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Tabitha Perry takes the stand as the prosecution's first witness in the murder trial of Latoshia Daniels. Perry testifies about April 4, 2019 - the night a woman she considered a friend from church arrived unexpectedly at her Collierville apartment, sat and talked about tennis, then pulled a gun and shot her husband Brous Perry to death. The testimony reveals Perry had no knowledge of the two-year affair between her husband and Daniels. She thought Daniels was simply a fellow church member and tennis partner from their time in Little Rock. She welcomed her in that night, made small talk, never suspected danger until she turned around on the apartment stairs and saw Daniels pull a gun from her pocket. The cross-examination becomes devastating when defense attorney Juni Ganguli plays Marco Polo videos of Brous Perry discussing "ethical non-monogamy" with other women. In the videos, Perry claims his wife Tabitha approved of his relationship with Daniels, that she selected Daniels for him, that they would be "sister wives," that she created rules about which women he could pursue. To each claim, Tabitha Perry responds: "No. That's not true. None of that ever happened." Perry describes being shot in the shoulder while trying to shield her husband, the bullet eventually migrating toward her lung and puncturing through her back. She testifies Daniels said "he broke my heart" and "I didn't mean to" shoot her. The legal question for the jury: did Daniels plan this murder by purchasing a gun hours before and driving from Arkansas, or did she snap in a moment of passion when Perry refused to acknowledge their relationship? ⏰ KEY MOMENTS IN THIS VIDEO 00:47 - Tabitha identifies photo of husband Brous Perry, confirms April 4, 2019 was last time she saw him alive 02:36 - Describes unexpected visitor: Latoshia Daniels knocked on door around 9-10 PM, she let her in thinking she was friend from church 08:22 - The shooting: turned around at stairs, saw Daniels pull gun from pocket and start shooting at Brous in doorway 10:34 - Shot while shielding husband: got on ground covering his head, Daniels told her to move, she refused, then got shot in shoulder 12:40 - Reveals she had no knowledge of affair between husband and Daniels until after his death 21:01 - Defense plays video of Brous claiming Tabitha was "perfectly fine" with his relationship - she testifies this was false 50:03 - Testifies Brous never told her about two-year relationship, never said they'd be "sister wives," 1:01:13 - Daniels' response after shooting Tabitha: "I didn't mean to" - Tabitha told her to leave, she didn't move 1:03:45 - Main thing Daniels said during shooting: "he broke my heart" 📖 CASE BACKGROUND On April 4, 2019, Latoshia Daniels arrived at Brodes and Tabatha Perry's Collierville, Tennessee apartment. The three knew each other from Little Rock, Arkansas. Tabatha let Daniels inside. After 40 minutes, as the couple escorted Daniels to the door, prosecutors allege Daniels pulled a handgun and shot Brodes Perry multiple times in the head and torso while yelling "you broke my heart." 📂 PLAYLISTS & RESOURCES ► Full Trial Live Broadcasts: • TN v. Latoshia Daniels - Live Broadcast ► No Breaks Edition: • TN v. Lotoshia Daniels - No Breaks Edition ► Trial Analysis Podcast: • TN v. Lotoshia Daniels - Trial Podcast ► Key Moments Playlist: • TN v. Lotoshia Daniels - Key Clips and Tes... ► Subscribe for Daily Coverage: / @justiceisaprocess ⚖️ ABOUT JUSTICE IS A PROCESS This channel continues the work of Steven M. Askin, a criminal defense attorney who was disbarred in 1998 for refusing to violate attorney-client privilege, then criminally convicted in 2010 for teaching people their constitutional rights from a coffee shop in Martinsburg, West Virginia. He passed away in February 2024, but not before he and I started this channel together. I am Steven M. Askin II. I am not an attorney. I am a watchdog. I cover criminal trials to educate the public about due process, the presumption of innocence, and constitutional protections. Every video on this channel is part of building the machine the system feared my father would create: a public trained to watch, question, and demand accountability. This is not entertainment. This is education. This is oversight. This is Justice Is A Process. ⚖️ FAIR USE & EDUCATIONAL PURPOSE This content is produced under Fair Use (17 U.S.C. § 107) for news reporting, criticism, and educational purposes. We provide transformative commentary on public court proceedings, advancing public understanding of the judicial process through timestamps, analysis, and educational context. No copyright infringement is intended. All video content is used for transformative educational purposes with added legal analysis and commentary. #JusticeIsAProcess #LatoshiaDanielsTrial