The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

MCIVER TRIAL

A LOOK BACK AT WEEK ONE OF THE MURDER TRIAL

- By Christian Boone cboone@ajc.com

The trial so far: After six days of intense questionin­g, a jury was finally seated on Monday. Opening statements followed Tuesday, and prosecutor­s began calling witnesses that afternoon. Their case is expected to take another week, if not longer. Claud “Tex” McIver is charged with intentiona­lly shooting his wife, Diane, in the back on Sept. 25, 2016.

The state’s case: Tex McIver’s finances were in trouble. His wife held the purse strings. Tex liked to be in control. Killing Diane was the easiest way for him to get it back and maintain ownership of the couple’s Putnam County ranch, prosecutor Seleta Griffin said in her opening statement. The shooting was “planned, intended and calculated.”

The defense responds: “They seemed like lovebirds even after 10 years of marriage ... and that is why he did not intentiona­lly shoot her,” defense co-counsel Amanda Clark Palmer said. The state’s motive actually supports the defense’s contention that Diane’s death was an accident, Clark Palmer said. He needed her cash flow, and that was cut off when she died. Noted and quoted :“I don’t understand why I’m here. I don’t know who was holding it,” said Emory emergency room doctor Selin Caglar, referring to the gun that killed Diane McIver. Prosecutor­s had told jurors a doctor, presumably Caglar, would testify that Tex McIver told her Diane “took the gun and put it behind her back. And as they were driving it went off.” Caglar said Tex told her he took out the gun and it went off when they “went over a bump.” Expert analysis: “On balance, the state’s case has seemed disjointed and at times incoherent, as if they hadn’t even spoken recently to many of the witnesses,” said Marietta criminal defense attorney Philip Holloway, an ex-prosecutor. As for the alleged financial motive, Holloway said that while “it does seem true that Mr. McIver stood to inherit quite a bit, it also appears that it would be much simpler to maintain his lifestyle with his wife alive.”

What’s next: We’ve yet to hear from Dani Jo Carter, the sole witness to the shooting. She was driving the couple’s Ford Expedition when McIver fired his .38 revolver from the back seat, hitting his wife, who was sitting in the passenger seat, from behind. Prosecutor­s have also yet to address the three counts of influencin­g witnesses, including Carter, who alleges McIver wanted her to tell police she wasn’t in the SUV at the time of the shooting.

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