raid
Dad Photographer
D E E P .......... B R E A T H
I already feel better!
Thanks, Joe.
I already feel better!
Thanks, Joe.
Didier said:We still have jury courts, but happening less and less. The legislative body (eg. both national parliament chambres) is discussing the abandon in the context of a mayor criminal law modernization. So far there wasn't a significant opposition against the abandon, as an involved friend of mine said, a professort of law at the University of Fribourg and consulting expert in the parliament's commission. But such things may take many years until they finally change, here. Because when the whole new law packet is ready, any political party may want a referendum about it. But fact is, we haven't seen a jury court since years.
D.
Matthew Runkel said:Every trial requires someone to make "findings of fact" such as about which testimony to believe. Whether these findings are made by a jury or by a judge, our system gives them great respect because the finders of fact (judge or jury) are the ones who sat through the whole trial, were in a position to assess the demeanor, credibility and truthfulness of witnesses, etc. Appeals courts, including even the Supreme Court, are not permitted to change the findings of fact made at trial (though they may order a new trial under various circumstances). This limitation is placed on appeals courts even though they have access to complete trial transcripts. I don't think anyone should read a brief press account and then substitute his judgment for that of twelve people who sat through the entire trial, saw all the evidence and heard all the testimony and, just as important, were shielded from irrelevant and prejudicial information about the case.
Criminal defendants in the United States have a constitutional right to trial by jury. They may waive this right, but few of them do, and this includes defendants represented by highly competent defense counsel. Interesting, if jury trials are like Russian roulette.
Didier said:No I wasn't, but I happen to know some details, from Bob, about things that happened at the first arrest, in his studio, and during the time before the process, which let me believe neither the police, nor the bureau of investigation, nor the judges, nor the jury did an unbiased job.
Didier
It's a big problem indeed if we can only rely on the truth as known by criminal defendants (and it would be a problem in Switzerland as well as in the "backwoods" of the American South). But I don't understand at all the basis you have for stating that this was "a judgment without any evidence" and that there was not "real evidence". As far as I can tell, you are basing your views on a short newspaper article and communications with the defendant.Didier said:I do not know the truth. Only Bob knows it. The problem is, the jury does not know it, too, but made a judgment without any evidence. This is my concern. If there would be real evidences, the articels would certainly have mentioned it.
Didier said:No I wasn't, but I happen to know some details, from Bob, about things that happened at the first arrest, in his studio, and during the time before the process, which let me believe neither the police, nor the bureau of investigation, nor the judges, nor the jury did an unbiased job.
Didier
Al Patterson said:I do think that if he were tried in some other state the penalty would be less than 30 plus years. There are states in this country where if you get in your car after a few too many drinks and kill someone you would serve less than 5 years in jail. Now I wasn't in the courtroom, and only know what I've read on the net, but 30 plus years is probably a lot more than he deserves.
No way he should walk with no jail time and just probabtion though. It isn't like he force fed her the drugs against her will or killed her because he was tired of her. Didn't she have personal resposibilty for what kind of garbage she was introducing into her system? She was an adult, supposedly.
Krosya said:Somehow you doubts a system, laws of the land and people that did there job to have their case.
RML said:WHAT?! French kissing is illegal now?!
😛
Problem is the system don't always work like that. A paper in Greensboro a few months ago broke a story of corruption of Durham N.C. where investigators hid back evidence of a young black teen acused of robbing a woman's home at gunpoint. Countless witnesses put the accused at a different location at the time of robbery and even the woman herself said the robber was hooded, but she just knows it was him! Long story short. He is still in prison and by the way the woman robbed worked at the Durham police dept. and the $5000.00 stolen was part of a illegial poker house she ran. She still has her job btw.Matthew Runkel said:Every trial requires someone to make "findings of fact" such as about which testimony to believe. Whether these findings are made by a jury or by a judge, our system gives them great respect because the finders of fact (judge or jury) are the ones who sat through the whole trial, were in a position to assess the demeanor, credibility and truthfulness of witnesses, etc. Appeals courts, including even the Supreme Court, are not permitted to change the findings of fact made at trial (though they may order a new trial under various circumstances). This limitation is placed on appeals courts even though they have access to complete trial transcripts. I don't think anyone should read a brief press account and then substitute his judgment for that of twelve people who sat through the entire trial, saw all the evidence and heard all the testimony and, just as important, were shielded from irrelevant and prejudicial information about the case.
Criminal defendants in the United States have a constitutional right to trial by jury. They may waive this right, but few of them do, and this includes defendants represented by highly competent defense counsel. Interesting, if jury trials are like Russian roulette.
Didier said:Yes I allow myself to doubt of the law system in Virginia, without having been at the court. I'm here in Europe (where I, by the way,very often defend your country against the here popular antiamerican reflexes). I like your country and the american way of life, you must know.
My opinion about the US american law is that it has been created in a time when it first had to achieve acceptance, and thus was very draconic. Times have changed meanwhile, but not the system.
That's all I wanted to say.
Didier
x-ray said:One thing that I find interesting and disturbing is the perspective some have on the south. As a native southerner I find it insulting.
John Camp said:The US trial process is much better than anything portrayed in the media. It is quite subtle, quite complete, and people don't usually get convicted without evidence, except in one circumstance -- when it's "eyewitness evidence," which is often quite bad. That's almost always how the guys who are unjustly convicted are convicted -- the victim incorrectly identifies them, often because of their race and the circumstances in which they are arrested (near the victim's house, etc.) But I have seen a lot of criminal trials, and have never disagreed with a jury's "guilty" verdict, although I have occasionally disagreed with a "not guilty' verdict. To condemn Shell's jury on the basis of partial media reports, which focused, as they always do, on the eye-for-an-eye aspect of it (comments from relatives, etc.) is laughable. As an ex-newpaperman, I can say that my faith in news reporting is far less than my faith in juries. And I would much prefer to have juries than to have some kind of three-judge system, where all the judges come from the society's elite classes.
As for Shell himself, I used to read his reports in photo magazines, and was never much impressed; he always seemed like a hack. I wasn't much impressed by his photography, either, which was mostly "find a girl with big tits and a short skirt and lean her against a post." Further, I made the mistake a couple of times of buying his camera-specific books, and finding that they were essentially re-written instruction manuals and spec lists from the camera company; in this aspect of his career, the guy was making money by scamming unwary consumers.
I would hate to see him convicted if he is innocent; but I don't think he is.
JC
Krosya said:...but he was found guilty by, what I believe , is the best legal system in the world. ... Plus one thing that I wonder about - why didn't he get a superstar lawyer that would make things straight...