Wednesday, December 15, 2021

THIRD INTERVIEW

 

In November 2021, Stephen talked to Fox News for 90 minutes. Only a small portion of what he shared was aired.


Jennifer: Do you have a job in prison?

Steve: I just recently changed from the kitchen to the transitions clerk. I now help get people ready to be released (get IDs, find housing, find jobs, etc). I get to talk guys, and I enjoy that. It's also a salaried position, so I have more free time for my legal and religious studies.


Jennifer: Where are you now in terms of your legal work?


Steve: I just sent in my first US Supreme Court writ of certiorari. I'm anxious to see what they say, because I showed it to the "legal beagles" here and they said they couldn't do any better, but only about 1 in 2000 are reviewed by US Supreme Court.


Now I'm working on my post-conviction pleading. It's a never ending job until I get out. In my mind, the evidence is in my favor. I just need to get someone to listen, and it will happen eventually. 


Jennifer: A friend who has been following your case has some questions for you that he sent to me. I’ll just put them to you. First one, setting up a TOR browser is fairly complicated. Why did you have it set up and for what reasons did you use it?


Steve: If the TOR browser that I'm referencing is the same as what he’s referencing, it was a single app that was just click and install. If he's referencing something different that could be important. 


Initially Amy did a Google search for "private web browser" because she was upset about all the tracking that Google did. I thought she installed TOR on her computer as part of that experiment, but according to the State's computer forensic report it wasn't installed on her computer, so maybe she installed something else. They said TOR wasn't installed until November of 2016, But it was part of trying to find a browser that didn't collect and sell all your information. 


Jennifer: Thanks, Steve. Here’s another one. Can you explain how your iPhone and or MacBook Pro could’ve been hacked? Did you have any security in place in your home office to prevent Internet hacking, such as a firewall?


Steve: I'm not sure our computers were hacked over the Internet, or just accessed over our internal network. 


The lady I believe was dogdaygod had access to Amy's training arena and it was on the same network with the house. There was no firewall between those 2 spots. As far as how they hacked the devices, I have no idea. We've never even had a chance to look at those devices. The prosecution gave our devices to a third party company (Lanterman's) and he "offered" to make us an image of a device for something like $700 each, so times 66 devices equals about $45,000 just to get the images. Does something seem wrong about that?


I know on the Mac and on Amy's laptop we had VNC-type remote apps, and while I don't know how to hack it, I know it is easy to access properly (one password and you're in). The other thing we noticed on Amy's computer was it was running extremely slowly, so much so that she had ordered a new computer a week or so before she was killed. For example I would hardwire my PC laptop to her network connection and go to speed test.net and might get 100mbps download and when I plugged her into the same cable it would be half or worse (50mbps). 


She also had weird things like emails showing read when she didn't read them, or unread when she knew she had read them. Also her business website would crash when she had an event sign up, but it was from a commercial hosting site, so having 100 or so people access the site (even if it was simultaneously) shouldn't crash it, and she had tickets open with her provider and they could never find anything wrong.


Jennifer: Thanks, Steve. None of that information came out in the documentaries I watched. I appreciate it. One more question for you, why didn’t you turn over your MacBook Pro laptop when you turned over whatever other devices you turned over in the initial investigation?


Steve: I don't remember the whole conversation with the FBI initially, and what they said they were looking for, but I know that they knew I had work computers and phones. I gave them what they asked for. One of Amy’s friends noticed some of these issues I told you about, because she was Amy's "Marketing advisor" and helped with the website. I'm not sure if they are just coincidences, but these were really strange, and were never investigated.


Jennifer: Yes, I found in the case of Adam’s story, that the truth was in the details that weren’t shared with the jury, and yet the prosecutor admitted in an interview three years after the trial that she pared it all down, even if that meant leaving unanswered questions. She admitted that she selected the details about the case that would give her the verdict she wanted. 


Let’s switch gears a bit, I get the impression from what I’ve read that you did a lot of traveling, both for work and together with Amy?


Steve: Yes, and I remember you telling me you’re from the Toronto area. I've only been there once and it was for work, but I liked what I saw.


Jennifer: It’s a great city, yes. (Smile)


Steve: Amy and I traveled a lot, but we never made it there for a vacation. We made it to Vancouver, Edmonton, Winnipeg, St.John's Newfoundland, and Banff.


