I guess that also applies to you, Meterclicks, Kamille and the rest of the live tweet posters. Good work and thanks!
I agree. To everyone who kept us up to date, thank you, thank you, thank you!
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I guess that also applies to you, Meterclicks, Kamille and the rest of the live tweet posters. Good work and thanks!
"The mission went well". These four words are all that is needed.
I was on the fence with MS. I'm not any more, great job Crown! Hoping Dellen the Felon and Say 10 both get 1st degree, and Tim gets justice.
Wondering if someone who knows how this works can answer this for me:
Once the judge gives his charge to the jury and deliberations begin, what kind of information can we expect to see come out? Specifically I mean, will it be evidence that was argued out during the legal arguments journalists couldn't report on?
I am stymied about this now. Normally, when the jury begins deliberations, the media is able to publish, for example, evidence that the judge ruled inadmissible.
And Susan Clairmont and other journalists say they are currently working on stories right now that can be published when the jury begins to deliberate.
However, I just read through the document that billandrew kindly posted up thread, where it states that a publication ban remains in effect until Laura Babcock's trial, so I am confused. [emoji848]
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I am stymied about this now. Normally, when the jury begins deliberations, the media is able to publish, for example, evidence that the judge ruled inadmissible.
(For example, in the recent Toronto trial about the death of sweet Melonie Biddersingh, who was unspeakably abused by her father and stepmother, during the father's trial the judge had ruled that evidence of the previous questionable death of Melonie's brother could not be admitted as evidence because it might prejudice the jury. The moment the jury went to deliberate, each of the newspapers released a "what the jury didn't hear" story and revealed everything about Melonie's brother's death. Father was found guilty, by the way, and the stepmother is currently on trial. It is on WS. An absolute horrific life that poor child and her siblings had.)
And Susan Clairmont and other journalists say they are currently working on stories right now that can be published when the jury begins to deliberate.
However, I just read through the document that billandrew kindly posted up thread, where it states that a publication ban remains in effect until Laura Babcock's trial, so I am confused. [emoji848]
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That's what I'm confused about as well. Since there's been a publication ban, we don't know what it is that we don't know. I can't imagine every argument over evidence was ruled inadmissible because it's part of LB's trial but I guess when the info does start coming out, the questions that still remain unanswered will possibly be part of that?
I really wish I would have been able to sit in during the trial. I suspect like many others who have, I'd have a much clearer opinion of things. Trial by twitter has definitely been a learning experience for me.
This is the main reason I conclude MS’s story is complete and utter BS.
Lawyers can advise their clients but, it the end, the accused has the final say. What he wants, goes. The lawyer is tasked with getting his client exonerated or, at the very least, get them the best possible deal. This is why we have plea bargains.
So, if MS’s version of events is true, why not try to get a plea bargain long before this trial started? If this is indeed the truth, and MS will turn on DM and plead guilty to AATF for the burning and cover-up, isn’t this the best possible outcome for MS, and more than he could have hoped for? And do you not think the Crown would have jumped at that deal, or at least considered it? Or is it possible TD tried to get a plea bargain and was shot down by the Crown, because they had so much evidence on the 1DM charge?
My take? They didn’t try to plea this out because they didn’t know the witnesses would be as damning as they were and, after all the evidence was in, MS decided to take the stand and conveniently tell his story based on the evidence already submitted. He knew DM had already hung himself out to dry, so I think as the trial went along, MS decided if DM refused to take the stand, he was going to do the “right thing”, so to speak, and tell his “story”. And I mean that literally.
Otherwise, why not tell the Crown this story two years ago and take the first-degree murder verdict out of the jury’s hands?
MS didn’t know the blow-by-blow evidence and couldn’t plan out his work of fiction until he knew the full details.
That is why I think MS's story is believable to so many. Because he crafted it to fit PERFECTLY with all the evidence submitted, it almost seemed plausible.
Wondering if someone who knows how this works can answer this for me:
Once the judge gives his charge to the jury and deliberations begin, what kind of information can we expect to see come out? Specifically I mean, will it be evidence that was argued out during the legal arguments journalists couldn't report on?
I wonder if some of the inadmissible evidence is under a publication ban because it has a direct relation to the LB case? (i.e. DNA in the incinerator or Yukon, texts between them, more letters from DM to CN, etc....)
Just a thought?
I can't even really put my finger on what it was exactly but I think it had a lot to do with the way Leitch presented MS contacting DM after the fact. I know we've seen that evidence before but something about that today just sort of made me shake my head. I still think some of the texts between them can be misread to mean something other than what they appear to mean to many.
.
So, if MSs version of events is true, why not try to get a plea bargain long before this trial started? If this indeed the truth, and MS will turn on DM and plead guilty to AATF for the burning and cover-up, isnt this the best possible outcome for MS, and more than he could have hoped for?.