Friday, April 5, 2013
Attorneys were back in court on Thursday.
Andrea Sneiderman attorneys were back in court on Thursday seeking all but the murder charges against their client to be dropped. CBS Atlanta reports that the hearing that began yesterday is in recess until Wednesday, April 10. Sneiderman's attorneys have filed a motion to dismiss 13 of the 16 counts that have been charged against her, including seven counts of perjury. The AJC reports that her attorneys are arguing that prosecutors have failed to address allegations that Sneiderman lied to police and concealed evidence that could have led to the capture of her husband’s killer. Sneiderman will stand trial beginning July 29 for her alleged role in arranging the death of her husband, Rusty Sneiderman. Sneiderman, now living with her …
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
A judge ruled late Tuesday afternoon that the Dunwoody widow may converse with a man prosecutors claim is her lover.
A judge has ruled that Andrea Sneiderman may have contact with a man that prosecutors say is her lover. Sneiderman will stand trial later this year for her alleged role in arranging the death of her husband, Rusty Sneiderman. According to Channel 2 Action News, DeKalb County Superior Court Judge Gregory A. Adams issued the ruling late Tuesday afternoon. Sneiderman's attorneys argued their client was entitled to some type of companionship in advance of her trial, scheduled to begin July 29. The Dunwoody widow hasn't been allowed any interaction with Joseph Dell since last November, when prosecutors added him to the state’s witness list. Sneiderman, now living with her parents under house arrest, faces one count each of malice murder, …
Friday, February 22, 2013
Her attorneys ask that no court dates be scheduled on the same days as Jewish holidays.
Andrea Sneiderman's murder trial is set to begin on July 29. Sneiderman was back in court on Thursday, 11Alive News reports, and her arraingment date has been set for March 15. Sneiderman faces a revised series of indictments surrounding her alleged role in the murder of her husband, Rusty Sneiderman, including one count of felony murder, one count of aggravated assault, seven counts of perjury, four counts of giving false statements, and one count each of concealing material facts and hindering the apprehension of a criminal. As future dates were being discussed, Sneiderman's attorney asked Judge Gregory Adams that no court dates were scheduled on the same days as upcoming Jewish holidays. Adams requested those dates to be submitted in …
Thursday, February 21, 2013
If Sneiderman's life story is ever made into a movie, who's your choice to star in the leading role?
Andrea Sneiderman is set to appear in DeKalb County Superior Court on Thursday, during which her murder trial is set to be scheduled. Earlier this week, as reported by the AJC, Sneiderman is alleged to have mused about who might play her if her story is ever made into a movie. “I was thinking if Sandra Bullock wasn’t so old, she’d be a good choice,” Sneiderman said in audio recordings captured at DeKalb County Jail. “I watched the Miss Congeniality movie … and I thought that she kind of has my personality.” Here at Dunwoody Patch, that got us to thinking: Sandra Bullock does look a little bit like Andrea Sneiderman, but we also came up with a few other names of Hollywood starlets who could pull off a good impression. My personal choice …
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
A reworked indictment of the charges against Sneiderman was handed down on Tuesday afternoon.
A reworked series of indictments was issued on Tuesday afternoon in the murder trial of Andrea Sneiderman. The new 16-count indictment drops language from the original document, according to the AJC, including allegations that Sneiderman and Hemy Neuman “conspired together to murder Rusty Sneiderman so that they could enjoy a life together, eliminate Neuman’s debt problems and fully benefit from the assets the Sneidermans had acquired as well as the proceeds of Rusty Sneiderman’s life insurance policies.” The revised indictment also no longer contains omits any reference to financial motives, referring to the defendant as a “party to the crime.” Georgia law defines that in part as intentionally advising, encouraging, hiring, counseling or…
Thursday, November 29, 2012
Andrea Sneiderman's defense team says that prosecutors are publicizing her new boyfriend to make a convicted killer to testify against her.