She was a great traveling companion and I think we made it to about 25 different countries together in 20 years.


It’s sad, but the photo you see of Amy [sent to Besa Mafia] was one that we took while in Hawaii a year or so previously. This picture was on a backup drive that we had in Amy's arena. (The lady I suspect of contacting Besa Mafia had access to it). The other thing that's interesting about that picture is it was one that Joe put on a blog that he did as a school assignment while we were at the Feast, and the blog link was sent to friends and Amy's dog classes. She might have had it from there too. 


If I was sending a photo I could've grabbed any picture and could've taken a more recent picture. Additionally this was posted to our website. The odd thing here is that if I was posting it then I could've just pushed that one picture up, but for some reason it looks like the whole website was downloaded, the file added, and the whole website was uploaded again. I thought the picture was already there as part of Joe's blog, so I'm not sure why all this happened, but it's strange. All of this activity would have left log files on the computer that did it and there aren't logs on my computer of any of this.


Jennifer: This case is very detailed when it comes to the techie-side of things. I think that’s why people are just willing to accept the authorities at the their word when it’s all explained to them in the documentaries. I look forward to reading the trial transcripts for myself and to see what came out and what didn’t. One question I have for you is, how did the killers know to come in the back way, rather than the front way? 


Steve: I think it's funny, in a sad sort of way, that the media makes such a big deal about the camera in the back and claiming "how did the killer know it didn't record?" I don't think they needed any special knowledge, because it's the only obvious way to enter the house from where they were parked. 


Amy's students noticed the guy's car parked on the north side of her dog arena. The "parking lot" is on the west side, so they noticed a car "out of place" on the north side at 4:45 PM, and it was gone when they left at 6 PM. From there, there's a solid wood panel fence to block the view from the road that goes all the way to the house. Then if you go around to the back of the house, you're not visible from the road. 


The first door is the rear garage door. I don't remember if it was locked or not, but he'd be able to see her through the glass sliding door. So, camera or not, that's the most logical point to try to get in. Our locking mechanism didn't work, but I've talked to guys here that say those are easy to break into.


Jennifer: That makes sense. I read in one of the articles that your last family vacation was in the autumn and that you went to Germany. It was good to read that Amy was able to sleep well and truly relax for the first time in ages, since getting that news from the FBI.


Steve: Yes, the Germany trip was our last Feast together. The whole family stayed together in a big condo. It was a wonderful trip.


Tuesday, December 14, 2021

SECOND INTERVIEW



1994, juniors, Ambassador College


Jennifer: When you initially learned about the threats to Amy’s life from the FBI, did they examine yours and Amy’s phones and computers?


Steve: The FBI did take both Amy's and my devices. I think they took my phone and my personal computer, but I don't think they took my work computer (the Mac). I wish they did, because I believe it would've cleared it up to that date. 


Jennifer: I also learned that what links you to the dark web is the iPhone labelled S Allwine and a MacBook Pro laptop also labelled S Allwine. I agree with what you said about ineffective counsel. You should have definitely had a computer forensics expert because that was the most damaging part of the prosecution’s case.


Steve:  They make a huge deal about those 60 devices taken from my home to try to make me look like some major hacker, but most of those were flash drives and thumb drives that Amy used to film the dogs that she trained. The state's computer expert said that there was only "interesting" information on 2 devices.


Jennifer: Yes, when they said they seized 60 devices it sounded suspicious. A person would have to listen carefully to note that, like you said, it included thumb drives, hard drives. I personally have about 6 thumb drives just for all my writing. In addition to my Mac, an iPod, two old phones, a new phone, the hard drive from my previous Mac. And that’s just what I can look at right now. There are probably some things I’m missing, and I’m not even a techie!


Steve: The bitcoin address in the deleted note is also interesting. First there's no evidence of it on my iPhone, which is supposed to be where it originated. Next, it was supposed to be created in March, but it didn't show up in the cloud backup until August. Guess when the FBI approached the lady that Amy suspected for an interview ... August. The State's computer expert said that it's possible to pre-date a file, and the backup could be made from a different phone.


