A federal judge overseeing a trial over control of the nation's oldest synagogue and ceremonial bells worth $7.4 million said on Friday there is no "smoking gun" in the battle between the congregation that worships at the 250-year-old Touro Synagogue in Newport, Rhode Island, and the nation's first Jewish congregation, in New York.
U.S. District Judge John McConnell made the comments during closing arguments in the lawsuits the congregations brought against each other. The two sides have argued bitterly about the smallest details, each claiming it owns the bells and disagreeing over what rights and responsibilities each has regarding the synagogue itself.
The trial drew on documents going back to the mid-1700s, in archaic language and writing styles that are often difficult to decipher.
"It is clear to this court, and I will state emphatically, there is no smoking gun. Apple did not email anyone a receipt," McConnell said. "How we think about ownership, it doesn't exist. We have to patch together 250 years of evidence. ... It's a matter of walking through history and looking through the evidence and figuring out when you look at the evidence, which weighs more?"... Read More: ABC News