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Scott Peterson

Interestingly, one of the people who I argued with also argues for the innocence of Jodi Aris.


Who are these people you are arguing with? 3rd graders?

I don't see how anyone could believe Jodi Arias is innocent.
 
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derail, but how would you go about determining that you would want David Sugar recused?


There are some easy questions:

"Do you agree that our justice system is fair?"

"If the evidence showed that the defendant were guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, would you be able to vote to convict him?"

"What do you think of our courthouse?"

Without being insulting, I think "social justice" people are pretty easy to pick out. They tend to volunteer their opinions with little prompting.
 
I'm totally against the death penalty. And Scott Peterson is totally guilty.

I'd also have convicted Jodi Arias.

The Casey Anthony case is extremely problematic. I've not the slightest doubt she's guilty of something. She almost certainly killed her child. The question is whether it was accidental, intentional but not premeditated, or premeditated. I could easily have convicted her of manslaughter, probably of second degree murder, but not of the capital murder she was charged with. Thanks to the incompetence of the police and prosecution, they simply didn't have the evidence.
 
Who are these people you are arguing with? 3rd graders?

I don't see how anyone could believe she is innocent.

There is a large Jodi Arias innocence crowd. . . . . They claim he threatened her.
In her case, I think it is cute women syndrome. Yes, there is a bit of that with Amanda of course.

I bring up an old cop named Jim Barton and nobody is even interested.
I plan to be moving within a couple of months but plan to get a post office box so I can mail him when I get settled. I am not going to use a home address to mail to a prison.

So you know who I am talking about
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/scared-to-death/
 
I would like to see the death penalty abolished but as long as it's on the books, some people should be sentenced to it. As a prosecutor I would limit it to serial killers, torture killers and people who kill in prison.

There was a guy in my town who kept two small children locked in a dark closet all day. The older sister (4 or 5) starved to death first and her little brother was left with her rotting remains until he also died of starvation.

If you are going to have a death penalty, that's where it should be invoked. If this guy isn't sentenced to death then the death penalty shouldn't be on the books. But if that guy isn't executed I'm OK with it.
 
I'm totally against the death penalty. And Scott Peterson is totally guilty.

I'd also have convicted Jodi Arias.

The Casey Anthony case is extremely problematic. I've not the slightest doubt she's guilty of something. She almost certainly killed her child. The question is whether it was accidental, intentional but not premeditated, or premeditated. I could easily have convicted her of manslaughter, probably of second degree murder, but not of the capital murder she was charged with. Thanks to the incompetence of the police and prosecution, they simply didn't have the evidence.

In the cases of Arias and Scott Peterson, I would personally have no problem injecting the stuff or pulling the switch or whatever.

Casey Anthony most certainly killed Caylee or she died as a result of Casey (perhaps not intentional, perhaps leaving her in the car or trunk) but what is fascinating about this case is the fabulous defense Jose Baez put forth. I watched the entire trial, including jury selection and when Baez gave his opening argument I knew it was as close to a perfect defense as was possible.
 
I don't think there is. I believe it is likely Peterson is guilty. (I would estimate maybe 80% likely to be guilty). To me, the strongest evidence of guilt is that he went fishing where the body was found. I think it was a mistake for the police to reveal where he went fishing to the public. That allowed the defense to raise this possibility, which may result in some doubt of guilt.

There was also no forensic evidence found on the boat to indicate there may have been body on it.

David

In fact there was forensic evidence missing from the boat - the concrete anchors! I wonder what happened to them...
 
There is a large Jodi Arias innocence crowd. . . . . They claim he threatened her.
In her case, I think it is cute women syndrome. Yes, there is a bit of that with Amanda of course.

I bring up an old cop named Jim Barton and nobody is even interested.
I plan to be moving within a couple of months but plan to get a post office box so I can mail him when I get settled. I am not going to use a home address to mail to a prison.

