that is absolutely not correct. so your sister-in-law mary testified to that fact that conversation you know mike she had with maggie but you say that is not true? i don t believe that is what she said. your defense put it in this exhibit, exhibit 107 were maggie text and said alex wants me to come home. i see that, and i agree with that. i ve got the wrong one. i will just hold it up. have you seen this text? i have seen that. mr. walker s only dispute with what you have is you say i called maggie and told her to come home. i always wanted maggie to come home. i would have talked to maggie about coming home before she ever left to go to charleston. and i can tell you this, and i didn t realize this at the time, but i realize it now.
0 after that you agree that maggie s phone around 8:53 show some steps being taken? the data shows that. that is what it shows, correct? that is correct. and then you would a agreed that 9:02 and 9:06, your phone starts showing a lot of steps? i do agree with that. what were you doing? i was getting ready to go to my mom s house. you took a shower already and were laying down on the couch. what were you doing? there wasn t any ready to get ready in that aspect. i was getting ready to go. i was preparing to leave. to do what? i don t know if i got up and went to the bathroom. i don t know. that is far shorter steps in any time. matt prior in the testimony in this case. so what were you doing busy doing? going to the bathroom? get on a treadmill? no, i didn t get on a treadmill. dog in-place? no, sir. jumping jacks? no, i did not do jumping jacks. what were you doing? preparing to get there might go to my moms house. you were in the front house l
Jane Pomp (Bolhouse) Connerton, 89, of Newport, Rhode Island, passed away peacefully at home on June 28, 2021, surrounded by her family. She was the wife of the late William H. Connerton Jr.
Jane was born on October 10, 1931, in Newport, RI to the late Peter Daniel Bolhouse and Gladys Estelle (Carr) Bolhouse. As a young girl she was a member of the Girl Scouts and maintained that affiliation for well over a half century, attending their annual reunions held at Camp Hoffman in South Kingstown. She also had a great love of animals and a passion for bird watching. She continued this appreciation of nature throughout her whole life, most notably, by her always having an assortment of books relating to birds on hand and a pair of binoculars at the ready whether she was sitting in her living room chair or out in her car. All her children and grandchildren had to do was describe what a bird looked like or mimic the sounds they made, and she would tell them what it was. Until the day she