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 …
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 …
Thursday, March 15, 2012
DeKalb DA confirms that his office is investigating the widow
A jury of nine women and three men found Hemy Neuman guilty but mentally ill in the 2010 killing of Russell "Rusty" Sneiderman. Judge Gregory Adams, who called Sneiderman's death "an execution," sentenced Neuman to the maximum sentence allowed __ life in prison without possibility of parole. Adams also imposed a five year sentence for using a gun in the commission of a felony. DeKalb District Attorney Robert James called it a victory. “Guilty is guilty,” James said in a news conference after the sentencing hearing. Defense lawyers pledged to appeal the verdict and argued that Neuman should have been found not guilty by reason of insanity. Neuman admitted killing Russell "Rusty" Sneiderman in Nov. 2010, just after Sneiderman dropped his son…
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
Jurors will return Thursday morning to continue their work.
The jury in the Hemy Neuman murder trial spent its first day deliberating Wednesday, but retired for the day without offering a verdict or even a clue about which way they're leaning in a case that has caught national attention. Neuman, a former GE Energy Atlanta executive, has admitted slaying Dunwoody entrepreneur Russell "Rusty" Sneiderman, but pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity. For about two hours Wednesday afternoon, the jury watched videotaped interviews of Neuman with a psychiatrist hired by the prosecution. That expert testified that Neuman was sane at the time of the killing and responsible for his actions. Almost all of the nine women and three men of the jury appeared to be bored while reviewing the video in the courtroom…
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
Widow Andrea Sneiderman was a focus for both prosecutors and the defense.
The prosecutors and defense attorneys delivered closing arguments Tuesday in the Hemy Neuman trial, each offering a version of the argument that Neuman killed Russell “Rusty” Sneiderman because he was in love with Sneiderman’s wife. Defense attorneys said that Andrea Sneiderman seduced and manipulated a mentally ill man into killing her husband. Prosecutors agreed that the widow and Neuman were lovers, but said Neuman knew what he was doing when he killed Rusty Sneiderman. Defense attorney Doug Peters called Andrea Sneiderman a “tease,” a “master manipulator” and “evil.” DeKalb County District Attorney Robert James told the jury, "Hemy Neuman killed Rusty Sneiderman because he wanted his wife, his money, his life. Period." Neuman has …
Monday, March 12, 2012
The defense will get to offer its closing first.
Monday morning, the 13th day of testimony in the Hemy Neuman murder trial, brought the last day of new evidence in the case. On Tuesday, the prosecution and defense are both expected to give their closing arguments. "We're getting close to the end, but we're not finished yet," Judge Gregory Adams told the jury shortly before sending them home for the day at noon. After the jury left, the two sides conferred with Adams and agreed to let the defense give its closing arguments first. Each side is expected to take about 2 hours. That means Neuman's fate could be in the hands of the jury by early afternoon. Their task will be to decide whether Neuman was legally responsible on Nov. 18, 2010 when he shot and killed Dunwoody entrepreneur Russell…
Friday, March 9, 2012
Neuman's statement, a reference to his ability to meticulously detail and carry out plans at his job, came during a taped interview with a mental health expert.
For the second time in the Hemy Neuman murder trial, the jury heard directly from the defendant about what happened in the days leading up to Nov. 2010, when Neuman killed Russell "Rusty" Sneiderman. "I got my marching orders," Neuman told Dr. Pamela Crawford in a taped interview. "And that is, Rusty Sneiderman had to die." Crawford is the forensic psychiatrist hired by the prosecution to evaluate the defendant. Neuman, who has told the judge he will not take the stand in his own defense, was heard Friday morning on about 20 video clips from Crawford's jailhouse evaluation of him. Neuman claims that he was visited by an angel and a demon and that he was told that the two children of his co-worker and love interest, Andrea Sneiderman, were…
Thursday, March 8, 2012
"I will not be testifying." - Hemy Neuman
Defense attorneys in the Hemy Neuman murder trial rested their case Thursday after calling two forensic psychiatrists to the stand to testify that Neuman was legally insane the day he killed Russell "Rusty" Sneiderman. Before the defense closed, Judge Gregory Adams gave Neuman what might be his last chance to take the stand and defend himself in the case that could send him to prison for the rest of his life. "I will not be testifying," a soft-spoken Neuman told the judge. The prosecution, led by prosecutor Don Geary and DeKalb County District Attorney Robert James, contend that Neuman is faking mental illness. Neuman is charged in the death of Sneiderman, who was gunned down in Nov. 2012 after dropping his child off at a Dunwoody daycare …
Monday, March 5, 2012
Prosecutors began to rebut defense witness Dr. Adriana Flores
Dr. Adriana Flores, the forensic psychologist who diagnosed Hemy Neuman as legally insane, returned to the stand Monday and testified for nearly six hours in defense of her findings. Flores sparred at times with prosecutors who contend that Neuman is faking an ailment to escape spending the rest of his life in prison for killing Russell “Rusty” Sneiderman. "He was delusional," Flores testified. "He was not reality based at the time.” Neuman has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity in the killing of Sneiderman, who was gunned down in Sept. 2010 after dropping his child off at a Dunwoody daycare center. Flores, who was retained by the defense in September 2011, told jurors that someone who is bipolar could be delusional and manic, but …
Friday, March 2, 2012
In a surprise move, the judge sent the jury home for the day.
Day nine of testimony in the Hemy Neuman murder trial ended as quickly as it started. Defense witness Dr. Adriana Flores, a forensic psychologist, had taken the stand, and the jury filed in. After a few pleasantries, and without explanation, Judge Gregory Adams dismissed the jury for the weekend and closed court for the day. "Another matter has come up that requires the court’s attention," Adams said. "It has nothing to do with this trial. I don't want the jury to infer otherwise." And then the judge rapped the gavel, dismissed the jury and left the courtroom. Family members of both the defendant, Hemy Neuman, and of the victim, Russell "Rusty" Sneiderman, were skeptical about the abrupt and unexpected delay. DeKalb County District …
loni
3:24 am on Friday, December 14, 2012
Did she take a lie detector test? Really this case is a funny that she got time too spend some but will spend rest on lawyers just like most rich peoples nightmares cased up for show and tell plus spend all your loot   more ›