cecybeans
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Hello,
After OJ's trial, my belief is that, on balance, jurors became more jaded toward defendants, particularly in non-celebrity, high-profile cases. And it's my belief that, moreso than before, jurors have accordingly lowered their internal standard as regards the reliability of evidence and testing for the sufficiency of evidence. Hence, in crime forums, I often talk to whether the reliability of evidence necessary to support the charge truly exists -- as I do in Caylee's case.
HTH
respectfully snipped by me...
While it is true that jurors may have become more jaded toward defendants, it is also true that what some legal talking heads are referring to as the "CSI Syndrome" is also occurring, in that juries are becoming unreasonably persnickety about the quantity and quality of forensic evidence necessary to reasonably point to guilt, due to the preponderance of TV shows and movies in which dna evidence, fingerprints and all kinds of other circumstantial forensics are not only readily available but apparently necessary in order to convict at all. In fact, the OJ trial is an example of that fact, in which, although the chances of another killer having the same dna profile of OJ's found on the scene were something like one in a gazillion, people chose to look at that as "reasonable" doubt because perhaps less than a handful or so unnamed people on the entire planet might have a similar dna profile even though the odds of them being in Brentwood or even knowing the victims were infintisimally small. I think that both forces might tend to neutralize each other when it comes to jury predispositions.