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Trial in the 2017 murders of two Indiana teenage girls reaches midpoint as prosecution closes

Trial in the 2017 murders of two Indiana teenage girls reaches midpoint as prosecution closes

The trial of a man accused of killing two teenage girls in a small Indiana community has ended after more than two weeks of testimony about the 2017 murders.

DELPHI, Ind. — The trial of a man accused of killing two teenage girls in a small Indiana community has ended after more than two weeks of testimony about the 2017 murders.

Prosecutors dropped their case against Richard Allen on Thursday after jurors heard phone calls in which he told his wife he killed 13-year-old Abigail Williams and 14-year-old Liberty Herman.

Allen’s trial began Oct. 18 at the Carroll County Courthouse in Delphi, the girls’ hometown. Jurors have been sequestered since the start of the trial, which will continue until November 15.

The defense began calling its first witnesses on Thursday. An Indiana Department of Corrections psychologist told jurors Friday that Allen was seriously mentally ill when he began confessing to the killings while incarcerated at Westville Correctional Facility.

Allen, 52, faces up to 130 years in prison if convicted of two counts of murder and two additional points murder in the commission or attempted kidnapping.

Here are some key points from the trial:

Carroll County Prosecutor Nicholas McClelland opened court proceedings telling jurors they will see and hear evidence, including Allen’s incriminating statements, that will convince them he forced the girls off a hiking trail into a secluded area while armed with a gun and cut their throats.

McLeland said Allen was the man seen on cellphone video taken by Germany the day the girls disappeared, and an unexpended bullet was found between their bodies.

Defense attorney Andrew Baldwin told jurors that Allen is innocent. Baldwin said jurors will hear witness testimony and forensic evidence that will raise “reasonable doubt” that Allen is not the killer, and said the state’s timeline does not match the evidence in the case.

Someone else may have kidnapped the teenagers and returned them early the next day to the scene where they were found dead, Baldwin said.

During the first full week of the trial, jurors were shown photos of the area where the teenagers’ bodies were found in the woods off a hiking trail. The girls, known as Abby and Libby, crossed an abandoned railroad trestle called the Monon High Bridge during a hike.

Some jurors and others in the courtroom gasped or turned away as gruesome images of their bloodied bodies were shown, while the girls’ mothers wept.

Jurors also viewed cellphone video Herman recorded just before the youths disappeared, showing a man in a blue jacket and jeans following Williams as she crossed the Monon High Bridge.

In an extended version of the video shown to jurors, one of the girls says, “There’s no trail, so we have to go down here.” According to prosecutors, shortly before the end of the video, the man seen in the video tells the teenagers: Down the hill.”

Investigators said in an affidavit released about a month later Allen’s arrest in October 2022 that he became a suspect after they went back and reviewed “previous leads” and discovered he had been questioned by an officer in 2017.

Witnesses in court revealed more details about how they targeted the former pharmacy worker.

A retired state government employee, who volunteered to help police with their investigation in March 2017, told jurors that in September 2022 she found documents that caught her attention.

Kathy Schenk testified that she found a “lead sheet” that said two days after the bodies of Herman and Williams were found, a man contacted authorities and said he had been on the trail the day they disappeared girls His name was incorrectly listed as Richard Allen Wightman and marked as “cleared,” Schenk said.

She determined that the man’s name was actually Richard Allen and recalled that a young girl had been on the trail at the same place and time and had seen the man.

“I thought there might be a connection,” Schenk testified, adding that she informed officers of her discovery.

The bodies of the girls were found on February 14, 2017, the day after their disappearance.

Two days later, Allen contacted authorities and told them he had been on a hiking trail on the afternoon of Feb. 13, the time the girls were reported missing.

Dan Doolin, a captain with the Indiana Department of Natural Resources, told the court he spoke with Allen, who said he was on the trail between 1:00 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. and recalled seeing the three girls.

After Schenck brought Allen to the attention of investigators, they interviewed him in October 2022. Allen told investigators he arrived at the trail around noon and left no later than 2:30 p.m., as he told Dulin in 2017.

Steve Mullin, who was the Delphi police chief when the girls were killed and later became an investigator for the district attorney’s office, said Allen told him and another officer that he was wearing a blue or black Carhartt jacket, jeans and a beanie on the day of the crime. the teenagers disappeared.