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]onenote
(45,990 posts)He shoots her. Claims it was after she shot at him. There is a bullet in the wall. The state concedes that the bullet in the wall is from her gun but puts in evidence an expert who testifies that based on the angle with which the bullet struck the wall, it had to be fired from her gun while she was on the floor. The defense puts on an expert that offers testimony that contradicts the state's expert. There are no eyewitness, no earwitnesses. Nothing.
If you'd like, you can reverse the hypothetical and have him be the one that is shot by her and his gun has been fired into the wall.
Preponderance standard: how does a jury conclude that the defendant has shown that his/her version of events (that they fired only after being fired at) is more likely than the other version? Should that be enough to jail someone.