How would there ever be a 'not guilty' without them being innocent anyway?
This is a primary legal foundation, and while no, it's not used outside of a courtroom, it is something I use to distinguish my beliefs from facts.
"Not Guilty" does not = "Innocent"
"Not Guilty" means guilt wasn't proved beyond a reasonable doubt. It means the accused could have (and may well have) done the crime, but there are remaining doubts about the evidence--enough doubt to not get past a 'reasonable' barrier. No defendant in the free world should ever be convicted on the basis of "well, they probably/likely did it." That is never good enough. Even in the most heinous of crimes.
"Innocent" means just that--the accused is factually innocent. The accused did not do the crime, no matter what anyone else thinks or believes or thinks they know.
I've never said AK and RS were innocent. I said I couldn't vote them guilty based on the existing holes in the case. I said I have 'reasonable doubt.'
Their statements (written or otherwise) haven't pushed me in either direction. I've enumerated why on many occasions. I'm sure they lied, but I don't know exactly about what and I don't know why and whether something is an out-and-out lie vs. a difference in memory I don't know. Can't tell. It doesn't prove murder, doesn't give any indication leading to a motive to kill, and is essentially useless because at this point there's more rumor than fact. Not good. Not good at all. I can't hang my hat on rumors and misstatements.
In addition, seeing twisted/incorrect statements attributed to them, taken out of context, when we actually do have something written and can refer to it, only makes me wonder what someone's agenda is, because accuracy is vital and there is precious little of it.
I look at the case objectively, not emotionally. I've gotten emotional in other cases, but this isn't one of those. To pretend there aren't issues swirling in this case that raise doubt would be disingenuous. There are issues.