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Defense seeks new trial for Vaughn

Attorneys cite Drew Peterson case among reasons for request

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Regarding the deliberations, he said it was the first time in his 20-plus year career where the jury did not ask any questions nor ask to review reports, evidence or transcripts.

"It's very rare and it's never happened to me where a jury doesn't ask one single question," he said.

He also questioned the depth of deliberations, and whether the jury had considered the case fully.

"It was 45, 50 minutes, sign the guilty-verdict forms and it's Miller Time," Lenard said, noting the jury's post-verdict stop at a downtown Joliet bar.

He also said, based on interviews with news outlets following, the jury appeared to have improperly based their decision on Vaughn's lack of reaction to proceedings, which shouldn't be considered as evidence because Vaughn did not testify.

Regis' rebuttal at the trial's closing arguments was also in the spotlight. Lenard said it was full of error, and claimed Regis told the jury there was no question about Vaughn's guilt, and "to forget about reasonable doubt."

Assistant State's Attorney Michael Fitzgerald had the chance to rebut Lenard's claims. He said the items outlined by Lenard were within his ability to change — from the jury selection process to the trial's timing.

"If he believed that that case was going to have some kind of impact on the Vaughn trial, he should have filed a continuance," he said.

He said it was unbelievable for Lenard to make it an issue at this point, after making no efforts to minimize the alleged impact. 

"It's unbelievable that the Drew Peterson case would find itself in the Christopher Vaughn case," he said.

Additionally, Fitzgerald said Lenard could have chosen a different juror over Lachat, and that Regis acted properly in addressing the jury, noting that the jury was aware that the state had the burden of proof, and that he told the jury the state had proven Vaughn guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

Fitzgerald said the accusation that jurors improperly based their decision on Vaughn's lack of emotion is insulting to the jury, considering the large amounts of evidence and testimony they saw and heard over the course of the five-week trial.

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