
Edgeworth tells Gant he has already forfeited his chance to make further statements. Gant, out of nowhere, comes to the stand as you start.

Lana's Testimony: Actual Crime Scene Īctual Crime Scene: Cross-examination Lana is scared, but with Edgeworth's encouragement, she finally agrees to tell the truth. Phoenix then tells Lana to testify once more, saying that if Gant fabricated the evidence before Lana got there, then Ema's involvement may also be a lie. Lana still denies it, and scolds Phoenix for telling foul lies. What was Gant doing there? Why was he hiding this for two years? Edgeworth says that he helped Lana protect Ema. If that is true, then Gant was the first person at the scene, not Lana! Since she testified to gathering every last piece, that means Gant's piece must have been collected before Lana got there. When Lana hears this, she is stunned, just as you hoped. There was still one piece left that Lana didn't wipe off, and that piece was found in Gant's locker. On Lana's fourth statement, present the Unstable Jar. Jar & Message in Blood: Cross-examination

She saw the knife from the Prosecutor's Trophy inside Neil's body. Lana says she arranged the crime scene, because she was the first to get there.

Gant & The Fabrication: Cross-examination My only motivation was to get Darke convicted.When I found Prosecutor Marshall's body, I rearranged the crime scene.I fabricated the evidence two years ago all by myself.

There's no truth to this "blackmail" theory.The answer they came up with was a couple of medical type tapes, but since it appeared from our thread that there are some artists also using parchment to separate their paintings that they may have another solution. I found this thread Tape That Sticks to Parchment Paper? - Kitchen Consumer - eGullet Forums from a confectioner asking the same question for a different application. So, the question is… Has anyone found a tape that will adhere to parchment paper? I have searched the web and have not found an answer. The only problem I have is that the parchment slips around very easily and when adding a new piece to inventory, I have to be very careful not to let it slip down between and leave the paintings resting against each other. Consequently, I am using parchment paper to separate my acrylic paintings when storing them (very inexpensive in bulk from Sam’s club and Costco). The original question was posed almost 8 years ago, and the responses were wonderful. Ok… this is the thread that won’t go away.
