June 25, 2025

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State offers data from Kayla Giles’ computer, cellphone in trial

Testimony on Friday morning in Kayla Giles’ second-degree murder trial centered around data retrieved from her cellphone and laptop computer, including one that read, “I may make the news.”

Giles is accused of shooting her estranged husband, Thomas Coutee Jr., on Sept. 8, 2018, outside the Walmart on Coliseum Boulevard in Alexandria. She claims she was defending herself.

The state put two witnesses on the stand, both law enforcement officers who specialize in retrieving data from electronic devices.

The first was Detective Curtis Gunter, a cyber forensics examiner from the Rapides Parish Sheriff’s Office. He told Louisiana Assistant Attorney General Brooke Harris that he was asked to pull data from Giles Macbook Pro laptop.

Testimony on Friday morning in Kayla Giles' second-degree murder trial centered around data retrieved from her cellphone and laptop computer, including one that read, "I may make the news." Giles is accused of killing her husband, Thomas Coutee Jr., outside the Coliseum Boulevard Walmart on Sept. 8, 2018.

Trial day four coverage:Friend testifies Kayla Giles told her she wanted to kill husband, asked to borrow gun

More day four testimony:Forensic pathologist testifies Thomas Coutee Jr. died from single gunshot wound

He testified that it was difficult to get to the data because, around the time it was given to him, Apple changed how it encrypted data, so he couldn’t access all of the information on it.

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