Another one of the things that I think is funny (sad) is the police comment that "he thought he was covering his tracks,” yet there is no evidence that I deleted my search history or browser history, so what exactly was I doing to cover my tracks? Like Adam, I had my personal phone, and then a phone for each of the two companies that I worked for and, of course, like Adam, they try to make that look nefarious.


Jennifer: Yes, when you’re under investigation, everything becomes suspicious to the authorities. That scares me because so many of our every day activities could be turned around to make us look guilty of something. For example, I know that you legitimately used bitcoin. In the Probable Cause statement they say there’s a bitcoin app on your Samsung Galaxy phone. And that on March 7, 2016 you reported to Cottage Grove police that you had been defrauded in a bitcoin transaction, for Cisco training and test preparation materials. 


Steve: The money is another interesting thing, because I was scammed out of that first bitcoin transaction, but in the emails between dogdaygod and Besa Mafia, she sent more money to Besa Mafia and there's no money leaving my accounts to match that. 


My theory is that the lady who knew Amy and ordered the hitman was behind the initial scam and she thought that would've been it, but then Besa Mafia kept asking for more and she paid that from her business account. The emails indicate that, and then say that she basically ran out of money to spend. Even that first bitcoin, my bitcoin address, doesn't show up on the bitcoin transaction log for Besa Mafia's bitcoin address, so that shows that I didn't pay them.


Jennifer: I read the email exchange between dogdaygod and Besa Mafia. In the end, it was decided to kill the victim in her home and then burn down the house. This doesn’t seem like something a spouse would agree to, particularly since you work from home. Can you tell me more about why it appears that you didn’t return to work after lunch, which opened you to suspicion that you had spent the afternoon killing your wife, moving her, and cleaning up the blood?


Steven: The Optanix "issue" is another joke. The prosecution allowed a police officer to opine on whether I was working or not when he doesn't know our business, and my lawyer didn't object or cross examine on it. The report from Optanix said that I didn't log back into the phone queue, but that's only for priority 1 calls. If we end up on a P1 call, then we can't get off without handing it off to another engineer, which could take an hour. Since Amy wasn't feeling well I chose not to log into the queue, but we still see all the calls that come in and we're still in a group chat where we can help others. Sundays are slow anyway and there are 4 engineers on shift, so there was no need for me to log in. There are other housekeeping tasks that we can do as well. If I wasn't on the group chat, then I would've been written up by the supervisor. 


Jennifer: What is one of the biggest challenges you face in proving your innocence?


Steve: No one wants to look at the actual evidence when you have someone convicted for it already. The big shock to me was that the prosecution will lie and cheat to get someone convicted because then the burden of proof shifts, and now the inmate must prove he's innocent rather than having the assumption of innocence.


Jennifer: I agree. Without that presumption of innocence, you become the person who has to explain everything to everyone, including things that you had no responsibility for. For example, after the allegation that you hired a hitman, the second most serious allegation is that you purchased scopolamine on the dark web to use on Amy. Can you tell me more about how Amy might have gotten scopolamine in her?


Steve: I never knew anything about scopolamine before this. Amy made lunch that day and Joe was there the whole time, so I couldn’t have slipped anything into it. Also, they don’t know when or how she was drugged. My impression is it’s used for motion sickness and after surgery. 


Jennifer: You’re right, it’s mostly for nausea and used for surgeries. But when it’s used as a street drug it has the reputation for making a person susceptible to suggestion. Some people call it a truth serum or say that it turns people into willing zombies.


If the killer wanted to make Amy suggestible to the idea of committing suicide in order to save her family’s life, that would definitely be the drug to use in terms of the reputation it has for causing people to basically empty out their bank accounts and give away all their jewelry under its influence. 


The difficult part about really studying the effect it has when it’s used on people in a criminal way is that the people suffer memory loss, and by the time they go to the doctor, it’s all exited their system, so they’re just left trying to piece it together based on circumstantial evidence. Since its origins are in Columbia and the people are tourists who have been out eating and drinking in a club, they conclude that it was slipped into their food or drink. 


Steve: I did hear that it wasn't a toxic dose which made me wonder why it was used. Where did you get information about "willing zombies" and "truth serum"?


Jennifer: It was at a medical website that was separating the facts from the myths about scopolamine. As you said, though, despite being a high dose, it wasn’t toxic. Was it possible that when an intruder entered that day, after you left, that Amy immediately went for the gun, but didn’t pull the trigger, and the intruder was able to disarm her?


