ozeco41
Philosopher
Thanks for your response. Retired Civil engineer, Military engineer (Australian Army Reserve), law degree but didn't practice.Are you a lawyer? Just wondering?...
It could be interesting to follow through this "Moot Court" scenario but it would be a diversion from the main topic interest of the thread. I'll limit my comments to avoid the derail.
Putting your ideas into a court setting is a great mechanism for forcing clear thinking. It isn't working so far - there are inconsistencies in your posted explanation.
...let that pass for now. You would need to be very specific....Anyway, OBL and AQ are on trial for the events of 9/11....
Comments on this....The defense wants in evidence, and remember in terms of *this* thread it is assumed to have been really there. Maybe represent isn't the best word, I was saying Oystein himself was the prosecution expert witness. You can substitute NIST etc...they would all have close to the same answers. I meant the defense attorney would ask Oystein to elaborate on his furnace...and so far no one in this thread has....
If the defence wants something in evidence it is almost certainly better for the defence to put the evidence. The only access the defence has to the prosecution witness is via "cross examination". It follows after the prosecution has elicited from the witness the evidence that the prosecution wants put before the court. The prosecution would not elicit evidence to support the defence. At that stage the defence cross examines but can only question what the witness has said in response to prosecution questions. The defence can attempt to disprove or put doubt on what the prosecution has claimed but is very limited in getting any evidence not already put by the prosecution.
Two comments here. First you were discussing prosecution's expert witnesses. The defence does not call prosecution witnesses. If these same persons were not called as witnesses by the prosecution it is possible for them to be called by the defence. However the evidence they have is prosecution favourable if they were potential prosecution witnesses. You risk having a "hostile witness". They are biased to the "other side". Second comment you are unclear as to what the prosecution case is and what the defence response should be. It needs clarification before we could make more meaningful comments....The defense would call them because based on their credentials they have knowledge of the subject matter. They would lay out their theories as to why there was molten steel, and why given the official story, temperatures should not have gotten that hot. They've explained this it many times. Thermite reactions own oxygen supply..etc. You can look them up, and compare them to "we don't know why"
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