You misremembered. He said Nancy was 'supportive' of his doing the MBA because it would allow him to move up in the company and increase his earning potential. However, she didn't 'push' him to do it. It was his idea.
Okay, thanks.
You misremembered. He said Nancy was 'supportive' of his doing the MBA because it would allow him to move up in the company and increase his earning potential. However, she didn't 'push' him to do it. It was his idea.
I am curious...if they found Nancy's hair or blood in his trunk, which is circumstantial evidence, would you still believe there was reasonable doubt?
Her body showed up where he "went fishing" that day. If someone can place Brad on Fielding Dr, then I can agree he is guilty. Peterson said he went fishing in SF that day.
Her body showed up where he "went fishing" that day. If someone can place Brad on Fielding Dr, then I can agree he is guilty. Peterson said he went fishing in SF that day.
Depends on if there is reasonable doubt or not. If the defense provides reasonable doubt in a circumstantial case, I would have a hard time convicting.
Sorry, but I have to disagree here. Take, as an example, the Laci Peterson case. This was the one in, California, I think, West Coast anyway, not to be confused with the Peterson case in Durham.
They never found a real smoking gun on Scott Peterson, but there was plenty of evidence and no doubt in my mind that he was guilty. Or perhaps a better way to say it was as I told my wife "If he is NOT guilty of this crime, he could give lessons on how to LOOK guilty." Now that I think about it, there are a few other parallels to this case. There was a "mysterious van" seen in the area that had carpet in the back. Someone walking a dog claimed to have seen Laci in a park that morning. In fact, the defense threw such a smoke screen in search of a SODDI defense that it mainly made them a laughing stock. "Be sure to keep a sharp eye out for that roving band of Hawaiian Mormons who are kidnapping pregnant women."
Her body showed up where he "went fishing" that day. If someone can place Brad on Fielding Dr, then I can agree he is guilty. Peterson said he went fishing in SF that day.
It appears you just don't understand the definition of circumstantial evidence even though I provided the definition. Seriously, what you are saying is that the only way you can 'cope' with someone being sent to jail is if there is DIRECT evidence? That means if there is no eyewitness, no confession, and/or no videotape of the crime, the person shouldn't have to go to jail? Because everything else...is 'circumstantial' evidence. That is the definition.
DNA? circumstantial
Fingerprints? circumstantial
Blood? circumstantial
Computer searches? circumstantial
Ballistics / bullet matching? circumstantial
Defendent having the exact same weapon as the murder weapon? circumstantial
Fibers, hair, and other trace evidence linking the suspect to the crime scene and/or the victim? circumstantial
Courts every day in this country convict people of crimes on those and additional circumstantial evidence.
Eta: how weird that I just posted this as you were posting that!
Is that the only evidence you will accept? No circumstantial evidence such as her blood in the trunk that day?
Eta: how weird that I just posted this as you were posting that!
Is that the only evidence you will accept? No circumstantial evidence such as her blood in the trunk that day?
In the same sense, I believe Jason Young is guilty. The circumstantial evidence showing him leaving the hotel out the side door along with witness testimony seeing a vehicle like his in the driveway (along with other circumstantial evidence made public so far) has me feeling that way. I won't follow the trial like I am this one, but I am curious about the totality of the evidence against him.
No, see my other response. I've posted my reasons for having reasonable doubt at this point (without real evidence...just based on discussions and affidavits so far as well as the opening statements). But they don't have to place him at the scene. I was just comparing the 2. But if they proved he made those calls, that will be enough circumstantial evidence for me.
Timeline comes into play. The defense can't say Brad didn't have time to murder his wife. He clearly did. He was close enough to the dump site where he could reach it within 5 minutes. She could have been murdered at 12:30am or 1:30am or 4am or 6am. The autopsy will not limit the TOD to within less than a range of a few hrs.
The only way they can play with the timeline is to try and assert that her murder happened after 7am, assert that she went jogging, try to find people who will swear they saw her (and not have those persons' testimony impeached on the witness stand), and try to create doubt about the source of the phone calls received on his cell phone.
You being deliberately obtuse does not phase me.
Chances are if someone broke into your home and killed you and they were skilled at killing without leaving evidence, that all the fibers, hair, and heated email exchanges, and other trace evidence that accumulates during normal living situations might send your innocent loved one to jail...and especially so if you told your neighbors that he was an...This is as much a tragedy in my mind as your death would be. That this country has sent men and women to sentences of death or life in prison on less is nothing to celebrate or be proud of. It is always a good idea, as far as I am concerned, to look at every situation as if it could be you sitting in that defendants seat...would you want every stone turned or would you be satisfied to know that you were sentenced to life or death based soley on circumstantial evidence? Condemn me if you like, but I speak for what I would want for myself if I ever found myself in the unfortunate situation of being wrongly accused.
I am curious...if they found Nancy's hair or blood in his trunk, which is circumstantial evidence, would you still believe there was reasonable doubt?
Doesn't the evidence have to paint a picture of what happened? So often I read in discussions like this that people want one piece of evidence to define guilty or innocence. It's never like that, but rather the interpretation of all the evidence; the big picture. If all the evidence indicates the marriage was a mess and that Brad used technology to snoop on his wife during divorce proceeding ... nothing strange in that. If all the evidence gives no doubt that Brad planned and carried out the murder of his wife ... that's what I'd like to see.
Slam dunk if you look at the totality of the evidence.
That was over 3 years, so that makes it even more intriguing the same DA indicted Cooper in less than 4 months.
You being deliberately obtuse does not phase me.
Chances are if someone broke into your home and killed you and they were skilled at killing without leaving evidence, that all the fibers, hair, and heated email exchanges, and other trace evidence that accumulates during normal living situations might send your innocent loved one to jail...and especially so if you told your neighbors that he was an...This is as much a tragedy in my mind as your death would be. That this country has sent men and women to sentences of death or life in prison on less is nothing to celebrate or be proud of. It is always a good idea, as far as I am concerned, to look at every situation as if it could be you sitting in that defendants seat...would you want every stone turned or would you be satisfied to know that you were sentenced to life or death based soley on circumstantial evidence? Condemn me if you like, but I speak for what I would want for myself if I ever found myself in the unfortunate situation of being wrongly accused.
But, we can say he couldn't have possibly have had the time to do everything the prosecution wants you to believe he did. How could he have cleaned the garage in the middle of the night with no one noticing? With a party across the street and those young hispanics in the white van watching him? (kidding) Wouldn't they have called the police? Or simply made a note of the noise?
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