hi...I'm probably one of the slowest horses in the race around these threads but I am so glad that I happened on this website where I can get so much information from people like you .
now this probably WILL sound dumb , but could you site some example from the OJ trial to illustrate what you are saying here......is it something like "if the glove don't fit you must acquit"?.......there were bodies and blood evidence everywhere........what was your take on the "Reasonable doubt" in that case, if you will..
thanks for your input on these threads.....(and also the other knowledgeable folks)

(I'm prolly going to be sorry I wrote this ....except for the first and last sentence)
My position on OJ's murder trial has long been that the Los Angeles Police Department tried to frame a guilty man. In some of the blood droppings, a blood preservative (EDTA) was found in large measure. Clearly, this strongly pointed to evidence tampering. Thus, the basis for the framing comment in my position.
However, to better review a situation where two reasonable explanations are put forth for a piece of circumstantial evidence, I think it would be wiser to use a hypothetical.
Hypo: A Mother taught her daughter to knit at the age of seven. Every year, off and on, the daughter would knit until she got married and continued to do so during the first two years of her marriage. Then she stopped knitting for several years.
Four years into her marriage, she found her husband playing around. So she decided to start knitting again to relax, and she bought new knitting needles.
Two days later, her husband is found dead in the kitchen from a knitting needle that was driven through his head.
The wife claims that someone entered the house and used one of her knitting needles to murder her husband while she was sleeping. However, LE found no forced entry or evidence that anyone else was in the house at the time of his death. The D.A. takes the evidence to a Grand Jury and the wife is indicted on premeditated murder.
At trial, the D.A. tells the jury that the wife obviously bought sharp, new knitting needles just before her husband was murdered with one, because she planned to use one of the sharp knitting needles to murder her husband in a cold and calculating manner.
Her attorney claims that the wife is a knitter, and that it is reasonable for a knitter to buy knitting needles.
Should a jury find that it was reasonable for the wife to purchase knitting needles? Or is it reasonable for the jury to find that after years of not knitting, the wife's knitting needle purchase so shortly before the brutal murder of her husband is evidence that supports a guilty verdict.
(In this state, premeditated murder carries the death penalty. Decide wisely.)