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Accused serial killer Anthony Garcia scribbled notes about changing his identity, getting a fishing boat and crossing a lake into Canada, prosecutors said Wednesday.

Defense attorney Alison Motta asked Judge Duane Dougherty to prevent prosecutors from using or referencing such notes at Garcia’s April 4 trial on charges that he killed four Omahans.

She said the scribblings have no relevance and no roots in reality.

“They could be the writings of a fictional play or something that happened 10 years ago,” Motta argued. “It was well after any of the events (alleged crimes). There’s no reason to assume that they are relevant to any event in this case.”

That was one of many motions taken up Wednesday during a hearing ahead of Garcia’s April 4 trial.

Among the others: Garcia asked that jurors be sequestered while they deliberate whether he is guilty or innocent of the March 2008 slayings of 11-year-old Thomas Hunter and Shirlee Sherman and the May 2013 killings of Dr. Roger Brumback and his wife, Mary.

Prosecutors allege Garcia killed as revenge for his 2001 firing from Creighton University by Thomas’s father, Dr. William Hunter, and by Dr. Brumback.