If You Murder Someone Refuse to Have a Cellmate
Some of my readers may have read that two cellmates of Martin MacNeill, a former Utah doctor on trial for murder, have sworn in court that he admitted to them that he killed his wife (1). I do not believe them.
I have not followed the case so I have no idea nor am I interested in whether MacNeill is innocent or guilty of his wife's murder. What I do know from personal experience and extensive research is that most prosecutors in this country are evidence-tampering, perjury-suborning, jury-rigging, self-serving low-life scumbags (see my numerous articles on Evil Prosecutors). And so it is in this case.
One of the men already admitted that he gave the testimony under a limited grant of immunity from pending drug and theft charges. Some of my readers may believe that getting immunity from prosecution does not necessarily mean that the inmate fabricated the jailhouse confession. Actually, yes it does - 99.9% of jailhouse confessions where immunity is granted to the so-called witness are fabricated or at the minimum staged and coached by the prosecution. If I were on the jury, the only way I would accept the veracity of such testimony is if the inmate informed us where the body is buried or if he offered a provable fact previously unknown to the police or prosecution.
In normal circumstances, snitches lie; police fabricate evidence; prosecutors ignore exculpatory evidence; juries are filled with mostly callous, sleeping, bored morons; and judges only want to clear their calendar. No one in this entire process is interested in justice.
So if you are ever indicted for murder and stuck in jail awaiting trial, I suggest that you absolutely insist that you sleep alone or you will kill any inmate in your cell. That's the only way to prevent prosecutors from encouraging false testimony from those men if there are no men in your cell. At least this is one false nail the system cannot use to seal your coffin.
If you believe that you can get a fair trial in this country, you are delusional. You have been warned.
ENDNOTES
(1):
CBS News, 7 Nov 2013, Martin MacNeill Murder Trial: Fellow inmates of Utah doctor charged with killing wife say he acknowledged murder
Two men who spent time behind bars with Martin MacNeill, a former Utah doctor on trial for murder, testified Wednesday that he had acknowledged killing his wife.
One witness recalled MacNeill saying he was getting away with murder. Another said MacNeill told him that he had held his heavily drugged wife under water in a bathtub.
With prosecutors nearing the end of their mostly circumstantial case, witness Jason Poirier recounted his December 2012 conversation with MacNeill in the Utah County jail - a few months after MacNeill's arrest in the death of his wife, Michele MacNeill.
Poirier was being held on suspicion of shoplifting at the time.
Poirier said the conversation started when he asked MacNeill how he was able to get away with wearing custom-made shoes in jail. He said MacNeill replied, "'I can get away with a lot of things. I'm getting away with the murder of my wife.'"