Lori Vallow invited Idaho Judge Steven Boyce in a Thursday motion to container her case after she has spent 1,169 days in jail for her alleged role in the murders of her two children, as well as her husband's ex-wife, Tammy Daybell.

Vallow's safety team is arguing that the court has violated her right to a snappy trial. Her joint murder trial with husband Chad Daybell was initially set for 2021 but has been delayed due to her competency examinations and the coronavirus pandemic, among other factors.

The safety team for Lori Vallow—who allegedly killed her two children with help from her husband, Chad Daybell—does not believe she "actually participated" in the murders. (FOX News)

"The first trial setting in this additional case was for October 11, 2022, since that was within six months of April 19, 2022. The government then invited for more time and the Court granted the put a question to and set trial for January 9, 2023. This violated her shimmering to a speedy trial," the motion states.

Thursday's motion to container includes a timeline of events in Vallow's case, comprising her initial arrest in Hawaii in February 2020, when she was held on $5 million bond; her indictment in May 2021; her arraignment in April 2022; her obliging trial setting on the indictment in October 2022; her instant trial setting on the indictment in January 2023; and her third ground setting on the indictment, which is scheduled for April of this year, totaling 1,169 days in prison.

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Lori Vallow

Vallow's safety argues in the motion that her "constitutional rights, comprising her right to be presumed innocent and her shimmering to a speedy trial, have been ignored by the government."

Meanwhile, Daybell has waived his rights to a speedy ground and has asked the state to delay the ground set for April in Fremont County.

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The court will hold a hearing to discuss Vallow's motion to container and other motions on Feb. 9.

Chad Daybell (left) and Lori Vallow (right)

Vallow and Daybell are charged with murdering Vallow's two children, seven-year-old Joshua "J.J." Vallow and 17-year-old Tylee Ryan, near September 2019, when the children disappeared. 

The couple, who joint in November 2019, allegedly collected J.J.'s and Tylee's Social Security benefits between Oct. 1, 2019, and Jan. 22, 2020, once their murders.

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The children were missing for a few months — when police say the couple lied in the children's whereabouts and then slipped away to Hawaii — afore their bodies were found buried on Chad Daybell's settled in rural Idaho.

Lori and Chad Daybell are accused of killing 17-year-old Tylee Ryan and 7-year-old J.J. Vallow in 2019. (Rexberg Police Department)

The combine were indicted in late May 2021 on multiple acsupplies each of conspiracy to commit first-degree murder and broad theft by deception, first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit first-degree destroy related to the deaths of Tylee, J.J. and Chad Daybell's ex-wife, officials announced at the time. Arizona officials in June 2021 also indicted Vallow in the July 2019 destroy of her ex-husband, Charles Vallow.

The case has garnered resident attention and inspired various crime television episodes and documentaries. Netflix most recently released the documentary series "Sins of our Mother" in Vallow and her life before the alleged crimes on Sept. 14.

Daybell has written a few apocalyptic novels based loosely on Mormon theology. Both were interested in a group that promotes preparedness for the biblical end times. Vallow and Daybell bonded over their religious beliefs at what time initially meeting in 2018, when they appeared together for the genuine time on a podcast discussing theories about the end of the world.