the Odinists who follow a pagan Norse
religion, but the judge ruled against that, saying the defense
“failed to produce admissible evidence” of such a connection.
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