Kaitlin Armstrong trial hears closing arguments on Moriah Wilson murder: Live

Closing arguments are set to begin in the trial of Kaitlin Armstrong, who is charged with the 11 May 2022 murder of star cyclist Moriah “Mo” Wilson.

The two women were reportedly involved in a love triangle with Ms Armstrong’s then on-and-off boyfriend and Wilson’s fellow cyclist Colin Strickland.

In the aftermath of the shooting, Ms Armstrong fled to Costa Rica and was only captured five weeks later.

The state rested its case on Wednesday morning after introducing testimony from Mr Strickland, friends of Ms Armstrong, and law enforcement personnel.

The defence called experts who sought to discredit the state’s DNA and ballistics evidence.

Mr Strickland was briefly called back to the stand by the defence.

Then, Ms Armstrong was advised of her right to testify in her own trial, which she declined, leading to the defence resting its case.

According to NewsNation Correspondent Alex Caprariello, Ms Armstrong seemed confused, and even scared during that exchange, a stark contrast from her stoic demeanour in the two and a half weeks of trial.

Key points

  • The key players in the deadly ‘love triangle’ at the centre of trial

  • Former friend of Kaitlin Armstrong recalls death threats against Wilson

  • Kaitlin Armstrong confronted Moriah Wilson on the phone, ex-boyfriend Colin Strickland says

  • Armstrong’s ex clashes with media at court

Deliberations begin

18:22 , Andrea Blanco

Ms Arsmtrong has left the courtroom after the jury was instructed to begin deliberations.

State wraps up rebuttal

18:21 , Andrea Blanco

“If you do, if you look at all the evidence, look at it with common sense, logic. Let the evidence take you where it’s going. That’s all I’m asking. You are going to find that the evidence is right here,” Mr Gonzalez says.

Not likely defence’s DNA transfer theory took place, state says

18:14 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Gonzalez reminds jurors that DNA experts who took the stand said a four-time DNA transfer, how the prosecution argues Ms Arsmtrong’s DNA ended on the bike, is extremely unlikely.

State gives rebuttal

17:53 , Andrea Blanco

State attorney Guillermo Gonzalez delivers a monologue about all the what-ifs the defence just laid out. Mr Gonzalez says that those hypothetical scenarios are not relevant to the case and that the evidence presented by the prosecution remains strong.

The defence objects and an argument unfolds but the judge allows Mr Gonzalez to continue.

“Take your time, and I trust that when you do that, the evidence points you in one direction,” he said.

Defence tells jurors ‘not knowing is not a failure'

17:47 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Puryear resumed his argument reminding jurors that they don’t have to believe Ms Armstrong is innocent in order to deliver a not guilty verdict.

The jury is told that they are compelled to deliver a not guilty verdict if they are not completely sure Ms Armstrong is guilty.

“Don’t feel like you failed, if that is your conclusion,”

WATCH: Armstrong Defense attorney waves bike around in court during closing arguments

17:43 , Andrea Blanco

Court takes 15 minute recess

17:35 , Andrea Blanco

The defence will resume its closing arguments shortly.

Defence asks jurors to focus on the ‘I don’t knows'

17:33 , Andrea Blanco

Defense Attorney Geoffrey Puryear says the things that remain unknown about the investigation are the most important.

He also tried to make jurors sympathise with Ms Armstrong over her brief May 2022 arrest.

“... but is never read her rights, and then they come in and say, oops! Sorry! No warrant, just kidding! But hey, stick around for a few minutes,” Mr Puryear said. “And then they come back and say, oops! We goofed again! You do have a warrant! How much trust would you have in them? Put yourself in that situation.”

Defence says love triangle narrative is ‘misogynistic'

17:16 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Cofer also raised allegations that Mr Strickland had been favoured by local authorities.

He argued that the “love triangle” narrative had been created by the defence due to misogyny deeply rooted in society.

Defence says Armstrong fled while flee and out of fear

17:09 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Cofer said that the murder warrant had not been entered into the system when Ms Armstrong fled to Costa Rica.

