General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Nope. Sorry. I don't want to make it easier for the state when it comes to criminal prosecution [View all]anomiep
(153 posts)But it is being lost in people's anger over the verdict. Which I understand, but at the end of the day, if you've got a defendant up there, and the prosecution is essentially trying to swing illogical arguments and what appear to be some outright untruths in *this* case, which is being broadcast live, it seems pretty clear to me that they're going to be doing those things when it's *not* being broadcast live.
The first is, withholding evidence. The only reason the defense knew about the dump of phone data the prosecution had completed is because an IT guy went 'wait, this wasn't given to the defense?' and eventually went to a judge about it. He's now been fired, supposedly not for that, but it's pretty reasonable based on the circumstances to think it may well have been for that. Fortunately the system for that is working and there will be a hearing and the like on that issue - but what if it'd been a less publicized case? What if the IT guy just assumed the prosecution had handed it over rather than asking?
There are also a couple of things from closing arguments but I think people are angry enough (justifiably) that they'd just consider them minor. But I wouldn't want the prosecution doing certain things it was doing if I were an innocent defendant - and since the point of a trial is to get to a finding of guilty or not guilty, how can it be reasonable to give the prosecution a pass on stuff like that just because a guilty is what people wanted in this case?