Evaristo Salas Jr.
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And the fact that they maintained it, they basically, like I said, they basically just gave us everything.
And they also kind of, they highlighted the statements that seemed improper, what the judge was saying on the order and the ruling.
Some of the things he said were just, one of the statements of the judge was to my lawyers, I don't think the court of appeals is going to care as much as you think they will about this, you know.
Yeah, and if they even decided that, most likely because the way he's been kind of operating across the attorney, he's just been dragging everything out and just kind of just letting it go as long as it can, which is horrible when you think about it.
I mean, even on this sense, I got...
less than three years left, you know, but he's still dragging as much as he can because that's the only hand he has to play.
So if they were to grab me to trial, I was going to sit back.
As soon as they grant us that, or they came to my conviction and grabbed me to trial, I would ask for a 60-day speedy trial.
And the only thing, option he can do is probably just drag it out until the day that we start, you know, or we start that initial, you know, process of going to trial.
And that's when my lawyer thinks, well, he'd be
foolish to even try because there's, it's just, there's so much that is so much wrong about this case.
And even the judge might just dismiss it right off that, but to take it to that point, I know it's like the pony thing is probably going to do is just try to drag it up into that point, which is horrible.
But that's what he's been doing since the get-go.
I hope that once they vacate my conviction and we go back where they ran me for their trial, that right there he just says, you know what, done is done.
Yeah, the vacate my conviction is not an exoneration, which is horrible too.
They're not saying by vacating my conviction that, oh, you know, you're exonerated.