trunkizback
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2017
- Messages
- 250
- Reaction score
- 933
I couldn't help but flash back to the movie. 12 Angry Men. Geez I'm old.
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it's not gonna make any differenceI really wish we could get the transcript of that call. They have not posted it.
After this, I don't think they will get many international students. Don't want to get murdered in a strange townThis is just my opinion but I believe the U of I will more than likely just settle up out of court. It's a possible black eye they just don't need.
I actually just saw a thing on cbs news that is exactly whats happening. What with a 2 year clown trial. Many foreign families are leary nowAfter this, I don't think they will get many international students. Don't want to get murdered in a strange town
I actually just saw a thing on cbs news that is exactly whats happening. What with a 2 year clown trial. Many foreign families are leary now
Come to Canada for school. Lower tuition, cheaper rent! Lots of Chinese. F Illinois!
Not blaming. It makes more sense to pay less for safer environment.Now, don’t go blaming all of us for two people who let enlarged hearts cloud their judgement and reasoning...
Where is he going to get $750k ? Money goes to the state.Justice for Yingying: In addition to a life sentence, Brendt Christensen was fined $750K+ for the kidnapping resulting in death of missing UI visiting scholar Yingying Zhang.
@foxillinois
@wics_abc20
Jacqueline Francis on Twitter
Maybe they were not over-sympathetic...It dipped a bit after the kidnapping, but rebounded the following year.
It wouldn’t surprise me if it does dip some again. Not so much because of danger, but because of the perceived insult of not sentencing him to death, especially in light of the fact that he refuses to divulge her remains.
Most Chinese families would want exactly what the Zhangs wanted: death and a body to return. They got neither (although the jury is still out -pun not intended, but noticed and is appropriate- on the last one). That will be perceived as a huge insult; it will be perceived as the jury thinking that BC forfeiting his life is too high a price to pay for YY’s death and her family’s suffering. It won’t much be liked, either, that BC got “credit” via sympathy at his own drug and alcohol use, and for his mom being a damn drunk while he was growing up. I hope people will continually point out to them that the vote was 10-2 in favor of death, and that 2 over-sympathetic saps don’t represent the majority opinion on matters like this.
Where is he going to get $750k ? Money goes to the state.
His family has no money.
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Maybe they were not over-sympathetic...
Maybe the case was not laid out sufficiently clearly for them...
Look at the case that was presented
It was utter minimalism!
The prosecution just presented barely enough ... absolute minimal information and evidence. They padded it with lots of irrelevant low-budget, minimal-effort 'witnesses'.
They did not analyse forensically all the knives for chrissakes!
and that was after they heard him say he had decapitated YingYing.
They gambled and they lost and everybody lost.-+*
I remember @altojack made a post when the evidence started coming on-stream.
The question was somethng like 'Well what was he doing online for the past 10 years?
Exactly.
wE HAVE ABSOLUTELY NO SINGLE NEW DETAIL UPON WHICH TO BEGIN A SEARCH!
We know nothing about his habits, his dark-web contacts, any of his contacts..
Not a single new thing.
All we're left with is a large number of 'IF's'
where did he put her body?
I have it in writing that the search is open and I posted it earlier.
WHERE IS SHE?
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Maybe they were not over-sympathetic...
Maybe the case was not laid out sufficiently clearly for them...
Look at the case that was presented
It was utter minimalism!
The prosecution just presented barely enough ... absolute minimal information and evidence. They padded it with lots of irrelevant low-budget, minimal-effort 'witnesses'.
They did not analyse forensically all the knives for chrissakes!
and that was after they heard him say he had decapitated YingYing.
They gambled and they lost and everybody lost.-+*
I remember @altojack made a post when the evidence started coming on-stream.
The question was somethng like 'Well what was he doing online for the past 10 years?
Exactly.
wE HAVE ABSOLUTELY NO SINGLE NEW DETAIL UPON WHICH TO BEGIN A SEARCH!
We know nothing about his habits, his dark-web contacts, any of his contacts..
Not a single new thing.
All we're left with is a large number of 'IF's'
where did he put her body?
I have it in writing that the search is open and I posted it earlier.
WHERE IS SHE?
And if “muscle memory” is a thing for jurors as the first article suggests, we must remember that this case was tried in a state that abolished the death penalty, and so surely that had an effect. But from my research, it seems that even had this case been tried in Texas, there’s still a high likelihood the outcome would have been the same.This verdict did not happen in a vacuum. I don’t see it as a failure on the part of the prosecution. First, we had no body, but they convicted him anyway. Second, the death penalty here in the US is going the way of the rest of the civilized world- out the door. While it’s still legal in some states and federally, and there are still many people who believe in it theoretically, juries are rejecting it more and more often anyway - even in Texas.
Why Jurors Are Rejecting the Death Penalty
And even if he had gotten the DP, odds are that it would not have resulted in his execution.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...tences-are-overturned-heres-why-that-matters/
Did you not read it?All twelve found ALL of the aggravators were proved beyond a reasonable doubt by the government. So, the two sad-sack saps with enlarged hearts and soft-spots for a guy growing up with an alcoholic mother completely agreed that he killed her in a heinous, cruel and depraved manner, showed no remorse, obstructed justice by refusing to divulge the location of -or what was done with- her remains, and that there was significant victim impact and loss to her family, fiancee, and friends.
They just wanted to cut him a break because alcohol and drugs, and because he wouldn't be a threat to do this again. It's all there in the additional mitigating factors they "found." Those are key. If they took the time to include them, then you can be assured that they were integral in the decision of the two to let him live.