TraceyLeigh
Lover of WS Peeps!
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From a legal standpoint, innocent until proven guilty. In my mind, guilty as sin.
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CA did try to force KC to be a responsible parent. This was something KC was not willing or able to do. I don't think it was her motive for killing Caylee though. Unless her mental state was such that she just refused to give in to her mother and admit her inadequacy she could have signed over custody of Caylee and been rid of the responsibility, free to do as she pleased. She did not need to kill her to accomplish this and CA, no doubt, will testify to this in court. The prosecution will have to show very compelling evidence as to why KC would never give custody to CA in order to convince the jury that this was her motive.No KC could not just leave Caylee with her parents or Lee anytime she wanted... read her text messages and IM's. When CA did watch Caylee it is obvious CA would call KC when she had been gone too long and she would have to go home... you want me to believe KC did not get angry and resent that she had to go home!?
Susan Smiths' mother said " My daughter is not a violent person. My daughter never abused her children. My daughter loved them dearly, they were her life"
Sound familiar?
How so? Sorry, but if I misunderstood. How can a person be guilty of 1st degree murder if there isn't enough evidence to prove "beyond a reasonable doubt"? If that were the case, she'd be acquitted. I think?
For me, this case has been very thought provoking for the last six months. The wheels in my mind have been spinning fast and furious but no topic or thread has me as perplexed as the concept of "reasonable doubt" and the "burden of proof". I began a search to define these principles and found that it's not my ignorance of legal standards that prevent me from understanding. Even those legal experts as high up as the Supreme Court have difficulty in their definition. I did, however, find a very informative paper that helped me understand the subjective nature of these terms and how they came to be used in a modern sense.
It's quite long, 171 pages. I read it all, very interesting stuff. For those not inclined, a lot can be gained by scanning the paper and reading the opening and conclusion. I've included the abstract and link to the pdf. Relative to this thread I think it states what is necessary to ensure a fair trial to the accused.
"The Origins of "Reasonable Doubt"
James Q. Whitman, Yale
ABSTRACT:
The "reasonable doubt" rule is notoriously difficult to define, and many judges and scholars have deplored the confusion it creates in the minds of jurors. Yet "reasonable doubt" is regarded as a fundamental part of our law. How can a rule of such fundamental importance be so difficult to define and understand?
The answer, this paper tries to show, lies in history. The "reasonable doubt" rule was not originally designed to serve the purpose it is asked to serve today: It was not originally designed to protect the accused. Instead, it was designed to protect the souls of the jurors against damnation. Convicting an innocent defendant was regarded, in the older Christian tradition, as a potential mortal sin. The purpose of the "reasonable doubt" instruction was to address this frightening possibility, reassuring jurors that they could convict the defendant without risking their own salvation, as long as their doubts about guilt were not "reasonable." In its original form, the rule thus had nothing to do with maintaining the rule of law in the sense that we use the phrase, and nothing like the relationship we imagine to the values of liberty. This helps explain why our law is in a state of such disquieting confusion today. We are asking the "reasonable doubt" standard to serve a function that it was not originally designed to serve, and it does its work predictably badly.
The paper offers a detailed account of the Christian moral theology of doubt, and a reinterpretation of the development of jury trial in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. It also includes a discussion of an important jurisprudential distinction: the distinction between proof procedures and what the paper calls "moral comfort" procedures. Without a proper comprehension of this distinction, we cannot understand the original significance of "reasonable doubt," or more broadly the structure of pre-modern law.
Citation:
James Q. Whitman, "The Origins of "Reasonable Doubt"" (March 1, 2005). Yale Law School. Yale Law School Faculty Scholarship Series. Paper 1.
http://lsr.nellco.org/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1000&context=yale/fss
I just want to make it crystal clear that MANY completely innocent people are indicted by a grand jury. This actually happened in the Caren Koslow case, where her husband, Jack, WAS indicted for her murder by the grand jury. The police were about to go place Jack under arrest when the truth came out...and it turned out that Jack was the main target in the attempted pay for hire double homicide! Caren was only the secondary target. It just so happened that Jack Koslow somehow lived despite having his throat slashed and being brutally beaten about the head with a tire iron. However, in the weeks after the murder, Jack was convicted in the press and by local gossip and great pressure was brought to bear upon the police to arrest him, hence the indictment. The saddest thing was that he was actually treated as a pariah at Caren's funeral. Here he was the grieving husband of the victim and a victim himself, and people were hateful towards him.