He went on to tell jurors that she was scared whoever killed Wilson would target her next.

Defence claims police did not thoroughly tested evidence

17:05 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Cofer used Wilson’s bike as a prop to show the parts where DNA was not collected from.

He criticised the state’s failure to test a rape kit investigators had collected.

 (NewsNation)
(NewsNation)

‘What is the evidence that Kaitlin Armstrong is a jealous psycho?’

16:46 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Cofer noted that Mr Strickland had not been transparent during their relationship.

The defence attorney said that the call Ms Armstrong had made to Mo Wilson and the threats she had voiced did not make her a murderer.

‘What is the evidence that Kaitlin Armstrong is a jealous psycho?’

16:46 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Cofer noted that Mr Strickland had not been transparent during their relationship.

The defence attorney said that the call Ms Armstrong had made to Mo Wilson and the threats she had voiced did not make her a murderer.

‘She asked for you to hear her case'

16:41 , Andrea Blanco

Defense Attorney Rick Cofer told the jury that Ms Armstrong had been “caught in a nightmare of circumstantial evidence.”

He went on to claim that the prosecution’s case was built on assumptions and “confirmation bias.”

Mr Jones asks for justice for Mo Wilson

16:39 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Jones said that Caitlin Cash, who found Wilson’s body, had asked him to refer to her by her last name because “[K]aitlin” was the name of the woman who had killed her friend.

“She pumped her friend’s heart over a hundred times,” Mr Jones said. “Not knowing that her friend had probably been dead for 45 minutes.”

Mr Jones then said the prosecution had met the burden of proof.”

“We can get out here quickly and find her guilty of shooting Mo Wilson in the head and heart and taking away this prodigy at the age of 25,” he said.

‘The more I talk the more ridiculous [the defence’s case] gets’

16:31 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Jones went on to tell jurors that the defence had failed to explain what the black Jeep was doing near the crime scene.

First, he said, they said the surveillance video didn’t prove that was her Jeep.

Then, they refused evidence that the infotainment system of the Jeep placed her near the scene, saying that perhaps someone else was driving.

“Do you see the rabbit holes they’re trying to send you down?” Mr Jones said.

Mr Jones reminds juror about testimony from Ms Armstrongs former friends

16:25 , Andrea Blanco

According to key testimony from Nicole Mertz, a close friend of Ms Armstrong, the defendant had voiced death threats against Wilson. Ms Mertz recounted that Ms Armstrong once said that if Mr Strickland dated another woman, she “would kill [her.]”

“That’s the evidence you got to work with ... her best friend called the police,” Mr Jones said on Thursday.

Prosecutor quips over defence expert whose testimony went on for hours

16:22 , Andrea Blanco

“That’s four hours of my life that I will never get back,” Mr Jones said about testimony from a defence expert who criticised the state’s ballistics evidence.

Mr Tobin, a firearm expert who took the stand on Thursday, said that the standards of the AFTE testing ran on Ms Armstrong’s guns were not “scientific.”

Mr Tobin later admitted that he did not review the evidence introduced by the prosecution and that he was only there to contest the validity of AFTE examination.

He later said he was not there to contest the findings of the investigation.

16:14 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Jones tells jurors they have to deliver a unanimous verdict, but their theories behind the verdict they reach do not have to be the same.

“I’ve never seen so much evidence in my life against one person,” Mr Jones said.

‘She’s running from you'

16:10 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Jones honed in on Ms Armstrong’s failed escape 19 days before the trial began.

“She was not just running from the sheriff’s office, she was running from you and you, and you,” Mr Jones said as he pointed to the jurors. “She is running from all of you in the back road. Everybody deserves their day in court, and she got it. As you see in this video, she didn’t want to face you. “

Closing arguments begin

16:08 , Andrea Blanco

Assistant District Attorney Rick Jones has begun presenting closing arguments for the state.

“The last thing Mo Wilson did was scream in terror,” Mr Jones says. “She stood over her after she shot her in the head twice and put another bullet in her heart.... you heard the medical examiner. That third bullet was in her heart.”

