waldojabba
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I am also sensing the CW will not air their dirty laundry again in another trialI'm beginning to perceive the silver lining...
JMO
I am also sensing the CW will not air their dirty laundry again in another trialI'm beginning to perceive the silver lining...
I hear you. I don’t agree with how it’s being handled, just what I’ve thought has been going on in the jury room. This imo is kind of like, human error, when they can’t get past things they believe. But per their note they know they should. Or at least whoever wrote the note understandsFacts and evidence thrown out based on beliefs. Wow!
Shaking my head in DISbelief
Karen and her defense say that she was not that drunk.
It is the note writer I would say.I hear you. I don’t agree with how it’s being handled, just what I’ve thought has been going on in the jury room. This imo is kind of like, human error, when they can’t get past things they believe. But per their note they know they should. Or at least whoever wrote the note understands
Mind was made up, sounds like the personality that should not be on any jury.I would hate to be in that”tense” jury room right now.
I keep thinking back to that one juror during the defense closing argument described as staring up at the ceiling, then looking down at the floor.
A win of sorts but not the same as hearing NOT GUILTY and being vindicated by a jury of her peers. And for the O'Keefe family back to square one...no one being held accountable for his death.it depends. if CW decides to re-try the case, I'd think they could definitely find someone to do a better job in both making the case and blunting the conspiracy angles put forth by the defense.
on the other hand, if they believe that was their best effort, they might decide not to re-try the case and since i wouldn't really expect any 'new' evidence to surface - it could be a win for KR.
I'm beginning to perceive the silver lining...
Could it be that their personal beliefs/convictions is just what is causing some to view xyz piece of evidence as more weighty than another person views it. Maybe it's not that they can't see the evidence and make a decision based on it, but the way they view the evidence and the weight it has on the case could be different based on their own thought processes. Doesn't make one more right than another in that case. They aren't excluding any piece of evidence, but if the way they think through things and come to a decision on what that evidence means for the case it could be different than how another persons views that same evidence.But when an individual is being held back by beliefs and convictions then I do not see how they can be reaching decisions based on thought processes that are rooted in reason and rationality. Personal beliefs have clouded applying reason to evidence. This is nothing to do with intelligence, rudeness, or calling one juror better than another. Its about a jury's duty to consider the evidence and parse the facts, putting aside for the time being biases and personal beliefs and convictions jmo
DamI'm beginning to perceive the silver lining...
I think the "oath" to some people and yes to jurors too, is just another formality and not taken seriously. Witnesses take the oath and lie through their teeth. There are many people who cannot separate fact from ficttion - we see and hear it everyday.Polls in forums are not the same as jury duty, lots of polls will vote guilty cos they don't like the way she looks or dresses or her mannerisms or personality.
They swore no oaths.
He did not die from a vehicular injury, is all.
Didn't that neighbour happen to be the Chief of Police?I’ve always found it highly suspic that the neighbor reviewed his footage, deemed it “not useful”, and erased it. His camera view absolutely should have caught KR backing into JO. Clearly it didn’t or he wouldn’t have erased it.
The alternate theory proposed by the defense is the literal definition of a conspiracy. It's not a word that is bandied about, it is an accurate use of the term.I love how the word conspiracy gets bandied about. Optics imo.
The other more accurate word IMO for it is "business as usual".
A group decides to set up an individual - for a reason or no reason - I used to see it all the time in Corporate America until I ran out screaming lol and founded my own company.
The stakes were maybe not as high in corporate America but people lost thier jobs etc because they got targeted by people in positions of power or were targeted to become the fall guy for failed projects bc they happened not to be in favor or were percceived as "other".
JMO
Yes, and whoever wrote the note appears to understand that. But the note clearly states that some people just can’t get past their convictions despite understanding the evidence.But when an individual is being held back by beliefs and convictions then I do not see how they can be reaching decisions based on thought processes that are rooted in reason and rationality. Personal beliefs have clouded applying reason to evidence. This is nothing to do with intelligence, rudeness, or calling one juror better than another. Its about a jury's duty to consider the evidence and parse the facts, putting aside for the time being biases and personal beliefs and convictions jmo
If the split is like 10 ng and 2 g the judge could surely not direct the verdict g. Do you really think directed verdict is possible?( I wouldn' t have a clue)Directed verdict (judge decides) my main concern. Rare but an option
Two concerns it is dismissed without prejudice. Or even worse (rare) the judge can give a directed verdict