Jesse Caneiro Was Still Moving: Blood Evidence Testimony Rocks Paul Caneiro Murder Trial
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The Paul Caneiro trial just delivered some of its most disturbing testimony yet. A blood stain expert told jurors that eleven-year-old Jesse Caneiro was still moving - still bleeding - still trying to reach the front door when he died. The patterns don't lie. A handprint. A finger mark. Movement toward an exit he never reached.
Prosecutors say Paul Caneiro killed his brother Keith, sister-in-law Jennifer, and their two children over money and a $3 million life insurance policy. But the defense is pointing at someone else entirely: Corey Caneiro, the third brother who was never investigated, never DNA tested, and who - according to a civil lawsuit - took control of the insurance money and bought a $1.8 million home less than a year later.
Did Paul Caneiro commit the most brutal family murder in New Jersey history? Or was he the perfect patsy? We dig into the crime scene evidence, the timeline prosecutors are building, the questions the defense is raising, and what those blood patterns in Keith Caneiro's kitchen really tell us about the final moments of a family destroyed.
#PaulCaneiro #ColtsMurders #MansionMurders #TrueCrime #MonmouthCounty #KeithCaneiro #JesseCaneiro #SophiaCaneiro #MurderTrial #HiddenKillers
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This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.
