Kicky: I don't believe questions of lack of jurisdiction can ever be "waived" however. Any such rulin is void ab initio, aint it?
Depends on the type of jurisdiction, but in this instance you are wrong.
You can't waive subject matter jurisdiction. That can be raised independently by the court all the way up to the Supreme Court level.
You can waive personal jurisdiction (and do automatically if it's not the first thing you contest), venue, and standing. Sometimes defendants strategically waive this requirements.
3. You say: "Two experts testifed on behalf of the defense side even though the state chose not to participate." Experts in what? Did they offer opinion testimony, or "factual" testimony?
Read the opinion. The answer is obvious.
4. Do you care to respond to other comments I have made about your unqualified claims that "factual" findings cannot be challenged on appeal?
I'm a lawyer, you're going to law school on wikipedia. I don't feel particularly threatened when you characterize my claims as "unqualified." Anyone that wants to do the legwork can.
I'll direct anyone who wants a broad view of why the opinion is structured the way it is and why it is more difficult to overturn than a straight law finding to this NYTimes article on the issue: https://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/06/us/06assess.html?_r=1&src=twt&twt=nytimes
I consider the matter closed here.