Defence likely to use Wilson’s bike as prop during closing arguments

16:05 , Andrea Blanco

Wilson’s bike is placed in the well of the courtroom, according to NewsNation Correspondent Alex Caprariello.

Kaitlin Armstrong’s FAMILY arrive at court

15:17 , Andrea Blanco

Cameras will be in the courtroom for closing arguments, which are expected early this morning.

The judge said before court was adjourned yesterday that deliberations are also expected to begin today.

Closing arguments to begin

13:00 , Mike Bedigan

Closing arguments in the murder trial of yoga teacher Kaitlin Armstrong are due to begin today.

Ms Armstrong is accused of the 11 May 2022 murder of Wilson, who prosecutors have described as her “love rival.”

The two women were reportedly involved in a love triangle with Ms Armstrong’s then on-and-off boyfriend and Wilson’s fellow cyclist Colin Strickland.

Jurors have heard testimony from Mr Strickland, friends of Ms Armstrong, and law enforcement personnel, including a US Marshal agent who aided in Ms Armstrong’s arrest overseas.

Jurors will hear closing statements from both sides, before being sent to deliberate.

What has the defence argued so far?

12:30 , Mike Bedigan

Defence attorneys accused police of a sloppy investigation that too quickly focused on Ms Armstrong as the sole suspect.

Ms Armstrong’s attorneys also have tried to raise doubts among jurors by suggesting someone else could have killed Wilson, and asking why prosecutors dismissed Mr Strickland as a suspect.

The defence tried to poke holes in the prosecution’s case, arguing that a lot of evidence in the case was not thoroughly reviewed, NewsNation reports.

The attorneys questioned Austin Police Department detective Richard Spitler on why a rape kit performed on Wilson was never processed, and why Mr Strickland’s laptop was returned to him just eight days after the murder without having been analysed forensically.

The defence also sent shockwaves through the courtroom when they raised a mistrial motion mid-procedure, arguing that Det Spitler favoured Mr Strickland and cleared him too soon. The attorneys brought up that Det Spitler had previously met Mr Strickland at a taco deli years before the murder, also asking the detective if he thought of Mr Strickland as a “local celebrity.”

Elsewhere in their arguments, the defence argued that the prosecution did not have any witness who could place their client at the crime scene and that her fingerprints or DNA were not found at the home where Wilson was found dead. Ms Armstrong’s lawyers also asked Det Spitler why he hadn’t further interviewed two of Wilson’s ex-boyfriends, with the detective saying that phone data and other evidence placed them nowhere near the crime.

Timeline of Kaitlin Armstrong’s moves on night of murder

11:30 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Strickland dropped off Wilson at around 8.30pm.

Ms Armstrong’s Jeep, which had been parked in an alley near Ms Cash’s home, pulls up and parks again.

Wilson uses her phone and sends her last message at 9.13pm.

A surveillance video from a nearby home captured gunshot sounds and a woman’s scream at 9.16pm.

At 9:43pm, the Jeep stops at a dumpster for three minutes and then heads to Mr Strickland’s home.

911 is called at 9.55pm when Ms Cash arrives home.

Kaitlin Armstrong said ‘in so many words’ that she wanted to ‘kill Wilson’

10:00 , Andrea Blanco

Nicole Mertz, a close friend of Ms Armstrong, was called to the stand on Wednesday (8 November).

Ms Mertz said that her friend and Mr Strickland often broke up and got back together and that he referred to Ms Armstrong as “his lady friend.” Ms Mertz went on to recount that Ms Armstrong once said that if Mr Strickland dated another woman, she “would kill her.]”

“My first thought was that Kaitlin might have had something to do with it,” Ms Mertz said about the moment she found out about Wilson’s killing.

Jacqueline Chasteen, a friend of Mr Strickland who eventually also befriended Ms Armstrong, said that during a gathering in Bentonville, Ms Armstrong confided in her that Mr Strickland had “cheated” on her with Wilson.

“She had described how Colin had cheated but while she was describing that, she had said in so many words that she wanted to kill her,” she said, per NewsNation. “That she had thought about it. But how she said it at the time I didn’t take it seriously...she said something to the effect that she had bought a gun... I do know the words kill and the words gun were used.”

