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Timothy Hudson's defense team requested the adult transfer themselves. They entered a not guilty plea without their client in the courtroom. They are pushing for the same judge who released him in February — when this was still a sealed juvenile case — to decide whether he stays free now that he faces first-degree murder and aggravated sexual abuse charges as an adult in federal court. Every one of those decisions tells you something. Former prosecutor and defense attorney Eric Faddis reads each move and explains what trial strategy is being assembled.
Anna Kepner was eighteen. She was found dead aboard the Carnival Horizon inside a stateroom she shared with Hudson and another sibling — concealed under a bed, wrapped in a blanket, covered with life jackets. The medical examiner ruled mechanical asphyxiation. Bruising on her neck was consistent with an arm held across it. Surveillance reportedly shows no one else entered or exited that cabin the night she was allegedly killed. Her fourteen-year-old brother reportedly heard yelling and violent sounds from the locked room the night before her body was found.
Hudson, sixteen, is on pre-trial release — living with a relative under GPS monitoring, cleared to work at his father's landscaping business. Prosecutors have moved to revoke that release, arguing the conditions were set under juvenile law and should not carry over now that he is being prosecuted as an adult. Anna's father, Christopher Kepner, has publicly stated the family is "deeply troubled" that Hudson has not been taken into custody.
The discovery file is open. Prosecutors have turned over the autopsy, body cam footage, and a cellphone data extraction from a device identified only as "C.K." — not the accused's phone. Anna's father is Christopher Kepner. Faddis examines what it means when the government extracts data from a victim's parent's phone and turns it over to the defense, and what that signals about the scope of this investigation.
Prosecutors estimate a seven-day trial. For a first-degree murder case carrying aggravated sexual abuse charges, Faddis assesses whether that timeline reflects a prosecution that knows exactly what it has — or one working with less than it needs. Hudson's mother told a court in December that her son "keeps repeating over and over he can't remember anything." That claim, combined with disclosed medication history, may be where this defense makes its stand.
Hudson has pled not guilty. He is presumed innocent until proven guilty.
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Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary