Tim Courts also said his son was asked whether Parker or Tulloch ever had mentioned the Zantops to him. Tim Courts told The Boston Globe that his son was asked repeatedly about whether Tulloch and Parker owned different types of knives. Tim Courts, of Chelsea, Vt., who received a subpoena in the case, did not testify yesterday, but his son Zack, 17, was questioned for about 45 minutes about his friendship with the suspects. The investigative grand jury, which will reconvene for a second day this morning, apparently questioned at least one of the witnesses about the suspects' familiarity with knives. "I cannot make any comment on today's activities," McLaughlin said after the hearing. New Hampshire Attorney General Philip McLaughlin, who attended yesterday's session in court, declined to comment about any of the proceedings or any aspect of the investigation. "Yeah, it was tiring," McKee said after leaving Grafton Superior Court in Haverhill with his father, Marc. Grand Jury begins probe of Zantop murdersĪ nineteen-member investigative grand jury heard testimony yesterday from two hometown friends of Robert Tulloch and James Parker " the two teens charged with two counts of first-degree murder of Half and Susanne Zantop.Ī friend of Tulloch and Parker, Gaelen McKee, 15, had little to say after the long grand jury session, which took place behind close doors.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |