News

Montgomery’s case to be heard by New Hampshire Supreme Court

Montgomery’s case to be heard by New Hampshire Supreme Court

FILE - Adam Montgomery arrives for his sentencing hearing at Hillsborough Superior Court, Thursday, May 9, 2024, in Manchester N.H. Photo: Associated Press/AP Photo/Charles Krupa, Pool, File


MANCHESTER,N.H.- The New Hampshire Supreme Court says it will hear arguments in Adam Montgomery’s appeal of his 2023 conviction murder.

According to court documents Montgomery, who’s currently serving more than 50 years in prison after being found guilty of murdering his daughter Harmony, and possessing stolen weapons will have his case heard this fall. However it should be noted that his daughter’s body was never found.

Lawyers for Montgomery claim that he should of been tried separately on assault charges from an alleged attack on Harmony in 2019 and that his wife, Kayla Montgomery, should not have been allowed to testify about Harmony’s abuse. Montgomery’s attorneys also claims that Police body camera footage shown to jurors violated his right to remain silent.

Montgomery’s case is scheduled to go before the court on October 15th.

Recent Headlines

4 seconds ago in Local

DEA arrests two in Salem out of investigation into drug trafficking

Fresh

Authorities say two people are facing charges as part of an investigation into drug trafficking which also resulted in police recovering about 250 grams of Fentanyl.

1 hour ago in Local

NH receives first PFAS settlement payment

Fresh

The funds will be deposited into the New Hampshire Drinking Water and Groundwater Trust Fund.

2 hours ago in Local

Fatal crash on Route 101

Fresh

An Auburn man crashed into a tractor trailer parked on the shoulder of the highway.

21 hours ago in Local

Manchester woman charged out of wrong-way crash

Police have charged Sandra Ouellette with DUI and a number of other charges following Sunday night's crash in Concord near Exit 12.

1 day ago in Entertainment

Emotional Jimmy Kimmel says in late-night return he never intended to make light of Kirk’s killing

Jimmy Kimmel returned to late-night television Tuesday after a nearly weeklong suspension and, in an emotional monologue where he appeared close to tears, said that he wasn't trying to joke about the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.