WATCH: Kaitlin Armstrong trial day 8

08:30 , Andrea Blanco

Details about Kaitlin Armstrong’s escape revealed

07:00 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Strickland and Ms Armstrong were told about Wilson’s murder by Austin Police detectives on 12 May 2022, just a day after the murder. Bodycam footage shown to the court reportedly showed that the two seemed shocked after learning the tragic news.

Mr Strickland later joined investigators at the police station, where he gave a statement for nearly six hours. The following day, authorities served a search warrant and seized weapons from his home.

Crime scene specialist Mirezha Guevara testified on November 3 that while she was taking pictures of the firearms evidence and Ms Armstrong’s black Jeep, she also noticed Ms Armstrong’s passport and foreign currency inside the home.

An attorney representing both Mr Strickland and Ms Armstrong was present while the warrant was served, but investigators did not ask to interview Ms Armstrong.

However, they did ask Mr Strickland about her black Jeep, the same model of car seen on surveillance footage near the home where Wilson was found. The car had also been spotted near the swimming pool bar that Mr Strickland and Wilson had been at just hours before she was killed.

Mr Strickland suggested during his testimony that investigators knew it belonged to Ms Armstrong.

Mr Strickland said that after he was interviewed and the warrant was served, he and Ms Armstrong were exhausted. He asked her to write a timeline of her activities on the day and reportedly said she went to yoga and visited a “healer” but made no mention of seeing Wilson.

He then went to his business’ headquarters in Lockhart and did not see Ms Armstrong again.

On 14 May, Ms Armstrong took a flight from Austin to Houston. She was found in Costa Rica 43 days later.

Love rival murder, a harrowing 911 call and bike DNA: Key revelations in the Kaitlin Armstrong trial

05:30 , Andrea Blanco

Kaitlin Armstrong faces up to 99 years in prison if she’s convicted of killing professional cyclist Anna Moriah ‘Mo’ Wilson after they were allegedly involved in a love triangle.

The Independent’s Andrea Cavallier and Andrea Blanco explain the most crucial moments so far in her high-profile trial:

Key revelations in the Kaitlin Armstrong love rival murder trial so far

Defence says DNA found on Wilson’s bike may have transfered

04:00 , Andrea Blanco

There was DNA from a third, male, individual, on the handlebar of Wilson’s bike but DNA analysts were unable to build a profile with it.

A third DNA profile was also found on the seat.

Forensic DNA consultant Matthew Quartaro testified on Wednesday that he can only say with certainty that the unknown DNA does not belong to Wilson, Ms Armstrong, Mr Strickland or Caitlin Cash.

He also admitted that it is impossible to know whether Ms Armstrong’s DNA was found on the bike because she touched it, or because it transferred.

The defence has tried to argue before that Ms Armstrong’s DNA may have ended up in the bike because Wilson rode Mr Strickland’s bike that night.

WATCH: Kaitlin Armstrong trial, summary of evidence

02:30 , Andrea Blanco

What has the state argued so far?

01:00 , Andrea Blanco

The state honed in on evidence connecting Ms Armstrong to the crime, including DNA found on Wilson’s bike, as well as cell phone data and the infotainment system of Ms Armstrong’s Jeep placing her near the scene.

Prosecutors argued that in the days leading up to the murder, Ms Armstrong had tracked Wilson’s movements on her Strava account.

Data pulled from Ms Armstrong’s phone showed that she viewed Wilson’s Strava profile once on 9 May 2022, two days before the murder, and four times the following day. Vehicle satellite records, phone-tracking data and surveillance video from a nearby home showed Ms Armstrong’s Jeep driving around the apartment and parking in an alley shortly before Wilson was killed.

According to key testimony from Nicole Mertz, a close friend of Ms Armstrong, the defendant had voiced death threats against Wilson. Ms Mertz recounted that Ms Armstrong once said that if Mr Strickland dated another woman, she “would kill [her.]”