Andrea Sneiderman’s defense team is claiming that prosecutors are publicizing a third man that’s involved with her to provoke Hemy Neuman into testifying against her, according to a report by 11 Alive. The filing came this week, after Judge Gregory Adams ruled that Sneiderman and Joseph Dell could no longer have contact with one another because Dell would be a witness in the case. Prosecutors allege Dell was the live-in boyfriend of Sneiderman. Hemy Neuman, Sneiderman’s former boss at GE Energy, was convicted in a March trial as the shooter of Rusty Sneiderman, Andrea Sniederman’s late husband, after he dropped off his child at Dunwoody day care. The prosecutions theory of what led to the killing has shifted and the focus has moved from …
Saturday, November 17, 2012
Proscecutors advance theory that Sneiderman had more entanglements than her ex-boss, Hemy Neuman.
- POLICE & FIRE
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Saturday, November 17, 2012
Prosecutors are advancing a theory that Andrea Sneiderman might have talked her boss into killing her husband so she could be with a third man, according to wsbtv.com. During a court hearing Friday, Chief Assistant Prosecutor Don Geary told Judge Gregory Adams that his office is investigating Sneiderman's relationship with Joseph Dell. Prosecutors had evidence that Sneiderman and Dell started a relationship after the man left his wife who was late in her pregnancy, according to the report. Hemy Neuman was convicted of shooting and killing Sneiderman's husband, Rusty Sniederman, after a 2010 incident. She now faces charges that she was complicit in the murder so that she could claim $2 million in insurance. “It is something we must follow …
Monday, October 29, 2012
Sneiderman's attorneys have asked that she be allowed to attend a religious rite that honors the husband she is accused of helping slay.
Andrea Sneiderman, the woman accused of conspiring to kill her husband for money, is asking for permission to visit her dead husband’s grave in a Jewish religious rite, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. According to the report, Sneiderman’s attorneys filed a motion last week requesting the right to observe Yahrtzeit – a religious rite that involves prayer and the lighting of a candle in remembrance of a loved one. The rite would occur Nov. 18 – the two-year anniversary of former husband's Rusty Sneiderman’s death, according to the report. The widow, who still owns a home in Dunwoody, is under house arrest at her parents' home in Johns Creek, according to the report. She was recently granted access by a Judge Gregory Adams to …
Friday, September 28, 2012
Discovery suggests that the evidence in the case against Andrea Sneiderman could be similar to Hemy Neuman trial.
Prosecutors in the Andrea Sneiderman case have filed discovery evidence this week that suggests the evidence against her is similar to Hemy Neuman, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Neuman was convicted in March of killing Russell Sniederman in 2010 at Dunwoody Prep, a Dunwoody day care, when Sneiderman was dropping off his child. Thousands of pages of evidence were shared with the defense team this week, much of which was presented in the trial against Neuman, according to the report. Andrea Sneiderman's testimony in that trial is also part of the discovery. She testified in the Neuman trial that she didn't have an affair with Neuman, her boss at GE Energy in Cobb County. She also testified that she found out about her …
Thursday, September 20, 2012
Judge ordered that Sneiderman's assets remain frozen until it is settled in Fulton County. She will appear in court again Thursday to attempt to loosen bond restrictions so that she can attend religious services.
Andrea Sneiderman's assets will remain frozen after a suit was filed in Fulton County where she banked, according to myfoxatlanta.com. The lawsuit was originally filed in DeKalb and was dismissed. At issue is $2 million in insurance money Sneiderman received after the death if her husband, Rusty Sneiderman. Rusty Sneiderman was killed in fall 2010 after dropping his son off at Dunwoody Prep, a daycare center in the city. The state had learned that Sneiderman had deposited the money with a vice president of Bank of New York Mellon in Fulton County. A Fulton County judge found probable cause to sign a freeze order on Wednesday. Sneiderman was indicted in the death of her husband by a DeKalb County grand jury on August 2, after a March …
Robert Ostrow
2:00 pm on Friday, April 5, 2013
It is very sad that this whole mess will take a long time to resolve.   more ›