The other thing about the case is that the police did not reveal to the media the incredible amount of physical evidence that pointed to intruders in this case. Evidence that included tire tracks and footprints on the master bedroom door where one of the intruders had kicked it in (footprints that were a different size than Jack Koslows.)
Check out this story, it is quite shocking:
http://www.trutv.com/library/crime/notorious_murders/family/kristi_koslow/1_index.html
So it is important to remember that grand juries DO indict innocent people from time to time.
I have been following this case in great detail and what we know so far makes Casey look guilty, but we don't know everything yet because we don't know Casey's story. Despite EVERYTHING we know, I remind myself that I HAVE NOT heard Casey's story yet. If I were a juror, it would be easy for me to set aside personal prejudices and listen to the facts as they were presented in the courtroom and make my judgement based ONLY on what was presented at trial. Therefore, I believe that it is possible for Casey to get a fair trial, even in Orlando and I believe that she is innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
Does she look guilty based on what has been presented in the media? Yes. But has guilt been irrefutably proven? No. Proof of guilt can only happen in a court of law. I patiently await the trial and finally hearing Casey's side of the case.
CA did try to force KC to be a responsible parent. This was something KC was not willing or able to do. I don't think it was her motive for killing Caylee though. Unless her mental state was such that she just refused to give in to her mother and admit her inadequacy she could have signed over custody of Caylee and been rid of the responsibility, free to do as she pleased. She did not need to kill her to accomplish this and CA, no doubt, will testify to this in court. The prosecution will have to show very compelling evidence as to why KC would never give custody to CA in order to convince the jury that this was her motive.
I completely agree with you. I think KC is as guilty as they come, but until she is proven guilty in a court of law, she is innocent.
I just want to make it crystal clear that MANY completely innocent people are indicted by a grand jury. This actually happened in the Caren Koslow case, where her husband, Jack, WAS indicted for her murder by the grand jury. The police were about to go place Jack under arrest when the truth came out...and it turned out that Jack was the main target in the attempted pay for hire double homicide! Caren was only the secondary target. It just so happened that Jack Koslow somehow lived despite having his throat slashed and being brutally beaten about the head with a tire iron. However, in the weeks after the murder, Jack was convicted in the press and by local gossip and great pressure was brought to bear upon the police to arrest him, hence the indictment. The saddest thing was that he was actually treated as a pariah at Caren's funeral. Here he was the grieving husband of the victim and a victim himself, and people were hateful towards him.
The other thing about the case is that the police did not reveal to the media the incredible amount of physical evidence that pointed to intruders in this case. Evidence that included tire tracks and footprints on the master bedroom door where one of the intruders had kicked it in (footprints that were a different size than Jack Koslows.)
Check out this story, it is quite shocking:
http://www.trutv.com/library/crime/notorious_murders/family/kristi_koslow/1_index.html
So it is important to remember that grand juries DO indict innocent people from time to time.
I have been following this case in great detail and what we know so far makes Casey look guilty, but we don't know everything yet because we don't know Casey's story. Despite EVERYTHING we know, I remind myself that I HAVE NOT heard Casey's story yet. If I were a juror, it would be easy for me to set aside personal prejudices and listen to the facts as they were presented in the courtroom and make my judgement based ONLY on what was presented at trial. Therefore, I believe that it is possible for Casey to get a fair trial, even in Orlando and I believe that she is innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
Does she look guilty based on what has been presented in the media? Yes. But has guilt been irrefutably proven? No. Proof of guilt can only happen in a court of law. I patiently await the trial and finally hearing Casey's side of the case.
Bolded by me.Actually there have been many people convicted that were 100% innocent. The judicial system is human and therefore falable. We are given an opportunity to confront our accusers before a jury of our peers, they then render an opinion of our innocence or guilt. I do believe in our country justice can and is bought. My biggest fear is that is exactly what is going to happen in this case. High powered "experts" are brought in with the only purpose of mudding the water to the point that just one person on the jury gets lost or unsure and will not convict.
45 minutes of visitation with her family when she is "totally out of the loop" and "everything has been taken from me" and not once does she ask a question about her precious daughter! KC, Baez and entourage are still figuring out what her defense is...KC says nothing because the only thing she can say is to admit her horrible act!
From a legal standpoint, innocent until proven guilty. In my mind, guilty as sin.
Bolded by me.
(Just_Me, this is not directed at you, I am just utilizing your sentence.)
There have been many, many more people who were 100% guilty who have not been convicted.
Our criminal system is flawed, and I guess people just have to decide what is worse, being convicted of a crime you didn't commit, or being the victim of a criminal who was not convicted for lack of evidence.
Lanie