LondonJohn
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 12, 2010
- Messages
- 21,162
I haven't thought about it very hard. There was a challenge a while back. I put 10 seconds thought into it and posted a scenario. People didn't like it.
The evidence uniquely determines a single scenario?
The defence are supposed to have access to people who can tell them what the single "true" scenario is supposed to be. Where they can't rely on them things are harder. Tell me the single true scenario for how the dna reading on the bra clasp occurred, or do you allow yourself multiple scenarios there?
None that you will accept exist. The thing about believing they are innocent is that you don't accept scenarios where they are guilty as plausible, though clearly others do. In any case, the prosecution and the "guilters" don't have to provide a scenario. There just has to be enough space for a scenario to exist.
And why shouldn't he?
To find a criminal defendant guilty of the charges brought against him/her, the court must be satisfied that the defendant has been proven to have committed the crimes beyond all doubt that any reasonable person might hold.
To find a criminal defendant not guilty of the charges brought against him/her, the court must be satisfied that the defendant has not been proven to have committed the crimes beyond all doubt that any reasonable person might hold. This means that if the court has any reasonable doubt whatsoever as to the guilt of the defendant, then there must be an acquittal.
There are extremely good and proper reasons why the burden of proof in criminal cases lies entirely on the side of those seeking to prove the charges, and why it doesn't lie with the defendant to prove that he/she didn't commit the crimes. Often (and in nearly all cases that make it as far as a trial) the defendant cannot prove his/her innocence. Proof of innocence is a very nice luxury to have as a defendant - just ask Patrick Lumumba. But for those who can't prove their innocence, a trial is all about the prosecution trying to prove its case to the court, and about the defence seeking to show that there is reasonable doubt about the prosecution's case.
If somebody cannot be proven beyond a reasonable doubt (to the court's satisfaction) of having committed a criminal offence, then that person should be acquitted and the presumption of innocence should remain intact. That's one of the bedrocks of modern jurisprudence. In the eyes of the criminal law, "not guilty" equates to "innocent", and rightly so.
So, as this relates to the Knox/Sollecito case, it's critically important to understand this asymmetry. In order to believe that Knox and Sollecito should be found guilty of these crimes, one ought to be certain beyond all doubts that a reasonable person might hold that they did commit these crimes. But in order to believe that they should be found not guilty, one does not need to be certain that they did not commit these crimes. In fact, one only needs to have the smallest element of doubt over whether they committed the crimes in order to believe they should be found not guilty.
I realise there are some here who have long had certainty that Knox and Sollecito had absolutely nothing to do with the murder and associated crimes. I am not one of them, but I strongly tend to believe they were not involved. Ultimately, unless Knox and Sollecito can ever prove their innocence, I don't think anyone will ever be able to be 100% certain. But the whole point is that people don't need to be certain of their innocence: if there's not enough evidence to convict, then that essentially equates to innocence.