Khari Sanford's alleged accomplice in the murders of Dr. Beth Potter and Robin Carre took the witness stand Friday morning to testify against his long-time friend, saying he had no idea what Sanford had planned on the night of March 30, 2020.
MADISON, Wis. — In nearly 3 hours of testimony Wednesday afternoon, the daughter of a couple murdered in the UW Arboretum in 2020 said her then-boyfriend ‘felt like a slave’ when her parents tried to make suggestions for him, or set rules for the couple while they lived in the family’s home. UW Health’s Dr. Beth Potter and husband Robin.
MADISON, Wis. — In opening statements Tuesday morning in Khari Sanford’s murder trial, state prosecutors laid out a motive against Sanford built on family tensions, alleging Sanford “hated” his girlfriend’s parents before planning their death on March 30, 2020. “The evidence in this case, as you’ll hear, is overwhelming,” Dane County Deputy District Attorney William Brown said in his 35-minute.
In nearly 3 hours of testimony Wednesday afternoon, the daughter of a couple murdered in the UW Arboretum in 2020 said her then-boyfriend 'felt like a slave' when her parents tried to make suggestions for him, or set rules for the couple while they lived in the family's home.
Prosecutors and defense attorneys have begun selecting the jury that will determine the fate of 20-year-old Khari Sanford, who is accused of the murder of his girlfriend's mother and father at the UW Arboretum in 2020.