Steve: We kept the gun right under Amy's side of the bed, so I'm not sure if she grabbed it and didn't get a shot off, or if they incapacitated her and saw it sitting on the floor. Either is possible, but I would think she would grab it and threaten an intruder, but I'm not sure either of us could shoot to kill someone. So they probably could've taken it from her.


Jennifer: Yes, I 100% agree that Amy couldn’t have killed a person, even with her life threatened. She was obviously a person who loved life and it would be unfathomable to take a life when it came down to it. Or at the very least, she hesitated and then was disarmed.


Steve: I miss her so much. She is the "Woman of my dreams" because that's where I get to spend time with her now. We did so much stuff together that I have wonderful vivid dreams about doing all kinds of things with her. So from that standpoint she's never really gone.



FIRST INTERVIEW



1992, freshmen, Ambassador College


Jennifer: What are some of the key exonerating points in your case?


Steve: I have about a 30-page doc on the details, but I can summarize them for you. They claimed that the time of death was 3:15 PM or earlier, because the medical examiner showed up at 7:00 PM, and time of death was determined to be 4-6 hours prior to his investigation. What I found out later is they had a document that showed the medical examiner didn’t show up until 11:31 PM, which changes the time of death to 5:31pm to 7:00 PM. No one argues that I left prior to that and came home and found her at 7:00 PM.


Three different people checked rigor mortis status at three different times and each came back to a time of death of roughly 5:30 as well.


Amy had 50+ gunshot residue (GSR) particles on her hands, showing that GSR was pervasive, and yet I had no GSR on my clothes and only a single particle on my right hand. That's the hand I used to check her vitals, because the 911 operator told me to.


They claim there was a large section of blood that was cleaned up with a light blue rag, and yet the rag has no visible blood stains and Amy's DNA isn't even a major contributor on the rag. Additionally there was no blood on any other clothes or towels, and no blood spatter on my clothes.


They claimed that I killed her to avoid a divorce, yet there was no evidence of a divorce and everyone interviewed (including Amy prior to her death) said we had a great marriage.


They claim no one else would have wanted her dead, and yet Amy suggested a lady as a suspect before she died, and there's email evidence pointing to this lady, and a lot of other strange "coincidences"


I've got quite a bit more, but those are the key bits.


Jennifer: Can you cite some examples of Brady violations where the prosecutor withheld exonerating evidence?


Steve: In my case, they withheld the medical examiner investigator's notes, my bitcoin account number, and some photos taken at the crime scene. Those are the ones I know about and can prove, There are probably others. 


Bagley is an expansion of Brady which removes the materiality standard and says all favorable evidence needs to be turned over.


Napue v. Illinois is Ffalse testimony. They aren't allowed to solicit false testimony and they're required to correct it if they know about it. So in my case this would be the medical examiner saying that her investigator arrived at 7:00 PM when he actually arrived at 11:31 PM. (According to the crime scene log that the prosecution had.)


Jennifer: Were there other examples of misconduct?


Steve: Yes, for example, prior bad acts - we call it Spreigl evidence here. They can't bring it in unless it's directly connected to the crime being prosecuted, but they usually do. Michelson v United States and Old Chief v. United States speak to that.


"Colorful" arguments in opening and closing - Taylor v. Kentucky - they aren't supposed to bring up anything that wasn't proven by the evidence. Like they repeatedly said that I killed Amy to avoid a divorce, yet there was no evidence of it, and everyone on the stand and in police reports said we had a great relationship. In fact, I stayed with my in-laws for 2.5 months after her death. Additionally they said many times that I drugged her and yet the medical examiner said we don't know when or how often she ingested the drug, and none of it was found in our house.


Violations in chain of custody - California v. Trombetta - Evidence is supposed to stay in the custody of the police or officers of the court, except for samples that may be sent for testing. The originals of all my electronic devices were given to a 3rd party. Then he wanted to charge us $45,000 to get images of them to review. 


Vouching for a witness or improperly impeaching a witness - I don't have the case handy, but similar to your friend Adam’s case. My neighbor saw Amy out in the garage over an hour after the State's time of death, and they basically said he didn't know what day it was because he is a shift worker. They made a similar claim about a recorded statement of a neighbor that we stipulated to, because he saw two cars speeding out of the neighborhood during our time of death window, and the state claimed they were confused about the day as well. The interview was taped less than 24-hours after her death.


