Aspiranti said she received a copy of the book she didn't ask for by mail and gave it to her attorney, John Mull. “It’s been a burden to them and a theater of this rich man trying to sue them all,” said Aspiranti, 66. Mull said he was confident enough that Soldwedel's poisoning claims wouldn't hold up in court that he didn't hire an expert on behalf of Aspiranti to rebut them, calling the case one of the most bizarre he's ever encountered. “She voluntarily agreed to talk to police, have her computer searched, have her phone checked, and none of that supported any of his claims. It didn't support his claims."
Source: Daily Sun September 01, 2021 19:41 UTC