Thanks mrazda1 for the journalists comments. No surprise that he is showing lack of emotion and taking everything in. Starting to sway toward thinking he may take the stand afterall.
I was a court reporter way back in the olden days before Twitter. Actually, even before mobile phones unless you include the solitary Motorola brick car phone that my office had!
Trials always take the same format.
The prosecution begins with a statement, then start calling their witnesses who they examine on the stand. The defence is allowed to cross-examine these witnesses.
When the prosecution has called all their witnesses, the defence calls theirs. The prosecution can cross-examine these witnesses.
When all evidence has been heard, the prosecution sums up their case in a speech. Then the defence sums up. The defence always goes last as it is considered fairer to the defendant (the jury having their statement freshest in their minds).
Then the Judge/Sheriff sums up the entire case, makes any points of law to the jury.
The jury is then sent out to deliberate. They must try and reach a unanimous verdict but if that isn't possible the judge will allow a majority verdict.
The defendant is under no obligation to take the stand during the defence phase. That is a decision the defence team must make. Usually they don't want to expose the defendant to cross examination by the prosecution.
All my court reporting experience was in England, but the basic format is the same in both countries I believe.
ETA: Personally, I can't see the defence subjecting a 16 year old lad to cross examination.
Not according to the trialThe evidence was put there by the accused not the police.
Perhaps a forensics or police witness will give evidence about any material discovered on his devices if relevant. Trying to think how many people they could fit into Monday and Tuesday morning...
Thanks, Mrazda! I was trying to imagine the scene in the courtroom and how the accused was reacting. It seems like no reaction.
I could be totally wrong here but this is my best guess.I remember in the Vincent Tabak trial (Joanna Yeates murder) hisuse was deemed inadmissible in court - despite showing women being strangled and photos of women arranged to look a lot like his victim. It was revealed after the jury had reached a verdict.
I’ve never fully understood why, but I think it’s similar to how previous convictions aren’t mentioned too.
Every defendant has the right to not take the stand.Can the prosecution not call the accused as a witness??? Where is the sense in that?
Why would the accused taking the stand result in a mistrial?
Only read this post since the trial started. Only interest is a friend of mine lives close by and I saw it on her social media and her daughter was an ex pupil. All I can say is glad you aren’t my jury- the posts on this forum have definitely all swayed one way. Until all evidence is heard, I rarely form a strong opinion. In this case, I am particularly dubious about the whole family- for lots of reasons that have been said in the media and in the trial. I am curious to see how this pans out- motive is not strong at this point.
Only read this post since the trial started. Only interest is a friend of mine lives close by and I saw it on her social media and her daughter was an ex pupil. All I can say is glad you aren’t my jury- the posts on this forum have definitely all swayed one way. Until all evidence is heard, I rarely form a strong opinion. In this case, I am particularly dubious about the whole family- for lots of reasons that have been said in the media and in the trial. I am curious to see how this pans out- motive is not strong at this point.