They didn't do it in my case, but they do it a lot here where they violate the portion of the double jeopardy clause that says you can't be convicted of legally inconsistent verdicts. Here they often charge someone with 1st degree murder and aiding and abetting 1st degree murder, but if someone was the killer then who did they aid?


All summarized in Berger v. United States, a prosecutor may not use "improper methods calculated to produce a wrongful conviction" ... Oh really? That's news to me (he says with a cynical smile).


The one that makes me laugh (have to laugh or I'll cry) is the ABA standard 3.1.1 "A prosecutor is a minister of justice whose obligation it is to guard the rights of the accused as well as to enforce the rights of the public."


When we mentioned in our MN Supreme Court argument that the prosecution violated the ABA stardards their answer was "The ABA standards are guidelines, and are not codified in MN law." WHAT?? 


I'm sure you would be shocked by that statement if you were not already numb to their callous disregard of the law when you looked into Adam’s case. :-)


Jennifer: I’ve said to friends that it might be hard to prove that you’re innocent, but it’s relatively easy to prove prosecutor misconduct.


Steve: You're right, prosecutor misconduct and other procedural issues are easier to prove, but in Minnesota they like to claim that any of that stuff is "harmless error" ... "Appellant would've been found guilty any way, so it does matter."


Jennifer: In another documentary, “Click for a Killer,” we’re introduced to the dark web and to “Yura”, who has a network of assassins and who dogdaygod hired to kill Amy. I was shocked when Yura outright claimed responsibility for Amy’s death, saying that one of his men did it.


Steve: I was at Oak Park when it aired. Oak Park is Max security, so we don't have bars, but solid doors. My neighbor happened to see I was on there, so he bangs on the wall and yells that I'm on TV. I dismissed it, I've seen it all :-)  About 5 minutes later he banged again, so I turned it on, but it was a commercial and I thought about turning it off, but I left it on. Immediately after the commercial was Besa Mafia admitting to killing Amy, and speeding out of the neighborhood, just like the neighbor saw. It was so short that no one else saw that bit until I drew their attention to it. What are the chances that all that would happen without a little urging from God? There are other things regarding people I've come in contact with at just the right time, or cases that I just stumble upon. Pretty amazing.


Jennifer: I agree. I experienced that sort of thing all the time when I was looking into Adam’s case and writing a book about it. At the Besa Mafia website, I noticed that a person can “hire a killer or a hacker.” What was there to rule out that whoever wanted Amy dead, didn’t hire both a killer and a hacker who then left a trail leading back to you? 


I know that in one documentary they said the website turned out to be a fraud, just taking people’s money and then not doing the hit, but I have my doubts because clearly this guy is a hacker and could definitely fulfill that for someone. I base that on how he actually sets up the guy who is tracking him online and trying to bring him down. The Besa guy is so successful that he had authorities thinking that the guy who was trying to bring him down was actually the Besa guy! 


But I do recognize that the weakness in this is that if Besa really does just take people’s money and doesn’t actually deliver with a hit, taking credit for the Amy Allwine death would be a good strategic move to make it seem as if they do deliver. 


Steve: Yes, there's no evidence that the person didn't hire a hacker as well, but the lady was an IT person prior to working with dogs, so I'm not sure what her skill set is. Saying I'm in IT, so I could be a major hacker, is like saying Adam's a Dr, so he can do open heart surgery. The knowledge area is way too broad. I worked on phone systems. If you want calls to go to customer service instead of sales, then I can help you out :-)


I agree that Besa could be claiming that they killed Amy to bolster credibility, but what bothers me or makes think it could be real is: 1) why her specifically? They could claim responsibility for any murder and many unsolved murders, why just her? 2) They included details that were in the media, but also one detail that I never heard in the media "... they sped away.” While it seems like a small thing, that was a detail noted by the neighbor, but never publicized.


Also, I just received an email from a group in London and they have a first and last name for Yura. That could make things interesting if they know that for sure, and how they found it. 


Jennifer: The media has certainly made it seem like an airtight case against you. 


