K_girl
Contributor
Most experts have said that Mr. Thomas' information about the insurance matter would be ruled as hearsay. Although you can't say for sure when it comes to Alabama hearsay exceptions. The prosecutor claimed in one newspaper article that he had evidence that Watson went to Tina's place of work to change her insurance behind her back. Not sure that I trust that he has this evidence since he only mentioned it once and seemed to talk more about Mr. Thomas' statement. But let's say he does have the evidence he claimed - is there any part of Mr. Thomas' testimony that would then be allowed because now you have corroboration?
Regarding the "ominous" nature of Mr. Thomas' discussion with Tina - Mr. Thomas revealed that Tina appeared to be stressed about getting it done before the wedding, as the advice he gave her was to wait until after the wedding but to tell Watson she had done it. That advice comes under auspices of a father, not an insurance agent. Tina would not likely go to see her insurance agent and if she did, she probably would just make the change. You would have to question if she would reveal the stress she was under to an agent. If this does come before a jury, I think Ayisha is correct about how a jury would see it. That Tina was not comfortable in talking openly about this with her fiance - I think that is what is key, not that there is something wrong with Mr. Thomas telling his daughter to "lie" to Watson. Mr. Thomas is simply offering a solution to his daughter without stressing her out any further.
Regarding the "ominous" nature of Mr. Thomas' discussion with Tina - Mr. Thomas revealed that Tina appeared to be stressed about getting it done before the wedding, as the advice he gave her was to wait until after the wedding but to tell Watson she had done it. That advice comes under auspices of a father, not an insurance agent. Tina would not likely go to see her insurance agent and if she did, she probably would just make the change. You would have to question if she would reveal the stress she was under to an agent. If this does come before a jury, I think Ayisha is correct about how a jury would see it. That Tina was not comfortable in talking openly about this with her fiance - I think that is what is key, not that there is something wrong with Mr. Thomas telling his daughter to "lie" to Watson. Mr. Thomas is simply offering a solution to his daughter without stressing her out any further.