Delphi & Richard Allen: The Harmless Error Doctrine Under Appellate Scrutiny
True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews
Tony Brueski
4.2 β’ 612 Ratings
ποΈ 4 April 2026
β±οΈ 80 minutes
ποΈ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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Summary
The Indiana Attorney General's response to Richard Allen's appeal relies on a single legal framework to address every contested ruling: harmless error. Each evidentiary exclusion, each procedural decision, each limitation placed on the defense β all characterized as errors, if they were errors at all, that could not have changed the outcome because the remaining evidence was overwhelming. Whether the Court of Appeals accepts that framing will determine whether Allen's 130-year sentence stands.
This week's look back at the most consequential legal developments in true crime examines the AG's 94-page brief filed March 26 and the specific arguments it makes β and avoids. On the search warrant, the State argues the probable cause affidavit contained no false statements and that any omissions would not have altered the finding of probable cause. On the confessions, the State argues Allen's statements were voluntary, that conditions of his confinement β 13 months in solitary as a pretrial detainee β did not constitute the level of coercion required to suppress, and that Allen confessed both before and after his documented period of psychosis. On excluded evidence, the State argues the Odinist alternative theory was "speculative" and "a motive in search of a suspect," that the composite sketch and bullet comparison expert were properly excluded, and that the trial court acted within its discretion.
The brief does not address the factual content of the confessions. According to the defense's appeal brief, Allen told his prison psychiatrist he shot the victims. Abby Williams and Libby German were killed with a blade. The State characterizes the confessions as credible without reconciling this discrepancy. The brief also does not substantively engage with the van timeline β surveillance footage and FBI cell phone data that, according to the defense, show the corroborating vehicle arriving after the victim's phone had stopped transmitting. The State's position on this issue is procedural: the defense failed to properly preserve the argument.
Defense attorney Bob Motta examines whether the harmless error standard can bear the weight the State is placing on it when the underlying case rested on confessions with no corroborating DNA, no recovered murder weapon, and no direct eyewitness identification β and when those confessions allegedly contained a fundamental factual error about cause of death.
The defense reply brief is due within approximately 15 days. Either party may request oral arguments. Richard Allen is in a prison in Oklahoma. Three appellate judges are reading documents.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | This is the big breakdown. |
| 0:02.2 | A long look back at some of the biggest stories we're covering for you at the Hidden Killers podcast and True Crime Today. |
| 0:09.3 | This is Hidden Killers with Tony Brewski. |
| 0:12.4 | Here now, Tony Bruske. |
| 0:15.8 | At some point during his time in the maximum security prison, according to the appeal, Richard |
| 0:21.0 | Allen told his psychiatrist that he had shot. |
| 0:30.9 | The victims, the girls. |
| 0:33.4 | Libby German and Abby Williams were not shot. |
| 0:41.2 | Yeah. Libby German and Abby Williams were not shot. They were killed with the blade. |
| 0:43.3 | Any person who had actually committed these murders would know that. |
| 0:48.2 | According to the defense's brief, Richard Allen did not. |
| 0:51.6 | That detail sits at the center of everything you are about to hear. Yes, it's |
| 0:58.1 | time to do another deep dive into Delphi, shall we? Join me and press subscribe, wherever you're |
| 1:05.6 | listening. And give us your thoughts in the comment section on Substack and YouTube as we go into one of the largest miscarriage of justice stories that we've ever covered. |
| 1:17.2 | Because the Indiana Attorney General just filed the state's formal response to the appeal, and they describe the evidence in the case as, and I'm quoting directly from that document, |
| 1:29.1 | conclusive and irrefutable. |
| 1:31.7 | They want the Indiana Court of Appeals to leave Richard Allen's conviction exactly where it is, |
| 1:36.5 | untouched, for 130 years. |
| 1:39.2 | And I tell you what, with a little bit of help from you, we're not going to let him do that. |
| 1:44.0 | We're going to go through what they actually argue, and we're going to show you where it |
| 1:49.9 | falls apart. Before we get into it, here's the frame. The state's response brief is the prosecution's |
| 1:57.5 | formal rebuttal to every argument Alan's defense raised on appeal. |
... |
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