GUILTY NE - Sydney Loofe, 24, brutally murdered, Lincoln, 15 Nov 2017 #4 *Boswell appeal 2023*

Here are some quotes from:
Sydney Loofe's family thankful daughter's murderers 'will never see the light of day'

"Some good, George Loofe said, has come from the loss of his daughter. There's a Sydney Loofe scholarship awarded every year through an Omaha-based group, the Set Me Free Project, that works to educate people about the dangers of human trafficking."

"If we would still be wondering where our daughter was, it would have killed us," he said. "I can't even put into words what (finding her) meant to us."

“I believe that she's as guilty or guiltier. If it wasn’t for her, my daughter would never have been there,” he said in an interview with the World-Herald after Monday's sentence was announced.

"Boswell's life sentence comes with no possibility of parole. There is a remote chance that the Nebraska Board of Pardons, years from now, might vote to commute her sentence to a period of years, which would allow the possibility of release on parole. But the Pardons Board hasn't taken such steps for many years."
 

The death sentence Audrey Trail received for the torture and murder of Sydney Loofe was justified. That’s the conclusion of the Nebraska Supreme Court in an opinion released Thursday morning.

Justice John R. Freudenberg, writing for the court, called the crime “utterly senseless and cruel” and showed Trail "relished the killing and was bereft of any regard for human life.”
 

During oral arguments heard Wednesday, the Nebraska Supreme Court considered whether showing dozens of gruesome photographs to jurors made it impossible for Bailey Boswell to get a fair trial.

Boswell and her attorneys used the argument in appealing the life sentence she received after a jury found her guilty of conspiring with Aubrey Trial to torture and murder Sydney Loofe of Lincoln in 2017. In a separate trial, a three-judge panel sentenced Trail to death.

The justices will review the case and determine if there is sufficient reason to review the sentence or grant Boswell a new trial. Their opinion will be released later this year.
 

During oral arguments heard Wednesday, the Nebraska Supreme Court considered whether showing dozens of gruesome photographs to jurors made it impossible for Bailey Boswell to get a fair trial.

Boswell and her attorneys used the argument in appealing the life sentence she received after a jury found her guilty of conspiring with Aubrey Trial to torture and murder Sydney Loofe of Lincoln in 2017. In a separate trial, a three-judge panel sentenced Trail to death.

The justices will review the case and determine if there is sufficient reason to review the sentence or grant Boswell a new trial. Their opinion will be released later this year.
Well if you didn't do heinous things the jury wouldn't have had to see it. Pretty simple.
 

During oral arguments heard Wednesday, the Nebraska Supreme Court considered whether showing dozens of gruesome photographs to jurors made it impossible for Bailey Boswell to get a fair trial.

Boswell and her attorneys used the argument in appealing the life sentence she received after a jury found her guilty of conspiring with Aubrey Trial to torture and murder Sydney Loofe of Lincoln in 2017. In a separate trial, a three-judge panel sentenced Trail to death.

The justices will review the case and determine if there is sufficient reason to review the sentence or grant Boswell a new trial. Their opinion will be released later this year.
Well if you didn't do heinous things the jury wouldn't have had to see it. Pretty simple.

There is precedent here and it’s not in her favor.

Nebraska Supreme Court
STATE v. BRITT
Filed March 27, 2020

4. Homicide: Photographs. Gruesome crimes produce gruesome photographs. However, if the State lays proper foundation, photographs that illustrate or make clear a controverted issue in a homicide case are admissible, even if gruesome.
5. In a homicide prosecution, a court may admit into evidence photographs of a victim for identification, to show the condition of the body or the nature and extent of wounds and injuries to it, and to establish malice or intent.
6. Photographs: Rules of Evidence. Neb. Evid R. 403, Neb. Rev. Stat. § 27-403 (Reissue 2016), does not require the State to have a separate purpose for every photograph, and it requires a court to prohibit cumulative evidence only if it “substantially” outweighs the probative value of the evidence.

Britt appeals and claims that the district court erred when it admitted crime scene and autopsy photographs over his objection..
We find no merit to Britt’s assignments of error and, accordingly, affirm his convictions and sentences.
 
Last edited:
Aug 8, 2023 article


[…]

Aubrey Trail, who is convicted of murdering Sydney Loofe, has filed a motion asking the state to carry out the death penalty.

[…]

In the motion, which was filed Monday, Trail also asks the Nebraska Supreme Court to set an execution date.

[…]
 

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