BBM - all valid points you made. I agree to disagree somewhat.
Example, the quote below is from one of the jurors on why they couldn't come to a proper verdict. I didn't crawl into his mind, but I have made a determination of his mindset. I have a reasonable suspicion that he may have somewhat of a CSI mindset or at the very least he doesn't seem to equate circumstantial evidence with direct evidence.
If we were not doing a trial on circumstantial evidence, it would have been a much more way for us to sink our teeth into and come up with a proper verdict, the juror explained. But because of the fact there were so many what-ifs, what if this happened, what if that happened, and things of that nature, we were hopelessly deadlocked.
I have no thoughts on SM's blunt rolling, other than he probably ratted out that kid.
I don't think it is unfair to say this particular judge could have given better jury instructions.
It is also not unfair for any of us to feel the judge should not have let the defense attorney's friend on the jury.
I think we're going in a bit of a circle. I've said previously that I don't think KT's friend should have been seated, primarily because even the appearance of a conflict is potentially a problem. I also said I don't believe that jurors should get to decide whether or not they can be impartial.
But did KT's friend vote NG? I keep seeing that he did and he was also the foreman. Is that the case? If he voted Guilty, then the mistrial can't be blamed on his relationship with KT.
As for the instructions, I honestly found them coherent and clear, but I said before that doesn't mean everyone else did.
My point re: jury thought processes, victim mind-reading
and blunt rolling, that is, assessment from afar of other people's frame of mind and shopping behavior, is that it's being cited alongside an insistence on facts. I observe at times that some are equating what is said at trial or advanced by the state as indisputable "fact".
I'm still frankly having a hard time with the reasoning that it's far-fetched to consider Longbeard's as relevant and potentially where more happened than we know because it's a 'what if', but it's somehow plausible that SM was going to get Heather to take a pregnancy test and then kill her no matter what the results.
I saw the juror's remarks the day he made them. It would be interesting to have more than a media blip of a discussion with that juror and the other one, to find out more about their reasoning. Maybe it's poor reasoning, maybe it's not. It's kinda like KT's friend being the foreman, but now this other guy is?
I want to see Heather have whatever justice she can receive, having been murdered and denied a dignified laying to rest. But I don't agree that any reasonable doubt in this case automatically equals juror stupidity or failure of the court.
FWIW, I appreciate the time you take to read posts and to thoughtfully respond.