So you know who I am talking about
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/scared-to-death/

Is this the one with the recording about "Phelps" or someone like that?
 
In fact there was forensic evidence missing from the boat - the concrete anchors! I wonder what happened to them...

The police tried to plant evidence on them, but bungled it so badly they made them disappear rather than send to the crime lab for processing.
 
There is a large Jodi Arias innocence crowd. . . . . They claim he threatened her.
In her case, I think it is cute women syndrome. Yes, there is a bit of that with Amanda of course.

I bring up an old cop named Jim Barton and nobody is even interested.
I plan to be moving within a couple of months but plan to get a post office box so I can mail him when I get settled. I am not going to use a home address to mail to a prison.

So you know who I am talking about
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/scared-to-death/

I would never have voted guilty in Barton's case.
 
That senator that said rape doesn't result in pregnancy wasn't stupid or ignorant of biology. He was just so pro-life that he wanted a difficult issue to go away. He wanted it so badly he actually tricked himself into believing nonsense.
I don't think this is how the brain works. More likely, his belief system tells him that God wouldn't make it possible for a woman to get pregnant by rape, the same way he wouldn't make it possible to for us to destroy the planet by burning stuff we found in the ground that he probably put there for us to use.
 
I found a way that skepticism interacts with this case is an interesting manner.
The defense is trying to make a big deal about the limbs and head were not attached to her body

How many have heard of the Salish Sea human foot discoveries?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salish_Sea_human_foot_discoveries
Decomposition may separate the foot from the body because the ankle is relatively weak, and the buoyancy caused by air either inside or trapped within a shoe would allow it to float away.[5] According to Simon Fraser University entomologist Gail Anderson, extremities such as the hands, feet, and head often detach as a body decomposes in the water, although they rarely float
 
While I think Peterson is very likely guilty, one thing that does bother me is that if a new piece of evidence turned up tomorrow - say, an item of Laci's bloody clothing with another man's DNA on it - there wouldn't then be anything to tie Peterson to the crime. The strongest evidence against him is really the absence of other suspects; the circumstantial evidence is all pretty weak.
 
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While I think Peterson is very likely guilty, one thing that does bother me is that if a new piece of evidence turned up tomorrow - say, an item of Laci's bloody clothing with another man's DNA on it - there wouldn't then be anything to tie Peterson to the crime. The strongest evidence against him is really the absence of other suspects; the circumstantial evidence is all pretty weak.

Can you think of another crime where there is an actual circumstantial case this solid where you then find DNA evidence (that is not contamination) which points to an alternate suspect.

Lacy Peterson was last seen alive in Modesto California with the last person known to see her alive being her husband.
That same day, Scott decides to go fishing 90 miles away and 1.5 hours away from his home. He spends only about a hour fishing.
Laci and Conners body is found washed ashore a few months later in the same body of water which he was fishing and according to a NOAA scientist, the currents would have drawn their bodies from where he was "fishing" to where they were found. The bodies are consistent (there might be some wiggle room on the exact date) to when she disappeared.
There are more minor details that further cement the case.

The alternative is that somebody else murdered Laci the same day or within a few days and ditched her body in the same water as Scott was fishing. In this situation, pretty much somebody has to be trying to frame him.
 
Can you think of another crime where there is an actual circumstantial case this solid where you then find DNA evidence (that is not contamination) which points to an alternate suspect.

Lacy Peterson was last seen alive in Modesto California with the last person known to see her alive being her husband.
That same day, Scott decides to go fishing 90 miles away and 1.5 hours away from his home. He spends only about a hour fishing.
Laci and Conners body is found washed ashore a few months later in the same body of water which he was fishing and according to a NOAA scientist, the currents would have drawn their bodies from where he was "fishing" to where they were found. The bodies are consistent (there might be some wiggle room on the exact date) to when she disappeared.
There are more minor details that further cement the case.

The alternative is that somebody else murdered Laci the same day or within a few days and ditched her body in the same water as Scott was fishing. In this situation, pretty much somebody has to be trying to frame him.

