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Richard Allen’s attorneys say jury should not hear his alleged confessions during Delphi murders trial

Attorneys asked special judge Frances Gull to suppress any statements Richard Allen made while he’s been in prison awaiting trial.

DELPHI, Ind. — Attorneys for Delphi murders defendant Richard Allen do not want a jury to hear some of Allen’s own statements, including alleged confessions about the murders of Abby Williams and Libby German.

Thursday, they asked special judge Frances Gull to suppress any statements Allen made while he’s been in prison awaiting trial, claiming that incriminating comments were not made voluntarily and came while he was mentally ill.

For those reasons, Allen’s public defenders say allowing a jury to hear the alleged confessions would violate the defendant’s constitutional rights.

Allen has been housed at maximum security state prisons for nearly 18 months since his arrest in October 2022. He is charged with killing the two Delphi teenagers, whose bodies were found near the Monon High Bridge in Delphi in February 2017.

Credit: Photos provided by family
Abby Williams (left) and Libby German (right) were killed in 2017 in Delphi.

In a “motion to suppress statements” filed Thursday with Carroll County Circuit Court, defense attorney Brad Rozzi said “Allen has been accused of making incriminating statements to both inmates and guards” while he was at the Wabash Correctional Facility between March and June of last year.

Rozzi claims prison officials posted inmates at Allen’s cell door and required those inmates to keep logs of all of Allen’s actions, statements and behaviors. And the attorney says some of those inmates actively asked Allen questions.

The defense teams says that essentially amounts to a “sustained form of interrogation; one that lasted more than five months before he was finally broken.”

And in a separate memorandum supporting the defendant’s request, Rozzi argues allowing a jury to hear Allen’s statements would be a violation of his constitutional rights because Allen did not have an attorney present when the comments were made.

Credit: WTHR
Richard Allen

Rozzi also says Allen suffered from a mental health disorder while in prison, made worse by being placed in isolation.

In his court filings, he argues Allen “slipped into a state of psychosis plagued with grossly disorganized, delusional, paranoid and highly dysfunctional behavior.” Rozzi says that behavior, detailed in the defense team’s memorandum for the judge, includes “periods of not sleeping for days, paranoia, stripping off his clothes, drinking toilet water, covering himself with and eating his own feces, and many other socially unacceptable behaviors.”

The defense team claims Allen’s statements and alleged confessions were not given voluntarily, but instead as a result of Allen being overcome by his harsh environment in a prison isolation cell while on suicide watch.

And they say any confessions were therefore coerced and should not be admissible at trial.

That trial is set to begin in mid-May.

The state is expected to use Allen’s jailhouse statements against him, but the defense team says the comments Allen allegedly said don’t even match up with evidence from the crime scene and, therefore, show the confessions cannot be true.

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