I feel like this is probably the most emotion DG has felt .... sitting in his cell waiting for someone else to decide his fate, at least I'm hoping.IMO - not much. Elect the foreman, look over the Decision Tree docs. Total fatigue.
That got me too.Just read this out to my eldest daughter 24, and I was suddenly choked by tears ... I can't even put into words why.
Well, I'm in Ontario. Nathan Clarkson does classes in Paris, Ontario. That's where I'm headed.
[video=twitter;832292160670162944]https://twitter.com/CTVCalgary/status/832292160670162944[/video]
This is probably an entirely stupid question. I do not follow trials often, so please forgive me.The drawing in the above quote made me wonder. What does the judge do during deliberations? And DG, the attorneys, prosecutor etc.... do they all just sit in the courtroom and wait?
When the jury is sequestered, everybody goes on their way UNTIL ... the jurors will let their jury guard know they have reached a verdict. The judge will be advised and then lawyers, accused, media, etc. It will become public knowledge that a verdict is coming down, and there will be a big rush for everyone to get to the courthouse as soon as possible.
The black SUV found abandoned in Airdrie in the early days of investigation has never been mentioned again, supposedly unrelated?
Its actually sort of shocking that some of those took as long as they did. I guess we can't assume that what seems obvious or easy, is.Perspective on deliberation time, from twitter.
Jury times other cases: Magnotta 7+ days, Bernardo 2 days, Turcotte 5 days, Boucher 11 days, Pickton 10 days, Smich/Millard 5 days #garland
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