Steve: Yes, the media makes it look bad, and it may seem insurmountable; however, I've showed my evidence to a couple guys here and they can't believe I was convicted, so to them it seems overwhelmingly in my favor. That's why I'm curious to get your impression.


Jennifer: I noticed in your appeal to the Minnesota Supreme Court that you mentioned the failure of the State to disclose the Yura/Besa confession. They say it wasn’t misconduct because they obtained it after the trial. That seems weak to me. Adam had something similar. The victim impact statement was read out after the jury found him guilty. In it, his wife’s family said that she had told them about a prowler in the house a few nights before. The family just presumed it was Adam, but Adam knew he wasn’t so his appeal (which failed) was to have an evidentiary hearing and to try to find out who this prowler was. The State said they didn’t have the letter translated in time (Samira’s family was in France & Madagascar) to share it with the defense until that day it was read in court. So that’s another similarity between your cases.


Steve: Yes, clearly his defense and my defense failed “to use an expert to develop alternative perpetrator theory and to present alternative perpetrator evidence…” 


Jennifer: Yes! The evidence pointed to the handyman, who even testified for the prosecution, and the defense demonstrated that he lied under oath. But nothing came of  it. No accusation of the murder. Not even a charge of perjury. Also, an expert was present in the courthouse to discuss phone records that were important, such as that Samira had called Adam after he left the house that day, but the defense just left the expert sitting out there and only used 3 witnesses — Adam’s personal assistant, the neighbour who saw the wife alive after he left, and a medical examiner who said that Samira appeared to have been in the water for minutes, not hours. It wasn’t a bad case, but it was the difference between a Bud Lite and a Guinness! Not exactly a robust, potent presentation for the jury!


Steve:  At least Adam's defense brought in a medical examiner. My attorney didn't even bother to hire an ME. How to do not hire medical examiner when Time of Death is the crux of the issue?


How is that not clearly Ineffective Assistance of Counsel? The court says, "That's a strategic decision." Really? What was the strategy, see how many holes you can drill in your boat before it sinks? :-) ... yes I can sort of smile at the stupidity of it.


Jennifer: One of the issues that seems critical in your case is the blood that had been cleaned up in the hallway. Yura said one of his men killed Amy Allwine, so why would they take the time to clean up a mess afterwards? I understand that I can’t exactly ask YOU why the blood was cleaned up because if you’re not the killer, you didn’t do it, so how would you know why the killer cleaned the hallway? But do you have any thoughts on the topic?


Steve: The clean up has bothered me too, because I can't explain it either. It seems to have been quick, because nothing in the house was used to clean it up. That's good because it would've been more damning for me. The prosecution claims that a light blue rag was used to clean it up, because it tested "presumptively positive for blood,” however, Amy used this rag to clean cuts and scrapes on the dogs. I asked my lawyer to have it tested for canine DNA to prove my story and he never did it. 


Additionally, the clean up spot was large, there's no visible blood on the rag, and Amy's DNA is not even a primary source on the rag (her DNA couldn't be excluded, but neither could 40% of the population. A very low number for DNA). Her DNA should be all over that rag if it cleaned up her blood, so it seems clear that it wasn't used. The only thought in my mind was that there was a pool of blood there and something identifiable was dropped in it or marked it (maybe a handprint or footprint when they moved her?). If my timing is right they only had about 30 minutes to get in, kill her, move her, clean that spot, and get out.


The other odd thing to me was moving her. It seems like she was killed in the hallway based on the clean up there. If I was the shooter then why try to move her, and if I did move her, why not drag her? She was 239lbs, and I was 166. It would be difficult, if not impossible, for me to lift and carry her to the bedroom, but yet the evidence shows she was carried and not dragged. My opinion is that if that lady ordered her killed, then the killers would've needed a picture to prove she was dead. If she crumpled in the hallway, the bedroom would've been the closest place to lay her flat to get a picture. Unless you have a better theory.


The State claimed that I moved her because my story was that I last saw her in the bedroom, but that's dumb because if I was making up a story I could make up anything (I last saw her in the kitchen...). I could've just matched the story to where she ended up instead of trying to move her.


Jennifer: I agree. But, of course, in the court of public opinion, they can make the blood and the clean up look as if it all points to you. 


