Q. You knew that … you knew personally that Gregory Elliott was responding to defend himself?
A. He’s entitled to defend himself to the world, but not to me.
Q. Okay.
A. He’s not entitled to an audience from me, Mr. Murphy.
Q. Okay. And that’s what it comes down to, would you agree with me, that you don’t believe that Mr. Elliott is entitled to defend himself to you?
A. To me. Yeah … no, I don’t believe he is.
Q. Right. Okay. No matter what you say to or about Mr. Elliott, agreed?
A. There were a lot of people who backed me up on what I said about him, a lot of people, Mr. Murphy.
Q. Two of whom are …
A. Two of the dozens, yeah.
Q. Two of whom are the complainants in this case, right?
A. Yes. Yes.4
By tweeting to, and about, Mr. Elliott – but yet at the same time demanding that Mr. Elliott not respond to her – it appears as though Ms. Guthrie had expected that the Twitter Rules would apply to everyone except her.
Or handing over "evidence" that Elliot was a pedophile.
Q. But by the time you met Detective Bangild, you already testified to this, you were aware that she was either 18 or 19, agree?
A. Yes.
Q. Right. Good. So not really trying to help out Mr. Elliott when you’re not mentioning the fact it’s actually an adult, right?
A. My position wasn’t really that I wanted … I was not trying to help Mr. Elliott.
Q. Right.
A. He was stalking me. So no, I wasn’t trying to help me. I wasn’t trying to harm him unduly, but I was not trying to help him and I was not trying to … yeah.
Q. Right. In your view handing tweets alleging Mr. Elliott’s a pedophile without correcting the officers receiving them, is not trying to harm Mr. Elliott, right?
A. Wasn’t trying to harm him, no.