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In reply to the discussion: Shadow Trial: Prosecutors in Ferguson violated our right to an open criminal justice system. [View all]woolldog
(8,791 posts)33. He's the Defendant in the proceeding, which is captioned Missouri v. Wilson
While technically the questioning of the Defendant is a cross it was not conducted that way. That is my point. At a minimum, he was not confronted on his contradictory statements. His questioning was not conducted the way it would be conducted in any other grad jury proceeding where the Defendant testifies, which is unusual in itself. In Missouri prosecutors do not even have to (and I assume usually don't) present exculpatory evidence.
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Shadow Trial: Prosecutors in Ferguson violated our right to an open criminal justice system. [View all]
justiceischeap
Nov 2014
OP
I'm convinced that a trial would have done that community and many others a world of good
justiceischeap
Nov 2014
#2
I meant to say "I'm NOT talking about the legal requirement of closed grand jury proceedings"
csziggy
Nov 2014
#55
Can you say with 100% certainty that he actually presented all the evidence to the grand jury?
justiceischeap
Nov 2014
#11
Not extraordinary or unbelievable or rare or even unusual in a grand jury proceeding. ..
pipoman
Nov 2014
#21
What felony? Try "alleged" (if you can identify death penalty level felony). nt
IdaBriggs
Nov 2014
#17
Yes, if person 'a' runs out of a bank with alarms sounding, with a bag of money,
pipoman
Nov 2014
#19
nobody has a legal or constitutional right to a public trial of anyone without probable cause
TorchTheWitch
Nov 2014
#56