Cailin Rua
New Member
- Joined
- Jun 1, 2011
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In some ways I feel like the issues in this case are illustrated by a comparison to the Casey Anthony case.
In that case, she has few supporters who argue her innocence, but there's certainly disagreement about what exactly happened to Caylee. It would be tough to agree on a charge, as it was for those jurors, even if the evidence is quite clear she was involved.
Then we have cases like the Amy Bishop one back when she first committed murder by shooting her brother - the further you go back, the more likely it was that intrafamily violence would not be suspected or at least not be acted on. I can only imagine how many people used to murder family members without being discovered - look at how many have been revealed in the last few decades. It just wasn't considered likely, and the media was different, and police had different sorts of agendas. It's hard to compare cases from even the 90s to the details of a modern case.
Going back to Casey Anthony, in that case, I feel like the evidence about her as a person and her behavior point more towards someone who would plan to kill her child, but yet the actual incident seems more like the act of someone who totally panicked and had no plan. Plus we have no real evidence of how she died so it doesn't seem like an attack so much as either a negligent accident or a quiet smothering. In the Ramsey case, their general behavior and presentation would lead more people to think this was an accident that spiraled out of control, but the way she was found and the molestation aspect indicate more intent, and you have the very violent manner of death. It would be a tricky case to prosecute.
WRT CA, I don't think it has to be either/or. You can think about an idea, get comfortable with it, maybe google up a few ideas, and then put it into action when presented with a sudden stressor.
Motive is a weird beast. Juries seem to want something clear like an insurance policy, but it's usually a combination of things that might not make sense to someone who doesn't generally think of murder as a possible solution to a problem.