Steve: Yes, they made such a big deal out of these and it's ridiculous. We take our shoes off at the door, so we have sock feet in the house. That big blood cleanup spot that they mention is in a small hallway right in front of the bedroom. So I walked through that with sock feet and therefore spread it where I walked after we found Amy. I would've walked through it at least 4 times (to Amy the first time, back to Joe, back to Amy as requested by 911, back to Joe). The number of footprints pretty well match those trips, though they're kind of hard to see at times. The bathroom, was Joe's bathroom where he was. The only footprints that are by the sink have the toes facing away from the sink because Joe and I were leaning against the sink and looking at the back wall. Then the footprints go to Joe's bedroom which is where we went to sit down. The 911 operator told us to go outside, so we passed through the laundry room to go outside. There is one set of prints, heading out the garage door and not near the sink. 


Here are the oddities that they don't bring up. The 2 closest sinks are the kitchen sink and the master bathroom, and both of which have towels or rags. If I was cleaning up, then wouldn't I use a close sink instead of walking all the way across the house? Amy was moved to the bedroom, so why are there no footprints around her body? The one set of footprints in the laundry room don't go near the sink or washer/dryer. 


Additionally if those were made during clean up, but also match my path after we found her, then there should've been footprints coming into the house when we returned as well, but there aren’t.


The investigators didn't think she was killed in the bedroom, so no blood stains on the comforter means nothing; however there are no blood stains on my clothes and I would think that is more important :-) 


Jennifer: One documentary mentioned that you had a wood stove going and that it was an unseasonably warm day, therefore you used the wood stove to get rid of the bloody cloths and your bloody clothes. I have a wood stove and I know how hard it would be to get rid of all the evidence that way. Especially in that short time frame. There would be fragments remaining, not to mention things like buttons and zippers and residue from synthetic fabrics. 


Steve: The outside wood boiler that we had heated Amy's dog training building as well as the house. On warmer days, we would turn off the pump to the house, but we had to keep heating Amy's business. It was a 4,000 sq ft. building with 12 foot high ceilings, so even on cool days (40-50°F) we still have to heat it. And you're right there's no way everything would've been burned and several investigators looked in there and only saw wood ash.


Monday, December 13, 2021

INTRODUCTION TO THE CASE




On November 13, 2016, authorities responded to a 911 call from Stephen Allwine that he had come from a dinner out with their son to find that his wife was dead. His initial impression was that it was a suicide. 


Stephen had left the house at 5:30 to pick their son up from his grandparents and they had returned at 7:00 to find Amy stretched out in the bedroom. When her body was examined later, authorities would discover that Amy had died from a single gunshot wound to the head. When questioned, Stephen told authorities that Amy hadn’t been feeling well that afternoon, but that she hadn’t wanted to go to urgent care for it. 


Police ruled out suicide on the basis of Amy’s position on the ground and by the gun being on the left side when Amy was right-handed. Plus, there were satellite blood drops outside what would be the ordinary range. 


Further investigation would show that blood had been cleaned up in the hallway, just outside of the master bedroom. Luminal lighting showed that footprints had gone down the hall into the bathroom and laundry room and back. They were a size 12, the same as Stephen’s. 


Six months earlier, the FBI had told Amy that her name was on a list on the dark web at a hitman-for-hire site. Someone with the username dogdaygod had contacted a man named Yura, who ran Besa Mafia, with instructions to make her death look like an accident, and had included specific details about Amy’s itinerary with regards to a dog competition and where Amy was staying. Amy was a dog trainer and ran her own business from home. A photo of her, smiling and obviously posing for the camera, was uploaded for the hitman. 


The transaction took place using bitcoin. Some investigative journalism revealed that Besa Mafia might be a fraud, taking people’s money, but not necessarily coming through with the promised hit. Nonetheless, the threat to Amy’s life was real because someone wanted her dead.


The Allwines bought a handgun and installed an extensive security system, and lived under the continual stress of knowing that there was someone who hated Amy enough to spend thousands of dollars to pay for her to be killed. The family spent a couple of weeks in Germany in the early autumn and Amy was able to sleep well for the first time in months knowing whoever it was who had paid for the hit, was back in the United States. 


When they returned to the US, there were threatening emails telling Amy to commit suicide or the rest of her family would be harmed. The writer called herself “Jane” and alleged that Amy had had an affair with her husband, which ruined her life. Jane was aware of specific details about Amy’s life and mentioned things like knowing where the family’s gas meter was, and what color shirt her son had worn to school. 


