today. how long have you been in law enforcement? almost 20 years. okay. i think one thing we ve all learned being in law enforcement that people we know sometimes we don t really know what s going on in their lives. would you agree with that? sometimes, yes. do you know where he s going to be staying if he gets out on bond. is he coming to live with you? i would imagine he s staying at his house. so he would stay in cobb county? i would think so. with his wife? i would think so. and you or your family wouldn t be there to make sure he shows up for court or anything like that? i mean, he s an adult? he is an adult, but i imagine we would be visiting him quite frequently. you told the judge, you didn t think he would commit crimes while out on bond, correct? i don t think he would at all. okay. were you aware that he s actually committed crimes that would be crimes in the state of georgia in the past year? i was not. did you know he s been
let s listen in. no, i did not. talking about cheating on his wife? no, i did not. if he were doing that, would you agree that maybe you don t know everything about mr. harris? i know him in a church setting and that s all. that s all i have. you may step down. thank you. anything else? no more evidence for purposes of bond, judge. what are you asking for mr. kilgore? i m asking for a $50,000 bond. mr. born? judge, we are objecting to bond given all the circumstances. he s committed crimes even before this that i believe speaks volumes when he said, does your conscious ever kick in, and he said no. it s obvious this man is leading two different lives and i don t think he can be trusted.
chatting with underage girls and getting pictures of their breasts sent to him? i did not. would that change your opinion as to whether he would be likely to commit crimes if released on bond? no, it does not change my opinion. that s all i have, judge. who would help him post a bond if bond was set? his wife. does she have resources, that you know of? i think so. all right. you may step down. judge, may i just ask one other question? you may. is it fair to say that your sister-in-law and your family are not people of great wealth. i think so, yes. thank you. you may step down. any other witnesses? alyssa sellers. you re watching a live
moments, he allegedly forgot the child. and then for him to enter the car later that day, after 4:00 in the afternoon, when the child had been dead and rigormo morti had set in, that the stench was unbearable, that he got in the car and drove it for some distance before he took any action to check on the welfare of his child. soy find there s probable cause for the two charges contained in the warrant. anything else today, mr. gilroy? judge, i would like you to consider bond i ve got several instances well, you have a right to present what evidence. you wish to state in your place what they would say or you would have one or two witnesses you want the court to hear from? judge, i m going to i ll call his brother, michael, at this time. all right.
stunning. we were told to expect anything. what we heard was just stunning, stunning stuff. and it portrays an individual who, at least the d.a. was trying to claim, was involved in an alternative lifestyle of sexting. he was sending pornographic images of himself to women at the time that his son is dying in a car. there were multiple objections by the defense saying, look, this has nothing to go to cause here. he may be, perhaps, immoral, but that doesn t mean that s why his son is dying in the car. he kept reiterating to the defense that this was an accident, but it was damning stuff, to be sure. and martin, just to recap for those who are just tuning in, the judge ruled that there is probable cause, enough to go forward to trial and denied bond, the defense had asked for a $50,000 bond. prosecution didn t want any bond at all. they were suggesting he was a