inspector rex
Former Member
- Joined
- Feb 28, 2015
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One of the reasons I have trouble with this case is because what a grand jury found means nothing to me in terms of determining actual guilt or innocence or what exactly happened. And at trial, juries can "nullify" and use opinions on all sorts of issues - there are lots of different rules of evidence that are all over the place. I still believe in the jury system overall and I do believe most juries make a reasonable decision based on the instructions and information before them. I'm sure they made a reasoned decision to indict based on the circumstances. I also find the indictment legally inconsistent and I feel like they didn't fully understand the nuances of the law, which is common. So I find it hard to determine what exactly they were going for, but that's really not what they were tasked with doing. They were just determining the charges should go forward - they didn't have to pin down an exact scenario. A trial would have forced that issue a bit more, but what is an "expert" science is debatable. Juries can make all sorts of calls. Regular people can tell whether one's handwriting looks like another's and assess that as part of the case. If they decided based on that alone with no other circumstances, i think that would be an issue.
Lawstudent, I'd appreciate your opinion on this. The GJ voted to indict on some vague (to me anyway) basis that, as I interpret what you say, seemed designed just to see the case go forward to trial? Someone made the comment about indicting a 'ham sandwich', so I assume that an indictment is 'expected' in every GJ case?
However, the DA decided not to proceed. Was it , do you think, due to the basis of the GJ's decision (child abuse resulting in death) not being able to be supported by evidence or simply that the new evidence that was hoped might come forward did not eventuate? In other words, was it like a 'trial' trial that failed?