HSienzant
Philosopher
The way the original trial was conducted was a mistrial.
The judge, the jury, the defense, and the prosecution all would disagree with you on that.
It was not an excellent court
In the U.S., the accused has a right to a speedy trial, not to an excellent one.
Your argument reduces to not just McDonald, but everyone, is entitled to "an excellent court". Since by definition (whatever definition you choose to use) some courts will be above average, some average, and some below, you are claiming most accused don't have "an excellent court". So what?
...and the federal rules of evidence and procedure were not followed.
You would think if that was actually the case, he would have won on appeal at least once.
The point is that if you were wrongly convicted and put in prison for thirty years you would probably go raving mad, as well as facing financial ruin. Something needs to be done about it.
About what? You're back to begging the question.
There is a bit about this ..
Relevance to the case under discussion? None.
Hank