Yes, Juliette gave Kevin neighbors' names and addresses. But that is not a crime. If she were arrested and that fact came out, it's not conclusive proof she was involved in their murders.
Yes, Juliette sent an email to Kelly telling her Nick was in danger. But a court would have to conclusively prove she not only sent the email, but in fact, it was direct evidence that she participated in Kelly's murder. There is no proof of that in the email. The only proof the email provides is that she is a liar, and that would happen only if it could be proven that Juliette sent the email. There were many people in the house that night. Any one of them could have sent it. Nick didn't lock the computer. It was open to anyone who happened to pass by.
I don't even think she could be held as an accessory to Kelly's murder because she was in the upstairs bedroom. Kenneth made it plain from the start that he was keeping Juliette close because he didn't trust her. His feeling was was that she would warn Nick. A good attorney might be able to argue that Juliette was held as a prisoner against her will, because she was forced to stay in the hotel room with the royals as well as being forced upstairs before Kelly even entered the house. She was not allowed to even meet Kelly face to face at the door, so there was no chance of warning her. She called Kelly on the phone and told her to come in, but do we know there wasn't a gun to her head at the time and she was under duress? No one really knows. The whole issue of Kenneth's trust could result in many precautions being taken to prevent Juliette from talking. The other thing that's in Juliette's favor is Diana. The child was kept downstairs during the murder. Juliette could also state (and perhaps truthfully so) that she feared for her life and Diana's safety, and so she remained upstairs. She and Diana were taken immediately to the royal compound afterward, which could be used to support her claim of being a prisoner. An attorney could argue she was held hostage and only managed to escape during the helicopter takeoff.
Is Nick going to say anything against her and incriminate himself and the scoobies in the royal compound massacre that night? Me thinks he would wisely remain silent if this went to trial.
In any case, I think Juliette's primary concern was revenge against Adalind and that demolished any rational thought or remorse. I don't think she gave a hoot if Kelly was murdered. But really, why would she? Kelly didn't give a hoot if anyone was murdered as the result of her dashing off with Diana.
I don't think Juliette cared if Nick believed her or not when she said she thought they were only after Diana. Whatever faith and trust Nick had in her had been partially shattered by him. He wouldn't trust enough to let her make the decision on the suppression potion and used force to prove his point.
By the time she becomes a hexenbiest, Juliette was collateral damage. She was physically and mentally scarred as the result of Adalind's antics and she was never going to recover.
If Nick had killed her, Juliette would have been a martyr. She became a hexenbiest because of him. I think that's the reason why Kouf and Greenwalt had Trubel do the dirty work. Nick gets to claim plausible deniability in the process.
Yes, Juliette sent an email to Kelly telling her Nick was in danger. But a court would have to conclusively prove she not only sent the email, but in fact, it was direct evidence that she participated in Kelly's murder. There is no proof of that in the email. The only proof the email provides is that she is a liar, and that would happen only if it could be proven that Juliette sent the email. There were many people in the house that night. Any one of them could have sent it. Nick didn't lock the computer. It was open to anyone who happened to pass by.
I don't even think she could be held as an accessory to Kelly's murder because she was in the upstairs bedroom. Kenneth made it plain from the start that he was keeping Juliette close because he didn't trust her. His feeling was was that she would warn Nick. A good attorney might be able to argue that Juliette was held as a prisoner against her will, because she was forced to stay in the hotel room with the royals as well as being forced upstairs before Kelly even entered the house. She was not allowed to even meet Kelly face to face at the door, so there was no chance of warning her. She called Kelly on the phone and told her to come in, but do we know there wasn't a gun to her head at the time and she was under duress? No one really knows. The whole issue of Kenneth's trust could result in many precautions being taken to prevent Juliette from talking. The other thing that's in Juliette's favor is Diana. The child was kept downstairs during the murder. Juliette could also state (and perhaps truthfully so) that she feared for her life and Diana's safety, and so she remained upstairs. She and Diana were taken immediately to the royal compound afterward, which could be used to support her claim of being a prisoner. An attorney could argue she was held hostage and only managed to escape during the helicopter takeoff.
Is Nick going to say anything against her and incriminate himself and the scoobies in the royal compound massacre that night? Me thinks he would wisely remain silent if this went to trial.
In any case, I think Juliette's primary concern was revenge against Adalind and that demolished any rational thought or remorse. I don't think she gave a hoot if Kelly was murdered. But really, why would she? Kelly didn't give a hoot if anyone was murdered as the result of her dashing off with Diana.
I don't think Juliette cared if Nick believed her or not when she said she thought they were only after Diana. Whatever faith and trust Nick had in her had been partially shattered by him. He wouldn't trust enough to let her make the decision on the suppression potion and used force to prove his point.
By the time she becomes a hexenbiest, Juliette was collateral damage. She was physically and mentally scarred as the result of Adalind's antics and she was never going to recover.
If Nick had killed her, Juliette would have been a martyr. She became a hexenbiest because of him. I think that's the reason why Kouf and Greenwalt had Trubel do the dirty work. Nick gets to claim plausible deniability in the process.
The best way to frustrate a cyberbully is to ignore him.