04/22/2013 - waiting for rebuttal to continue

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  • #1,841
  • #1,842
Commonwealth but not England here :seeya: We brought the world Karla H and Luka M and have 1/10 your population. :blushing:

Olsen, Pickton, Williams. :furious:

On the upside, our RCMP made a huge arrest of wannabe terrorists yesterday.:rocker:
 
  • #1,843
Do you realize how many years I have tried to forget that movie? I was a kid sneaking tv time and was terrified for DAYS. My adult memory makes the hair on the back of my neck stand up.

The 3rd story of the voo doo doll and Karen Black sitting spread eagled with that knife and those voo doo warrior teeth. I could cry right now.

Thanks for that.
:mad: :mad:


lol


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I have not thought of that movie in years either. Jodis evil ways brought it back.
 
  • #1,844
The gas cans!

The gas cans most definitely. Especially the fact that she sat there on the stand and lied for days without breaking a sweat. It makes it even more plausible that she lied to all the experts she talked to as well.
 
  • #1,845
Commonwealth but not England here :seeya: We brought the world Karla H and Luka M and have 1/10 your population. :blushing:

Nottinghamshire's Neil Entwhistle poisoned our little section of MA.


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  • #1,846
  • #1,847
How many posters are from England?


Does England have any nuts like JA, or is the USA the only one that is so graced?
I'd say at least half a dozen just for this case. There are a lot on WS altogether - a few of which are Americans living abroad.

We have nuts aplenty over here too - but smaller population and gun control = smaller number of homicides; CCTV everywhere sometimes means its much quicker to arrest; a much more accessible and less stigmatized stance on mental illness may have some effect on reducing violent crime; and trials are very, very different here. No televised coverage, not nearly the media hype, no Nancy Grace equivalent, witnesses often stand giving testimony, court artists are still in employ, and barristers and magistrate alike both still don powdered wigs and robes.

We can also boast an overly 'humanitarian' justice system which sees some murderers get sentenced appallingly lightly and convicted killers underage at the time of their crimes being granted new identities; no open records public can access, without going through the police, for known sexual offenders because of the risk of vigilantism; prisoners being granted cosmetic surgery taxpayers fund through the NHS; and highly sensationalized trials will often find dozens of people throwing bricks, cans, rocks at the prison van transporting the defendant - with unarmed police in full riot gear. It's a beautiful country steeped in tradition - but we're not without our problems, for certain.
 
  • #1,848
Morning Nurse. Does it look like we are being good today- angels that we are?? :floorlaugh: How goes your morning? Ready for the trial?

I am ready to roll on this rebuttal! I am having a great morning and hope you are having a great one too!

:rocker:

:drumroll:

yes, you guys are good :wink:
 
  • #1,849
Then you must have missed the lastest photos taken straight on of his chest and face.

It looks to me like there are rope abrasions all around his neck below the gaping knife wound, but maybe those have to do with the position the body was in those long five days he was left to rot.

She must have sat on him and just plunged that knife in as he lay on his back. I can't imagine her having enough force to make it go three inches in any other way. You physics folks can figure out the windup that it would take to penetrate 3". The heart is well-protected.

Also, I noticed the blood flow from the deep heart wound was to the right side, congealing on the body. Was this seepage post mortem or the result of post mortem handling? Does anyone in the know have a comment?

Anagrammy

I saw them. I just think the back wounds reflect rage against someone not able to defend themselves. Heinous.

I don't see any rope burn at all. The testimony was there was seepage post mortem from the chest wound.
 
  • #1,850
I realize Gus does not fit the criteria for that type of occupation...... hence my ridiculous comment. Saying goofy off the wall things is in my gene pool. I cannot escape it.
 
  • #1,851
I'd say at least half a dozen just for this case. There are a lot on WS altogether - a few of which are Americans living abroad.

We have nuts aplenty over here too - but smaller population and gun control = smaller number of homicides; CCTV everywhere sometimes means its much quicker to arrest; and trials are very, very different here. No televised coverage, not nearly the media hype, no Nancy Grace equivalent, witnesses often stand giving testimony, court artists are still in employ, and barristers and magistrate alike both still don powdered wigs and robes.

We can also boast an overly 'humanitarian' justice system which sees some murderers get sentenced appallingly lightly and convicted killers underage at the time of their crimes being granted new identities; no open records public can access, without going through the police, for known sexual offenders because of the risk of vigilantism; prisoners being granted cosmetic surgery taxpayers fund through the NHS; and highly sensationalized trials will often find dozens of people throwing bricks, cans, rocks at the prison van transporting the defendant - with unarmed police in full riot gear. It's a beautiful country steeped in tradition - but we're not without our problems, for certain.

The same goes for the Netherlands. :)
Although we don't have a jury system.
 
  • #1,852
I am one of the guilty parties,,,, or maybe the only guilty one. I am truly sowwy.
:fence: Geeze kaydono. Stop making me do bad things. Sorry Nurse!
 
  • #1,853
I'd say at least half a dozen just for this case. There are a lot on WS altogether - a few of which are Americans living abroad.

We have nuts aplenty over here too - but smaller population and gun control = smaller number of homicides; CCTV everywhere sometimes means its much quicker to arrest; and trials are very, very different here. No televised coverage, not nearly the media hype, no Nancy Grace equivalent, witnesses often stand giving testimony, court artists are still in employ, and barristers and magistrate alike both still don powdered wigs and robes.

We can also boast an overly 'humanitarian' justice system which sees some murderers get sentenced appallingly lightly and convicted killers underage at the time of their crimes being granted new identities; no open records public can access, without going through the police, for known sexual offenders because of the risk of vigilantism; prisoners being granted cosmetic surgery taxpayers fund through the NHS; and highly sensationalized trials will often find dozens of people throwing bricks, cans, rocks at the prison van transporting the defendant - with unarmed police in full riot gear. It's a beautiful country steeped in tradition - but we're not without our problems, for certain.

The Hounslow Slasher benefitted from the "humanitarian" system aye ?
 
  • #1,854
  • #1,855
Not from England but it seems when we do have a high profile crime they are off the charts. Not as many it seems but horribly heinous. Canada.

Agreed, and it was the same in England when I lived there.
 
  • #1,856
omg did this guy even EXAMINE Arias????????


(If we have to hear from one more psychologist I think I will be in need of a psychologist! Enough is enough!:truce:)

I don't think that's his purpose. I think he's going to look at the test results of Dr. Demarte and testify that he interprets them differently. He'll hone in on the PTSD part. I could be wrong.

Also, that expert on the ABC site you posted mentioned the judge could decide very limited testimony from Geffner. I think that's what will happen, but then JM will skewer his testimony - he'll show the jury that Geffner was already coined a "hired gun" by another trial court, that Geffner edited one of ALV's books, etc. The fact that Geffner has a horse in this race (ALV's reputation) is fodder for JM.

JMO
 
  • #1,857
Good morning!! Trial today!!! :woot:
 
  • #1,858
O/T but pre trial, I am enjoying Janine Driver on Anderson Cooper Live right now.
 
  • #1,859
  • #1,860
I don't know, but if he hasn't I'm sure he will. Otherwise, I don't see the need in him testifying. Seems to me his entire testimony would be speculation.[/QUOTE)
Jodi was writting in a frenzy when Dr. D was on the stand. Now we know why. She was preparing for this next witness who aligned himself with OJ. I am starting to wonder if the DT wants her found guilty.Think about it . Is this who you want to bring in after the last two witnesses. Maybe no one else would touch this case.
 
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