LondonJohn
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 12, 2010
- Messages
- 21,162
Del Prato is NOT going to say that, as she hadn't investigated it at the time. If you know anything about cross examination, the barristers gave her every opportunity to complain that Rudy broke in, which they could not ask outright, as a leading question, and at no stage did she say so.
Have a practice making a closing submission from this.
What on earth are you talking about now?
You still don't know what a leading question is. It would have been entirely proper and admissible to ask her something like: "Did it appear to you that someone had broken in?" And in any case, it's entirely possible that there were easy points of ingress to this nursery (nurseries don't exactly tend to be highly secure premises, nor do they tend to spend much money or effort on security (window locks, reinforced door locks, burglar alarms etc). And the nursery had been unlawfully entered at least once previously, when money had also been stolen from the lockable cupboard within the premises.
So it's entirely feasible that the petty crooks and drug addicts of Milan (and/or Guede himself) had found a way to get into the nursery with relative ease (e.g. a small unlocked window which could be opened from the outside, or a door which was easy to pick), such that there actually wasn't visible evidence of damage (e.g. broken window, broken door/door frame). And therefore even though del Prato answered that she didn't notice any signs of forced entry, that in no way implies that whoever trespassed into the nursery that night did so by way of having been "let in".
And why do you tend to regress so often to this strange fugue based upon fantasies of standing up in a courtroom making legal arguments? Or claiming that you know more about court practices than others on this thread, including me? Strange indeed.