“My first thought was that Kaitlin might have had something to do with it,” Ms Mertz said about the moment she found out about Wilson’s killing.

Jacqueline Chasteen, a friend of Mr Strickland who eventually also befriended Ms Armstrong, also testified that during a gathering in Bentonville in early 2022, Ms Armstrong confided in her that Mr Strickland had “cheated” on her with Wilson.

“She had described how Colin had cheated but while she was describing that, she had said in so many words that she wanted to kill her,” she said, per NewsNation. “That she had thought about it. But how she said it at the time I didn’t take it seriously...she said something to the effect that she had bought a gun... I do know the words kill and the words gun were used.”

Colin Strickland leaves court with police escort

00:17 , Mike Bedigan

Colin Strickland was seen leaving the courthouse after testifying on Wednesday, flanked by at least four law enforcement officers.

Mr Strickland – who was the defence’s last witness before resting its case – has previously had several negative run-ins with reporter inside and outside of the court.

Closing arguments to begin tomorrow

Wednesday 15 November 2023 23:48 , Mike Bedigan

Proceedings in the murder trial of Kaitlin Armstrong have adjourned for the day.

Jurors were told that closing arguments will begin tomorrow, when they return at 9am local time.

They will then begin their deliberations in the case.

Forensic expert casts doubt on defence DNA claims

Wednesday 15 November 2023 23:42 , Mike Bedigan

Referring back to evidence given by the defence, which discussed how Ms Armstrong’s DNA had ended up on a bike ridden by Wilson, Dr Kalafut said he “wouldn’t have a very high expectation at all” for finding the DNA once Wilson and Mr Strickland had been swimming.

Prosecutors counted out how many steps of transfer DNA that would entail – at least four.

Dr Kalafut said had only heard of two studies where transfer DNA has successfully been passed down four times and survived.

He added that it is his opinion that it is more likely that Ms Armstrong placed her DNA on the bicycle, not that Wilson transferred her DNA by accident.

Defence rests its case, new witness called by prosectors

Wednesday 15 November 2023 23:13 , Andrea Blanco

Forensic scientist Tim Kalafut has been called to the stand.

Kaitlin Armstrong will not testify

Wednesday 15 November 2023 23:12 , Andrea Blanco

After Mr Strickland was dismissed, Ms Arsmtrong and her attorneys approached the judge.

She was asked if she understood her right to testify if she wished to do so.

According to NewsNation Correspondent Alex Caprariello, Ms Arsmtrong seemed confused, and even scared during that exchange, a stark contrast from her stoic demeanour in the two and a half weeks of trial so far.

Colin Strickland returns to court

Wednesday 15 November 2023 23:04 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Strickland tells the court that he does not remember buying a second gun lock.

He is confronted by the defence about the fake alibi he provided to Ms Arsmtrong on the night of the murder.

Mr Strickland admits he lied to his then-girlfriend and instead spent time with Wilson.

Expert testifying for the defence under cross-examination

Wednesday 15 November 2023 21:47 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Tobins tells the court that he is being paid $5,000 to testify for the defence and that he has not reviewed the evidence in Moriah Wilson’s murder investigation.

He is confronted by the state about research he did in the past which reportedly served as the baseline for Association of Firearm and Tool Mark Examiners’ (AFTE) practice.

Colin Strickland is in the courtroom

Wednesday 15 November 2023 21:03 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Tobin’s testimony resumes.

Over the lunch recess, Colin Strickland arrived at the court and is now inside the witness room.

Mr Strickland was dismissed as a witness last week, but was told he could be called to the stand again.

Court take recess

Wednesday 15 November 2023 20:15 , Andrea Blanco

The proceedings will resume after lunch.

Wednesday 15 November 2023 19:57 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Tobin is now going through studies debunking theories about ballistics analysis.

Wilson’s family is not in the courtroom, according to Mr Caprariello.

Jury has no reaction to testimony discrediting prosecution’s ballistics testimony

Wednesday 15 November 2023 19:08 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Tobin notes that firearm examination is not a science and is very subjective.