There was no evidence, though, that Amy had ever had an affair.


But when it came to Amy’s death—which was quickly perceived to be a murder, not a suicide—investigators said it was unlikely that an intruder had come in, taken off his or her shoes, found the homeowner’s gun, and then cleaned up afterwards. Also, the person would have had to have known to come through the back door, the one with the only camera that wasn’t recording.


Documentaries, such as the one produced by Crime Watch Daily, shared with viewers that no blood on the comforter suggested it had been changed. Investigators had now become suspicious of Stephen and believed that he had murdered his wife in the afternoon and burned all the evidence, including any bloody clothing. The wood stove was going and it was an unseasonably warm day. 


Authorities requested access to Stephen’s computers and Stephen agreed. Sixty pieces of electronics were seized—computers, hard drives, thumb drives, cell phones. 


Documentaries and news reports told viewers that the 34-digit bitcoin code used to purchase the hitman was found on one of the devices. It had been typed in the notes app on the iPhone, later erased, but still in the cloud. Twenty seconds after the note was created on the iPhone, it was posted on the hitman website with a message, ‘help, I posted the wrong Bitcoin code, this is the one that I meant to use.’ Less than a minute later, the code was deleted from the iPhone. They said that as an IT specialist Stephen should have known this. 


Investigators, at this point, viewers were told, now believed that Stephen was also “Jane.” The day before Amy got the first email, one of the devises marked S Allwine had gone online to radaris. And radaris was referenced in the email when “Jane” threatened Amy’s family, saying she knew where they lived due to radaris.com. 


Dogdaygod also purchased scopolamine on the dark web. A huge amount was found in Amy’s system. (45 times the normal prescription amount.) Investigators said that Stephen put it in Amy’s lunch and that’s why she had been experiencing the unusual symptoms Stephen told the police about. Investigators believed that Stephen hoped that Amy would die of poisoning. 


Defense Attorney Kevin DeVore said in an interview with Crime Watch Daily that there was evidence that the Allwine computer system had been compromised. “I would say hacked would be the right word for it.” Furthermore, any phone could be labelled as his client’s phone. 


When the interviewer asked one of the detectives on the case, “What was Stephen Allwine’s biggest mistake?” The detective replied that with his internet savvy he thought he was covering his tracks. 


My name is Jennifer Armstrong and when I first heard about Stephen Allwine’s case, I was looking into a similar case down in Florida of a doctor, Adam Frasch, who had been accused of murdering his wife, but who maintained his innocence. Stephen Allwine and I both attended Ambassador College in Big Sandy, Texas at the same time in the early 1990’s and I remembered him and his wife, who was Amy Zutz at the time. I contacted him through the prison email system and what I learned disturbed me because he had experienced similar prosecutorial misconduct as Dr. Frasch down in Florida. Facts had been manipulated and misrepresented to the public. Furthermore, evidence that supported his innocence had been ignored. 


The question it raised for me is, is there really such a thing as a fair trial? And if a man is guilty, why does the prosecutor have to resort to shady tactics to “prove” it. 


In Licensed to Lie: Exposing Corruption in the Department of Justice, Sidney Powell lists some of the most serious types of prosecutorial misconduct: 


Withholding or delaying the release of exculpatory evidence.

Deliberately mishandling, mistreating, or destroying evidence.

Allowing witnesses they know or should know are not truthful to testify.

Pressuring defense witnesses not to testify.

Relying on fraudulent forensic experts. 

During plea negotiations, overstating the strength of evidence.

Making statements to the media that are designed to arouse public indignation.

Making improper or misleading statements to the jury.

Failing to report prosecutor misconduct when it is discovered.


I saw examples of these violations of justice in both cases. And my conclusion was that if the prosecutor and his or her team is free to mishandle the evidence and make misleading statements to the media, then the office of the prosecutor has become, in every sense, the judge and jury in the American justice system. 


I did several interviews with Stephen Allwine and this is what he shared with me.


RULES FOR THEE, BUT NOT FOR ME

  Abuses continue to happen in this case. For an updated copy of 'Rules For Thee, but Not For Me' please contact  Stephen Allwine #2...