more likely than not standard. more likely than not is a lower standard obviously than beyond a reasonable doubt. or people would argue preponderance of the evidence. that we use in civil trial. the idea of we re going to do these in these settings. non-legal settings. more likely than not. do you agree with that standard? and was it met here. i understand this. it was a job interview. and not a legal proceeding. right. i believe that christine blasey-ford was credible because she was willing to do the fbi process. and the lie detecter test. i would have thought he would have welcomed the same for himself. no, i don t agree with collins. how do you feel about that more likely than not?
well, i think it is ironic that people may think he s a little less. i don t think he s more or less dishonest, he called obama an illegal immigrant. and he says stuff that we know he knows under lie detecter test. there this s absolutely no evidence of that. and we know there s no audit. can t the irs they re making a statement, he can t somebody that will be a good leak. he would have been inviting the irs people to do that for months now. into their credit so far they have it. i thought they were all liberals over there. they might actually believe in the ethics of their job. i think over all, you know, whether it s the drain the swamp, anything else he was saying, we re paying for the white house. i think that he had the trip. we re paying for as
detectives s detectives say bambi failed to pass, the lie detecter test he said was suspicious. have you told me everything you know about this case? if i ask a detective that same question, he couldn t pass it either. it s too broad a question. bambi sat in jail for six months. they were hoping she would flip and tell them the story? that s exactly what they were hoping. finally the judge said, enough is enough. prosecutor humphries had to let bambi go. it became apparent the evidence was not sufficient to bring her case to trial. didn t have the goods? just wasn t there. wasn t there. yet she s the foundation of your theory? there s no question about it. for the time being bambi was able to put the county jail in her rear-view mirror. and with it, rick. by now bambi had cut ties with her old boyfriend. it sounds like she had your back, rick, and then she didn t. yeah. what happened? jail changes people. rick was hoping it would be just a matter of time
that gap had to be filled in. he also passed a polygraph test. one of the detectives did come to my work and he asked to see me. at that time, i said, am i still considered a suspect? and he says, mr. church, yes, you are. and i said, well, i think that you need to look somewhere else. diane church was also considered a suspect. they gave me a lie detecter test, a horrible thing to go through to go to the police station and be fingerprinted and lie detecter test and all this kind of stuff. the only potential evidence at the scene was the fingerprints on the bedroom screen. the prints were compared with those in the database of the colorado state bureau of investigation. there was no match. next, the sheriff s office sent the prints to the fbi and their
that gap had to be filled in. he also passed a polygraph test. one of the detectives did come to my work and he asked to see me. at that time, i said, am i still considered a suspect? and he says, mr. church, yes, you are. and i said, well, i think that you need to look somewhere else. diane church was also considered a suspect. they gave me a lie detecter test, a horrible thing to go through to go to the police station and be fingerprinted and lie detecter test and all this kind of stuff. the only potential evidence at the scene was the fingerprints on the bedroom screen. the prints were compared with those in the database of the colorado state bureau of investigation. there was no match. next, the sheriff s office sent the prints to the fbi and their automated fingerprint