Mr Caprariello, who is in the courtroom, says that Mr Tobin’s testimony does not appear to have an impact on the jury.

Defence argues validity of AFTE-based testimony presented by prosecutors

Wednesday 15 November 2023 19:02 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Tobin is criticising the Association of Firearm and Tool Mark Examiners’ (AFTE) standards regarding ballistics examination.

He said there is not enough peer review and that terms used, such as “sufficient agreement,” are “flawed, worthless statements and claims.”

Expert explains ballistics terms to the court

Wednesday 15 November 2023 18:50 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Tobin is explaining details about gun manufacturing.

He says that while manufacturers intend to make weapons as identical as possible, there are always defects or impressions.

Wednesday 15 November 2023 18:25 , Andrea Blanco

Firearm expert William Tobin is testifying on a Zoom appearance.

Mr Tobin has previously analysed bullet and lead testing that has led to exculpatory evidence.

State redirects

Wednesday 15 November 2023 17:24 , Andrea Blanco

The state is now trying to question Mr Quartaro on the possibility and probability of Ms Armstrong’s DNA being unknowingly transferred through a second party.

Mr Quartaro says it is more likely to shed DNA when someone is nervous and sweating, but can’t say how Ms Armstrong’s DNA got there.

The defence redirects and asks Mr Quartaro whether it is possible Ms Armstrong’s sweat DNA from the motorcycle helmet could have transferred to Wilson’s bike. He says it is.

Defence argues that DNA may have transferred to bike

Wednesday 15 November 2023 17:05 , Andrea Blanco

There was also DNA from a third, male, individual, on the bike’s handlebar but DNA analysts were unable to build a profile with it.

A third DNA profile was also found on the seat.

Mr Quartaro says he can only say with certainty that the unknown DNA does not belong to Wilson, Ms Armstrong, Mr Strickland or Caitlin Cash.

He also admits that it is impossible to know whether Ms Armstrong’s DNA was found on the bike because she touched it, or because it transferred.

The defence has tried to argue before that Ms Armstrong’s DNA may have ended up in the bike because Wilson rode Mr Strickland’s bike that night.

Forensic DNA consultant Matthew Quartaro takes the stand

Wednesday 15 November 2023 16:56 , Andrea Blanco

The defence is honing in on the presence of another DNA profile on the weapon believed to have been used in Wilson’s murder.

Mr Quartaro agrees with the defence that DNA samples and testing can’t conclude how the DNA got to the item that was swabbed. The expert also notes that only one swab was used for different areas of the weapon and it is impossible to tell where exactly in the weapon was Ms Armstrong’s DNA.

Ms Armstrong ‘stone cold’ throughout trial

Wednesday 15 November 2023 16:43 , Andrea Blanco

When asked by prosecutors if Ms Armstrong seems tense, Officer Niels says that she looks as calm and collected as she did on 12 May 2022.

Mr Caprariello describes Ms Armstrong’s demeanour during the two and a half weeks of trial as “emotionless” and “stone cold.”

APD officer takes the stand

Wednesday 15 November 2023 16:27 , Andrea Blanco

APD Officer Niels has now taken the stand. He arrested Ms Armstrong on a “theft of service” warrant a day after the murder.

Ms Armstrong was released after the arrest after the detective who questioned her claimed there was an error with her date of birth - said detective admitted last week that there was never an error and it remains unclear why she let Ms Armstrong free.

When the defence suggests that Ms Armstrong was handcuffed and arrested by two officers to instil fear in her, Officer Niels said she seemed calmed that day.

Pinneapple juice is a ‘weak acid,’ will not erase someone’s fingerprints, witness says

Wednesday 15 November 2023 16:09 , Andrea Blanco

The state has brought up Ms Armstrong’s searches while on the run in Costa Rica on whether pineapple juice could erase fingerprints.

Ms LaGrone said fingerprints can only be altered through deep scarring.

“You would have to hold on to a pineapple for an exceedingly long time for it to wear away your fingerprints,” Ms LaGrone says, according to NewsNation Correspondent Alex Caprariello.

