BlOnDe_GuRrL
New Member
- Joined
- Dec 10, 2008
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Wow, heavily argumentative thread here. Kudos to you WS'ers who've provided links and good information that I think a normal juror would actually pay attention to and consider in the court room instead of finding something else to argue endlessly about.
I'm not worried, though. At trial, we'll have experts for both sides, and the prosecution will have something the defense just can't argue - the actual car with the actual smell STILL IN IT. Once the jurors get a whiff of that car - and I know it'll be almost three years out, but still - they will know what was in the back of it, and it ain't going to be spoiled food products or a squirrel. That smell will still be so potent, the jurors noses will be the ultimate decider of what was there, and that will be a human decompositional event.
The jurors will be the only ones who truly know what was or wasn't there by that smell. And you better believe there will be a field trip - I don't think the state is going to hold anything back or be nice to anybody come trial time. The car is their ace in the hole and the defense knows it, otherwise there wouldn't be so much delay, delay, delay. All IMO.
Btw, I have enjoyed the scientific and personal info from experience shared here.
Do you think they'll actually have the jury smell the car?
When my husband was a teenager, one of his friends died inside of his car and his parents could NOT get the smell out of it... 20 years later, they were trying to sell it as a "classic" car or whatever.. had the whole interior replaced and the car still reeks of death.