Thanks for replying
@MyJoey. I think a lot of folks are voting against the conspiracy theory. It does sound preposterous, doesn’t it? Other than that, the tail light evidence is a toss up between the G and NG folks I think. Yes, there were some pieces found in the street and near the body, but not all of them belonged to KR’s SUV. There have been two versions of what KR said the morning John was found. Some heard “I did it” while others think it was “Did I do it?”
KR was really drunk. Is it possible that maybe even she doesn’t know what she said or did?
Next we come to the crux of the charges. What proof do we have that John died as the result of being hit by a motor vehicle? If the prosecution can not prove that, KR can’t be guilty of doing that, can she?
John’s body doesn’t tell us how exactly he died, but it does tell us how he didn’t die. He didn’t die from being hit by a motor vehicle. Witnesses for both the prosecution and the defense admit they can’t conclude that JOK definitely died as a result of being hit by a motor vehicle. His injuries, the lethal head wound and the deep scratches and puncture wounds on his arm, were not caused by impact with a vehicle, any vehicle. Furthermore, his body lacked the injuries that he should have sustained had he been hit by a vehicle; broken bones or fractures, heavy bruising, and those types of injuries should have been present, especially below the neck. His body is the most important piece of evidence in this case, not tail light fragments, not deleted texts, not butt dials, not a completely incompetent investigation. Extensive testing was done by highly qualified experts. Their conclusions were not theories or guesses. They were based on the laws of physics, medical evidence, kinetics, and pathology.
We, as law abiding citizens, want justice for victims. However, we can’t get justice for a victim or protect the rights of an accused by finding them guilty based on feelings. We need good solid evidence with no reasonable doubt in order to convict. I do not believe that we have that in this case. A wrongful conviction is justice for nobody.