Kaitlin Armstrong’s print not found at the scene

Wednesday 15 November 2023 16:06 , Andrea Blanco

Ms LaGrone says that most of the prints lifted from the door’s exterior and interior were inconclusive, meaning they could not be compared to Ms Armstrong’s. Other prints were excluded from the defendant.

When asked if she was asked to compare the collected prints with Wilson’s or Ms Cash’s, Ms LaGrone said she is not sure who they are.

Fingerprint expert first witness for the defence

Wednesday 15 November 2023 15:47 , Andrea Blanco

Erin LaGrone, a senior fingerprint examiner with the Austin Forensic Science Department, is the first witness called by the defence.

Ms LaGrone says that she did not collect fingerprints in the case.

She analysed 22 lift cards taken from Caitlin Cash’s front door, as well as nine others taken from Wilson’s bike.

Ms LaGrone was given Kaitlin Armstorng’s fingerprint to match those found at the scene.

She tells the court she realised there was an error when she was handed the prints because the label in the envelope didn’t match the number of prints contained. The suggestion is that the accurate label had been switched.

State rests its case

Wednesday 15 November 2023 15:23 , Andrea Blanco

Prosecutors have rested their case and the court will now hear from defence attorneys.

The defence’s witness list is relatively short and closing arguments could begin this afternoon.

Kaitlin Armstrong said ‘in so many words’ that she wanted to ‘kill Wilson’

Wednesday 15 November 2023 13:00 , Andrea Blanco

Nicole Mertz, a close friend of Ms Armstrong, was called to the stand on Wednesday (8 November).

Ms Mertz said that her friend and Mr Strickland often broke up and got back together and that he referred to Ms Armstrong as “his lady friend.” Ms Mertz went on to recount that Ms Armstrong once said that if Mr Strickland dated another woman, she “would kill her.]”

“My first thought was that Kaitlin might have had something to do with it,” Ms Mertz said about the moment she found out about Wilson’s killing.

Jacqueline Chasteen, a friend of Mr Strickland who eventually also befriended Ms Armstrong, said that during a gathering in Bentonville, Ms Armstrong confided in her that Mr Strickland had “cheated” on her with Wilson.

“She had described how Colin had cheated but while she was describing that, she had said in so many words that she wanted to kill her,” she said, per NewsNation. “That she had thought about it. But how she said it at the time I didn’t take it seriously...she said something to the effect that she had bought a gun... I do know the words kill and the words gun were used.”

Moriah Wilson’s final screams captured on video

Wednesday 15 November 2023 12:00 , Andrea Blanco

The murder trial began on 1 November with Texas prosecutors telling jurors they would hear Wilson’s final screams and the shots that killed her.

“The last thing Mo did on this earth was scream in terror,” Travis County prosecutor Rickey Jones told jurors in opening statements.

He said nearby surveillance equipment captured the screams.

“Those screams are followed by ‘Pop! Pop!’” Mr Jones said, smacking his hands together for emphasis. “You won’t hear any more screams after that.”

Seconds after those shots, Mr Jones said, “Kaitlin Armstrong stood over Mo Wilson and put a third shot right into Mo Wilson’s heart.”

Love rival murder, a harrowing 911 call and bike DNA: Key revelations in the Kaitlin Armstrong trial

Wednesday 15 November 2023 11:00 , Andrea Blanco

Kaitlin Armstrong faces up to 99 years in prison if she’s convicted of killing professional cyclist Anna Moriah ‘Mo’ Wilson after they were allegedly involved in a love triangle.

The Independent’s Andrea Cavallier and Andrea Blanco explain the most crucial moments so far in her high-profile trial:

Key revelations in the Kaitlin Armstrong love rival murder trial so far

Missed signs of Armstrong’s plans to flee

Wednesday 15 November 2023 09:00 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Strickland and Ms Armstrong were told about Wilson’s murder by Austin Police detectives on 12 May 2022, just a day after the murder. Bodycam footage shown to the court reportedly showed that the two seemed shocked after learning the tragic news.

