NotEvenWrong
Muse
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2014
- Messages
- 910
You're an American citizen, right? So you will be familiar with the concept of prosecutors considering there is 'probable cause' to bring a criminal case against a suspect. The case is listed for arraignment before a judge. However, on the day, the suspect's defence lawyer - or even the suspect, if representing himself -manages to persuade the residing judge not to list it for a hearing as the prosecutor's case is not strong enough (in England & Wales, we call this 'Reasonable Prospect of Success'). So the case is dismissed on the grounds of 'insufficient evidence' and not listed for trial.
Vixen, sweety... help us out here.
Consider two scenarios:
- Two individuals are accused of a crime, move through the court system, and are ultimately completely exonerated by the Supreme Court by the end of it, and have all of the scientific and expert backing on their side.
- (Your alternative example, above) The suspect manages to persuade the judge to dismiss the case on grounds of insufficient evidence.
Are these two scenarios the same, or different? Consider this a basic, single question IQ test.
If the same, why? If different, then why are you using this made up example as an analogy to the Raffaele and Amanda trials?
Does this mean he is no longer a suspect? Does it mean he can no longer be prosecuted for the same crime, again? Does it mean the guy is 'proven innocent'? Or as innocent as someone who went to trial and was acquitted? IOW, that 'double jeopardy' kicks in and he can't be charged again for the same crime?
So, hopefully your answer to the above will be "completely different", therefore making these questions totally irrelevant. I have a feeling we're going to be transported to Vixen in Wonderland with your answers though lol.
If you know anything about your own country, you'll know that it means nothing of the sort. You can, and often are charged for the same offence if the police and prosecutor are able to acquire a better case against you.
Hurrrr
So no, being dismissed for 'insufficient evidence' is NOT the same as being found, 'Not Guilty' by your peers ( a judge and jury). Knox and Sollecito were NEVER found 'not guilty' by a jury. Quite the reverse. They were TWICE found 'guilty' of Aggravated Murder after a long and fair trial.
So uh the Supreme Court literally said they did not commit the act and everything about their convictions was eviscerated by the Supreme Court, all legal experts, and all forensic science experts. Yeah that's how bad you lost.
They had their sentence quashed by a couple of supreme court judges who never heard the case first hand and sat for just a couple of days in a paper-only environment, with Sollecito's barrister-for-the-mafia, Sicilian-born Bongiorno, being given five times the amount of hearing time than the other four parties put together.
So.... you're saying the lower courts are actually higher in the court hierarchy than the Supreme Court? And there was a mafia conspiracy to acquit two random kids? Weren't you guys the ones accusing us of conspiracy theories when we have been saying for 12 years the evidence didn't add up and Amanda/Raf were innocent?
Vixen, was Bigfoot in on this as well? You can answer honestly, we won't judge.
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