Thermal
August Member
Georgia DOC placing orders for additional xxl orange jumpsuits.
"I'm not saying he deserved to die for X, but I'm bringing X up a lot and spend all my time hairsplitting the difference between X and Y" has been way too much of this discussion.
I'm not 100% sure what you mean by this, but the prosecution is taking down the defense's closing statements during her time, one by one.
The multiple 50 billion page hijacks about whether he was running or sauntering, the hairsplits about whether he was passing through, trespassing, or casing, etc.
None of that matter.
There aren't many hairs to split anymore.
It's a bit cynical, but ain't nobody gonna want to deal with this over the long weekend. The jurors will return a decision by close of business Wednesday, assuming closing arguments end before midday Tuesday or so.
Closing arguments are happening right now. Jury should start deliberating later today.
I'm sure the defense will still find a way to ask for a mistrial because there's a black pastor in the same zip code 28 more times.
Some back and forth now with the defense and prosecution about what they'd like to include in their closing. It looks like the judge is going to make some changes.
Was that the issue with the slides? He is such a crybaby. He can't handle objections. He gets huffy and winey. If an objection is completely unreasonable it should be very easy to make an argument to defeat it. No need to stomp your feet and hold your breath. He already got called out by the judge once for that for disrespecting the court. I'm surprised the judge didn't call him out again here. I think the judge is getting worn out and just wants to get this over. It is almost done.
.....
ETA: These are some really, really terrible closing arguments by the defense. He keeps phrasing things as what Travis is "allowing" Arbery to do.
******* are still going to walk.
No, they aren't.
I saw a comment yesterday that the defense got mad during jury instructions when the judge explained the citizen's arrest law to the jury, and explained that it had to be an immediate response to observing a felony in progress.
The defense lawyers whined that he had just pulled the rug out from under their whole defense.
Because they wanted to base their defense on a "citizen's arrest" law that didn't exist, it seems.
Calling what they did a citizen's arrest does not make it one.
A private person may arrest an offender if the offense is committed in his presence or within his immediate knowledge. If the offense is a felony and the offender is escaping or attempting to escape, a private person may arrest him upon reasonable and probable grounds of suspicion.