Well, if evidence emerged against someone else, the fishing would have to be a coincidence. I don't think framing is necessary. You say "a circumstantial case this solid", but it basically rests on him going fishing in the same area in which her body was discovered - suggestive, certainly, but not rock solid.

My issue is just that if there were a plausible alternative suspect, the evidence against Peterson wouldn't need explaining. It would just fall away. While I think he's almost certainly guilty, the ease with which the case against him could be turned upside down does make me a bit uncomfortable.

Compare that with, for example, Guede. I find it very hard to imagine any way in which he could be exonerated - at most, new evidence could show that someone else was with him, but it could never exonerate him, because the existing evidence ties him too closely to the crime.
 
When he was arrested in a disguise and a with a murder kit near his girlfriends house with a map to her workplace after selling his wife's Range Rover (why would you sell it unless you knew she wasn't coming back) that was only the final nail in the coffin of "circumstantial evidence".

it basically rests on him going fishing in the same area

No.
 
When he was arrested in a disguise and a with a murder kit near his girlfriends house with a map to her workplace after selling his wife's Range Rover (why would you sell it unless you knew she wasn't coming back) that was only the final nail in the coffin of "circumstantial evidence".

How he behaved when he knew he was under surveillance and about to be arrested means little to me, and would be very weak evidence of guilt, if evidence at all (had he fled immediately after Laci's disappearance, now, that would be different).

To see that as evidence of guilt, as you apparently do, you would have to also believe innocent people having nothing to fear from being arrested.

Feel free to enlighten me. To me it seems that's the strongest evidence against him.

ETA: Um, a "murder kit"? You think he was planning on killing some more people? Well this certainly puts a different spin on things... (spin, I suspect, being the operative word)
 
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Yes, most people assume the reason that he had rope and a shovel and knives and a map to his estranged ex-girlfriends workplace is so he could kill her.

What kind of sick **** would sell his missing wife's vehicle in order to buy himself a new truck?

There was of course, more to the evidence against him. I'm not going to try to change your mind, I'm getting bored of that in life.

You're more uncomfortable that there wasn't more direct evidence against him than you would be in a society that would let someone get away with something like that because there wasn't more direct evidence? I'm sure all of the jury members sleep soundly at night.
 
Yes, most people assume the reason that he had rope and a shovel and knives and a map to his estranged ex-girlfriends workplace is so he could kill her.
What kind of sick **** would sell his missing wife's vehicle in order to buy himself a new truck?

There was of course, more to the evidence against him. I'm not going to try to change your mind, I'm getting bored of that in life.

You're more uncomfortable that there wasn't more direct evidence against him than you would be in a society that would let someone get away with something like that because there wasn't more direct evidence? I'm sure all of the jury members sleep soundly at night.

From this article:

Authorities issued an arrest warrant for Peterson late Thursday, a day before investigators had positively identified the badly decomposed remains. Modesto police, the California Highway Patrol and federal agents had been watching the husband for months, using wiretaps, vehicle tracking devices and direct surveillance. They said Friday that they feared Peterson might flee, perhaps to Mexico.

"We started to worry," California Atty. Gen. Bill Lockyer said in an interview on CNN's Larry King Live.

"He was aware of surveillance teams, was waving at them and being, you know, kind of a smart aleck, and so they finally decided that they ought to just pull him in."

So your theory, I take it, is that Peterson intended to evade the cops he knew were tailing him, and to head over to his girlfriend's workplace to murder her because... Well, just because? I see.

Funnily enough, yes, I do think the beyond reasonable doubt principle is generally a good thing. Regardless of what I think, that's the way the law works, or should do.

I have little interest in spending more time sifting through factoids to get at any scintilla of truth that might exist in them, so I agree there's little point in you posting more evidence if it's on a par with that in your previous post. I'm interested in a balanced discussion, not sensationalism.
 

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