Typhoo1961
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I do not believe that DM got a text from his friends from Tim Hortons.
There was no friend. DM made it up according to MS.
I do not believe that DM got a text from his friends from Tim Hortons.
FWIW your opinion counts just as much as everyone else's. When the verdicts come in you and canadiangirl and JuneBug67 and ArianeEmory, among others who have reasonable doubt about MS may just be right in the end if the jury comes back with a verdict that reflects such reasonable doubt. I hope notbut it is very possible!
I hate to see anyone feeling badly about their indecision or about sharing their honest opinions because it just feels alienating. I do hope the jury will bring back guilty verdicts for both MS and DM, but that's because I believe they are guilty. The jury may not agree with me and those who think like me.
I've always appreciated the differing viewpoints on this forum and you and others who are uncertain about MS contribute a lot to the discussions. I think we're all just very tired of debating, especially when it's not always easy to articulate why we think as we do, and we're all very anxious for the verdicts and for this very emotionally draining trial to be done with.
All MOO.
Can you elaborate on this? What sort of difficulty?
That's why MWJ is charged with supplying it. But if LE did not know the supplier they would have to assume that WM acquired it from an unknown source - which was DM's plan and apparently what LE originally did since the initial conclusion was suicide - all IMOLE would have difficulty with the gun if it wasn't registered I would say.
People very often do attempt to hide or dispose of a body after a killing to escape detection, so thinking of the incinerator as cruel and gruesome as it is actually wouldn't be a showstopper for me in believing this was 2nd degree murder or manslaughter. However my real sticking point is that I just can't get my head around the Crown's argument. People are sadly murdered every day, and only very, very, very few of them are murdered by thrill killers working in pairs. In a sense it's an extraordinary claim that falls just short of needing extraordinary proof. Add to that that it is allegedly thrill killers with a very specific plan to steal a truck and murder an owner...that they don't enact for 10 months? It remains a difficult theory to grasp for me. It's possible, and this is why I asked my mini-poll question, that the incinerator didn't start as part of a murder plan but somewhere along the way evolved into one, whether as part of a premeditated plan, an plan for exigent circumstances, or something improvised after a robbery gone bad.
Ummm. I don't know a whole lot about guns but it really doesn't seem to me this group and especially isho would register a gun. Moo
There was no friend. DM made it up according to MS.
To me - the thrill kill thing makes perfect sense. These two stole things they had no possible use for beyond the thrill. They stole things in broad daylight. The thrill was obviously part of it. DM in particular with the multiple girlfriends, vehicles and everything else. MS doesn't really show that same thrill seeking attitude but he obviously was good with going along with it for these crimes.
Found this wikipedia article on a pair of murderers from way back in 1924. Some wacky parallels between these two and MS/DM - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leopold_and_Loeb including how they both turned on each other when they were caught and were drawn together by their interest in crime.
Yeah, I called the Crown's theory a "Leopold and Loeb style thrill kill" a few days ago. It's a hard fit for me. I'd probably have to spend more time figuring out why. I think it's just because it feels kind of jammed into the facts. I'm pretty sure Millard is a psychopath, but it feels more like evidence suggests he kills for expedience rather than thrill. Who knows. The facts in the LB case may change my mind on this.
Does court resume tues or wed this week?
That's why MWJ is charged with supplying it. But if LE did not know the supplier they would have to assume that WM acquired it from an unknown source - which was DM's plan and apparently what LE originally did since the initial conclusion was suicide - all IMO
Isn't that what the crown does? They weren't there for the crime. They get the evidence and then come up with a theory of how the crime went down that fits the evidence.
I'm completely on board with the Criwn's thrill kill theory. I think the evidence fully justifies it, and I think both were on board.Yeah, I called the Crown's theory a "Leopold and Loeb style thrill kill" a few days ago. It's a hard fit for me. I'd probably have to spend more time figuring out why. I think it's just because it feels kind of jammed into the facts. I'm pretty sure Millard is a psychopath, but it feels more like evidence suggests he kills for expedience rather than thrill. Who knows. The facts in the LB case may change my mind on this.
I'm completely on board with the Criwn's thrill kill theory. I think the evidence fully justifies it, and I think both were on board.
E.g. MS's comment about 'chopping' required for one incinerator model they researched? I'm sure he was referring to the need to dismember a body to fit it (as alleged in the Criwn's cross examination)
I have ETA and corrected my post, and in posts I have apologized for only remembering the grommets found in the burned vegetation grid.
I thanked you for pointing out my mistake.
I was not offended.
I am copying this question from one of my previous posts ... I am seeking personal opinions to my question.
Can it be said that because it was a livestock incinerator with no livestock or pets to burn, and it wasn't an incinerator of the type used to burn garbage or melt metal (CN), MOST PROBABLY the intent to purchase the Eliminator was to burn human remains (more than likely clothed and possibly wrapped in something)?
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Yes, but it can be a good fit or an ill fit. It's a story designed to secure an outcome, no more and no less than MS or DM's story. The Crown is not about truth, justice and light, they're often about crafting a case in a way they think they can win. It can feel like a game. When it does, that gives me pause.
For the most part the crown isn't there to win or lose a case. They present the evidence.
From the Supreme Court of Canada:
It cannot be overemphasized that the purpose of a criminal prosecution is not to obtain a conviction; it is to lay before a jury what the Crown considers to be credible evidence relevant to what is alleged to be a crime. Counsel have a duty to see that all available legal proof of the facts is presented; it should be done firmly and pressed to its legitimate strength, but it must also be done fairly. The role of prosecutor excludes any notion of winning or losing; his function is a matter of public duty than which in civil life there can be none charged with greater responsibility. It is to be efficiently performed with an ingrained sense of the dignity, the seriousness, and the justness of judicial proceedings. (R. v. Boucher)
In the US - where these roles are elected - there is a lot more pressure to win. Its a different role in Canada.