Does anyone know Masipa's experience with criminal vs civil cases?
In a civil dispute, parties' behaviour is usually very telling and can help decide matters. Where the claim is he said this and this was agreed, then what they actually did after said event can help settle it. A judge can often rely on their actions being honest and straightforward as they never foresaw a legal case arising.
In a criminal case, that all goes out the window as desperate times call for desperate measures - especially when you've literally been caught red-handed or you planned it. I still can't get over the finding that is "highly improbable" someone could be capable of inventing a simple intruder excuse within 6 minutes - it's hardly solving a Rubik's cube...
In a civil dispute, parties' behaviour is usually very telling and can help decide matters. Where the claim is he said this and this was agreed, then what they actually did after said event can help settle it. A judge can often rely on their actions being honest and straightforward as they never foresaw a legal case arising.
In a criminal case, that all goes out the window as desperate times call for desperate measures - especially when you've literally been caught red-handed or you planned it. I still can't get over the finding that is "highly improbable" someone could be capable of inventing a simple intruder excuse within 6 minutes - it's hardly solving a Rubik's cube...