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 News Archive 2020








The prosecutor claims the jail's Coronavirus policies are why Lori Vallow and her attorney's conversation was recorded
by Nathan'ette Burdine: April 16, 2020
 


Madison County Prosecutor Rob Wood has told everybody that the “new COVID-19 policies at the jail” are why Lori Vallow and her attorney, Mark Means, conversation was recorded in the lawyer-client visitation room where there are no connections to recording devices.

“The Jail promptly deleted the recording of that conversation and has placed a block on all recordings in the current attorney/client visiting area to preclude any other accidental recordings,” is what the FOX 13 folks say Wood wrote.

A question y’all are more than likely asking yourselves is, “How can there be ‘accidental recordings’ in a room where you can’t connect a recording device to anything that will cause you to have an ‘accidental recording?’”

The question answers itself. And I’m going to go as far as to say that it’s more than likely why Wood has gotten the hush mouth. Wood knows that sanctions, fines, and loss of employment will follow.

This is a big mess, folks! Ain’t no way around it. It’s so bad that the folks over at Davis County Sheriff’s Office let their spokeswoman, Liz Solis, add her two cents to it.

Solis told the FOX 13 folks that they’ve never had any complaints about ease dropping in on a lawyer-client conversation: “We are all about respecting the rights of the individual whose in our care and custody. If they’re having an attorney-client visit, then that conversation is not recorded.”

As to be expected, Mark Means is happier than a hungry dog with five chicken bones! Means knows that the Madison County Jail folks’ little hiccup is his “golden ticket” to getting Magistrate Judge Michelle Ward to reduce his client’s $1 million bond down to something like $100,000, which his client can afford.

Related-Lori Vallow's bond hearing to reduce her $1 million bond has been moved to April 24

And y’all know Vallow, Vallow is hauling tail as soon as she gets out. She fled from Arizona to Idaho after her now deceased brother, Alex Cox, killed her husband Charles Vallow. Soon after that, her two children, 17-year-old Tylee Ryan and 7-year-old Joshua “JJ” Vallow, went missing, which led Lori Vallow to flee to Hawaii.

The police in Hawaii shipped her back to Idaho where she’s been ever since. Now, the folks over at the Madison County Jail have given her a third chance at freedom. A third time’s a charm.

Hopefully, the state will step in and take over before that happens. The state has already taken over the case, from the Freemont County Prosecutor’s Office, involving Chad Daybell’s possible involvement in his late wife’s, Tammy Daybell, death.

And I’m quite sure that do to the fact the state doesn’t want anybody jacking up their case by letting a prime witness and suspect get away, the state will step in and take over Lori Vallow’s case from the Madison County Prosecutor’s Office.

Because you know if the folks over at the Madison County Prosecutor’s Office and the jailhouse can’t figure out how the “new COVID-19 policies at the jail” led to somebody recording a private conversation between Lori Vallow and her lawyer, Mark Means, in a room that doesn’t have any connections to any recording devices in the Madison County Jail, then the chances are the folks over at the Madison County Prosecutor’s Office and the jailhouse won’t be able to figure out how to keep Lori Vallow from fleeing from Lady Justice a third time around.






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