trillian
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- Nov 17, 2009
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I'm going to have to think back to get the context for the comment ... I think that someone suggested that one of the prosecutors was a joke or that people couldn't take him seriously. My response was that it appeared that many people took the prosecutors and judicial system seriously and demonstrated their confidence in the system by cheering when the verdict was announced. I'm assuming that the cheering meant the people of Perugia endorsed the court's decision, and do indeed have faith in the prosecutors ... but it's possible that a soccer game had just ended and the cheering was nothing more than an unfortunate coincidence.
The defense in the OJ case was equally a joke. Mignini is a joke and Cochran was a joke. Remember the suggestion that it was a drug vendetta and the slashed throat was evidence of a "columbian necktie"? Even though there was no real reason or evidence for such a theory? Same thing. People cheered at the OJ verdict. They felt the jury got it right. The jury got it WRONG. Unless you think he was innocent?
I dont mean to derail but perhaps you are too young or not familiar with the OJ case, hence this explanation.