Mr Strickland later joined investigators at the police station, where he gave a statement for nearly six hours. The following day, authorities served a search warrant and seized weapons from his home.

Crime scene specialist Mirezha Guevara testified on November 3 that while she was taking pictures of the firearms evidence and Ms Armstrong’s black Jeep, she also noticed Ms Armstrong’s passport and foreign currency inside the home.

An attorney representing both Mr Strickland and Ms Armstrong was present while the warrant was served, but investigators did not ask to interview Ms Armstrong.

However, they did ask Mr Strickland about her black Jeep, the same model of car seen on surveillance footage near the home where Wilson was found. The car had also been spotted near the swimming pool bar that Mr Strickland and Wilson had been at just hours before she was killed.

Mr Strickland suggested during his testimony that investigators knew it belonged to Ms Armstrong.

Mr Strickland said that after he was interviewed and the warrant was served, he and Ms Armstrong were exhausted. He asked her to write a timeline of her activities on the day and reportedly said she went to yoga and visited a “healer” but made no mention of seeing Wilson.

He then went to his business’ headquarters in Lockhart and did not see Ms Armstrong again.

On 14 May, Ms Armstrong took a flight from Austin to Houston. She was found in Costa Rica 43 days later.

WATCH: Kaitlin Armstrong trial day 8

Wednesday 15 November 2023 22:19 , Andrea Blanco

WATCH: Day 7 of Kaitlin Armstrong trial in Austin

Wednesday 15 November 2023 07:00 , Andrea Blanco

Colin Strickland says ‘he doesn’t know Armstrong very well’

Wednesday 15 November 2023 05:00 , Andrea Blanco

Mr Strickland’s initial remarks to the court about he and Ms Armstrong loving each other but not being compatible long-term took a turn on Monday after he seemingly tried to distance himself from the disgraced yoga teacher.

“You know Kaitlin Armstrong very well, don’t you?” Ms Armstrong’s attorneys asked during cross-examination on Monday (6 November).

“No, I do not,” Mr Strickland answered, prompting an audible gasp in the court, according to NewsNation reporter Alex Caprariello, who was in the room.

Defence says Armstrong fled the country after shooting ‘because she likes to travel’

Wednesday 15 November 2023 03:00 , Andrea Blanco

The murder case drew international headlines when Ms Armstrong fled the country after her initial meeting with police just days after the fatal shooting, leading to a 43-day search.

In a short opening statement at trial, defence attorney Geoffrey Puryear suggested Ms Armstrong’s sudden flight out of the country was not an attempt to escape justice.

“She would have no reason to know about any (arrest) warrant, You will hear Kaitlin is passionate about travelling and passionate about yoga,” Mr Puryear said.

He also said that Ms Armstrong was caught in a “web of circumstantial evidence” and that no video evidence or witnesses can put Ms Armstrong at the scene of the shooting.

Investigators said she sold her vehicle for $12,000 and fled the country using her sister’s name, email, credit card and passport.

Federal authorities tracked Ms Armstrong to Costa Rica, where prosecutors said she spent $6,425 for surgery to change her appearance and used several aliases while attempting to establish herself as a yoga instructor.

She also had cut and darkened her hair, and had a bandage on her nose and discoloration under her eyes when arrested at a beachside hostel. She told police when she was arrested that she was injured in a surfing accident.

Items found in Ms Arsmtrong’s hiding place in Costa Rica:

Wednesday 15 November 2023 01:00 , Andrea Blanco

-A receipt for a $6,350 rhinoplasty procedure under the name of “Allison Paige”

-A boarding pass for a flight booked for “Christie Armstrong” from Newark to San Jose. Prosecutors have previously said it appears Ms Armstrong used her sister’s passport.

-Christine Elizabeth Armstrong’s passport

-US dollars, foreign currency and medication

-Credit cards, sim cards and phones

Court adjourned for the day

Tuesday 14 November 2023 23:58 , Mike Bedigan

Ms Mazak has been dismissed as a witness and court has adjourned for the day.

Here is a recap of the key revelations from the trial so far.

Key revelations in the Kaitlin Armstrong love rival murder trial so far