gatekeeper
Loves the "Funny" Button
Sorry folks, this one is video only:
You must be logged in to see or use the Shoutbox. Besides, if you haven't registered, you really should. It's quick and it will make your life a little better. Trust me. So just register and make yourself at home with like-minded individuals who share either your morbid curiousity or sense of gallows humor.
But I thought she was this perfect and pure Mormon who was horribly corrupted by that evil womanizer Travis. You know how he "forced" her skanky-ass to do all that sex stuff that she would have never normally done.including his claims that Arias tried to manipulate him with talks of genital grooming
EXCLUSIVE: Juror in the Jodi Arias trial fell in love with murderess and held out against the death penalty, claims prosecutor - who also discloses she had knives, condoms and a gun in her car
- Juan Martinez led case against Jodi Arias through trial and two death penalty hearings when ended in her escaping capital punishment
- He will reveal in new book published early next year how he believes one of the jurors was in love with Arias despite the evidence against her
- Book does not name him - but alternate tells Daily Mail Online she is convinced it was foreman Bill Zervakos, who bragged he was a womanizer
- Zervakos denies the claim but alternate Tara Harris Kelley says he bragged about being a womanizer and was holdout against death penalty
- Book will also reveal evidence never presented to jury - including what was found in her rental car, including a 9mm handgun, condoms and knife
The deadly diva with the mysteriously, magical poon denied visitationUpdate!
But I thought she was this perfect and pure Mormon who was horribly corrupted by that evil womanizer Travis. You know how he "forced" her skanky-ass to do all that sex stuff that she would have never normally done.
Lying cunt.
Jodi Arias’ lawyer’s request to file her upcoming appeal of her murder conviction under seal in the 2008 slaying of her ex-boyfriend, Travis Alexander, has been denied.
The Arizona court ruling cites a “strong presumption for public access,” while the convicted killer’s lawyers argue that the records should remain sealed due to extreme public interest in the case.
However, according to azcentral.com, a three-judge panel of the state Court of Appeals wrote “the court concludes that the current request is legally insufficient to overcome the strong presumption in favor of public access.”
[....]
As for his destination, Rotondo said he planned to spend the next week at an Airbnb in Syracuse. After that, he planned on moving in with a distant cousin. It was not immediately clear if he was going to look for his own place.
I LOVED Flo!!!I used to call the obese, lumbering, untidy, unskilled glob of gelatinous flesh the Boogerman as he always had a thick finger jammed up his nose digging for nuggets at the defense table.
View attachment 7819 As Flo would say... "That man is a P, I, G, pig." View attachment 7823
Living double lives has people learning to deal comfortably with dealing in lies.
They were both sinners if you will.
Jodi Arias is serving a life sentence in Arizona for murdering her on-off boyfriend in 2008 — but that hasn’t stopped her from selling her artwork online for thousands of dollars.
The convicted murderer — who turned 44 this week — works with her family to maintain a website and an Instagram page of her work.
While her website claims that she is not currently accepting commissions, Arias acknowledged on Instagram that she recently painted a cow after “someone I really couldn’t turn down asked me to paint one for her office.”
“An officer interested in the painting’s progress kept asking me how ‘ol’ girl’ was coming along,” she wrote on the caption.
“She said it several times and it clicked: that’s the title!”
And her work isn’t cheap: according to her website, an original acrylic painting titled “Beyond the Horizon” is selling for $2,500. Prints of her work range from $28 to $39.
She also sells a set of collectible postcards for $34.95.
While many states have “Son of Sam” laws that prevent criminals from profiting from their crimes, there is no direct link between Arias’ artwork and the murder of Alexander.
The Arizona Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation and Reentry confirmed that it is aware of Arias’ side hustle, but it breaks no laws.
On Arias’ website, her family writes that the revenue from the artwork is used to purchase more supplies. “Ten percent of it is donated to select nonprofit organizations,” the website says. “Some of it will go towards Jodi’s appeals.”