At the minute the prosecution seems to have nothing concrete apart from him leaving the house ...which could be explained...presumably his body fluids at the crime scene will be the nail in the coffin
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Disagree. In that case, the search would be what is DNA, not how do police find DNA and collecting DNA. This is not beyond all doubt--it's beyond a reasonable doubt
Agreed. Also, he could easily argue that he was taking a general interest in DNA as (in addition to the conversation he had with his mother - pertaining to DNA) the whole island would have been discussing the case. It does not necessarily imply guilt.I don't think that constitutes beyond reasonable doubt.
Disagree. In that case, the search would be what is DNA, not how do police find DNA and collecting DNA. This is not beyond all doubt--it's beyond a reasonable doubt
What does at his backside mean? Can anyone translate. Is it a Scottish term?Hi, started at beginning of other thread yesterday so only just caught up so apologies about the jump backwards but something's bugging me about the CCTV from his house.
His mum says he returned and had a shower leaving his clothes 'at his backside' how does she know this if he subsequently went back out and disposed of said clothes?
is the CCTV inside the house? The bathroom?
I haven't seen anything mentioning this (although I was up stupidly late reading so could have)
It may be a minor thing but it jumped out at me straight away as confusing
I don't think that constitutes beyond reasonable doubt.
What does at his backside mean? Can anyone translate. Is it a Scottish term?
What does at his backside mean? Can anyone translate. Is it a Scottish term?
I thought tracing his movements via his iphone would have been done as standard practice?
Not even close for me.Like I said, we have yet to hear the defense, but taking all of what we've heard so far into consideration from the prosecution, it meets beyond a reasonable doubt to me.
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Not even close for me.
just left where he took them off I believeWhat does at his backside mean? Can anyone translate. Is it a Scottish term?
Hi, started at beginning of other thread yesterday so only just caught up so apologies about the jump backwards but something's bugging me about the CCTV from his house.
His mum says he returned and had a shower leaving his clothes 'at his backside' how does she know this if he subsequently went back out and disposed of said clothes?
is the CCTV inside the house? The bathroom?
I haven't seen anything mentioning this (although I was up stupidly late reading so could have)
It may be a minor thing but it jumped out at me straight away as confusing
Good point. Far as we know, the clothing found on the beach was jogging bottoms and shorts, both inside out as they might be if taken off in a hurry - so am not sure what his mother was referring to, as surely no other clothing was left in the bathroom
cctv, I think they said it was front and back of the house - hence how she saw him return and jump over the back garden wall.
May also be more inside the house - as mrazda said, to assist because of the person with dementia who was living there.
His mother testified she told him, not that he asked, as far as I'm aware.His mother testified that he asked her what DNA was so presumably she told him. Maybe he felt he had enough of a grasp on what it was to go ahead and search how police collect it.
Not even close for me.
Edited to add - far too much evidence that can be explained away as circumstantial for me at this point in time. I would not be happy giving a guilty verdict based on what we have seen so far. It just does not objectively meet the criteria for me. Emotionally, I say he’s guilty as sin. The evidence is just not there for me though.
The point is, we can only base things on the concrete evidence. There is not enough for me yet. I do think he is guilty, but you cannot base your opinions on gut instinct, only facts. If I feel this way, then I am sure that others on the jury do as well.Well I’m glad your in your house and not on the jury