Your logic assumes kids are light sleepers.Aussie wrote:Okay, now I'll throw my oar in the water. I reckon there was reasonable doubt and there should have been an acquittal. Apart from all the other possible scenarios raising that doubt, the most important piece of logic for me was this. Powell, if guilty, had to move the corpse from his home in the dead of night to where she was found, many kilometers from the home. If there was a scuffle at home which resulted in her death, there was a liklihood at least one or more of the kids would be disturbed from their sleep by the noise of that scuffle. So, given that, and even without that, all that had to happen for him to exposed as a killer was for one of the kids to get out of bed and ........... find BOTH their parents missing.
Nah.
Also Kids could be used to noise and even arguments when they are in bed and will not get up. the are thankful when it goes quite.
Your assumption that the kids would wake up or leave their rooms is a flawed one.
My daughter does not wake up all night when she is in bed. Even if we make a huge noise like dropping a dining set. Logic flawed. The jury thought the same clearly.