bettybaby00
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- Apr 24, 2013
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Yes, and I see now what you're talking about (which was my mistake in not understanding). When we hear about a criminal trial, it gets reported or referred to as "Joe Blow's murder trial". The DA's office (whether a GJ was used or not) will have the charges in their "complaint" on behalf of the people of their state. But that charge (or charges) may change during the court case because of the evidence that the judge allows or because of other factors. After hearing the case, the judge and attorneys may agree to allow lesser charges (Manslaughter, Negligent Homicide, etc.) to be considered by the jury also, if they feel M-1 might not be sufficiently supported by the evidence. Whatever changes might be made from the initial charge(s) will be in the jury instructions issued by the judge when the jury begins deliberation.
Boy, I agree with that!
Not to my knowledge. I think he felt vindicated simply having the TBs acknowledged.
Idk why, but sometimes it seems I understand and know things on a subconscious level, and then when discussion takes a specific turn, it's like...Ding, ding, ding, ding!
Obviously I wish we had all 9 (?) charges that were considered by the GJ, but as we've delved into the ones we know about specifically (thank you for that), the implication(s) becomes more and more clear for me.
I don't agree with the talking heads who have stated these are "compromise" rulings. As you've pointed out, if the evidence supported murder charges (whether M1, M2, M3) but the jurors were unsure who did it, they still could have rightly ruled for For some type of murder charge for both. The laws seem clear regarding that. IMO a M1 (or any variation of murder) charge with a lesser included of "coverup" would more accurately describe a compromise. The fact that the evidence led to the specific charges we are discussing here, strongly indicates a 3rd party was involved.
And then it all circles back to: If a 3rd party was involved, who were they trying to protect?