Ruben Flores: 'There were a lot of made-up things'
Ruben Flores said he was "relieved" about his not-guilty verdict as he left the courthouse Tuesday.
"There was a lot of made-up things," Ruben Flores told reporters. "You look through it and there is no evidence against anybody, me or Paul."
When asked if he had any comments for Kristin Smart's family, he said, "I feel bad for them because they didn't get no answers about what happened to their daughter, and we don't know what happened to their daughter."
Ruben Flores' attorney, Harold Mesick, said his client never should have been charged and that the verdict was the "just outcome."
He said "there is a reasonable inference to be drawn" that Smart might still be alive, and that prosecutors never proved her death.
Commenting on the split verdict, Ruben Flores said the jurors who found his son guilty "were carried away with feelings about the family."