Golly,why then do you suppose NOT ONE LE agency would identify PR as the author?
From what I understand, it's not a question of identification; it's a question of "will the courts allow it?" Alex Hunter said specifically that he was worried that nothing he could get would pass the Daubert test in court after the rulings in the Timothy McVeigh case. A journalist said pretty much the same thing during the radio interview with Mark Fuhrman. The link is around here if you'd care to listen in.
If all you're going to do is read this one page.
Ah, but that's just it: it's not just this one page.
I believe you represented the GJ members as pawns. That they took 13 months to simply be told what to do by somebody else.
I hate to be the one to break this to you, HOTYH, but a DA has absolute discretion when dealing with Grand Juries. It's not unheard of for DA's to do exactly what I said. In fact, Alex Hunter himself had done it some years earlier. I forget the name just now. Simka, I think.
Instead, there are several media reports indicating that the GJ decided there was not enough evidence to warrant an arrest. "No bill" I believe it is called.
Given the air of secrecy around the GJ proceedings, I'm rather surprised at how much faith you show in the media vs. people who were there.
Now you're saying not to believe media reports.
That I am.
Whereas the GJ returned "no bill," you stated that the GJ never voted because they were instructed not to, thus seemingly making 13 months of secret testimony moot.
Like I said, that's a fairly common occurence. Many times, a GJ will be used not to indict, but for investigative purposes. Thus, in the event of a "runaway" GJ, a DA is not bound by their decision. Even if the GJ had voted to indict, he STILL would not have to abide by their decision.
This is BASIC law, HOTYH. I'm kind of shocked you don't know these things.
My guess is that you would claim the DA was 'running' the investigation
Well, I guess it depends on who you ask. According to Michael Kane and Bryan Morgan, he was indeed.
and campaigning for PR exhoneration.
Again, it depends on who you ask. The general feeling is that AH was acting more like a politician than a prosecutor, trying to please all sides. One theme that seems to recur is the idea that the DA's office (at least the ADAs) were convinced that Santa Bill was "the guy." There have been several statements to that effect from the police involved. Other people have said that he believed the Rs were guilty, but that his inexperience with handling murder trials made him too afraid to take on the well-connected, million-dollar defense team the Rs had on their side.
To say nothing of the fact that he was business partners with them
One things's sure:
he was no Giuliani.
You've got a good friend in DeeDee there, HOTYH. You'd do well to listen.
Something that seems to run from one DA to another?
Hmm. That one's a bit complicated. Depending on who you ask, AH was either convinced of the Rs guilt or desperate to prove that they were innocent, but he would at least listen to all sides. His successor, on the other hand, was more like the Boxer from Paul Simon's song: hears what she wants to hear and disregards the rest. According ST and Frank Coffman, a Boulder-area journalist who worked on her campaign, ML made up her mind from Day One that there was no way that the Rs, especially PR, could have done the deed and that she was--and I quote--absolutely convinced that Santa Bill was guilty. Afterward, when she succeeded AH, she made it a point to exclude anti-R investigators from the investigation.
And before you say anything, HOTYH, none of this is secret. It's actually fairly well-known. If you don't know it by now,
don't kill the messenger.