Boxlicker101
Licker of Boxes
- Joined
- Apr 5, 2003
- Posts
- 33,665
Originally Posted by Boxlicker101
Circumstantial evidence is enough to cast suspicion on somebody, but it should NEVER be enough for a conviction. Eye witness testimony is better, but even that can be doubtful.
Of course. That's why I said "should NEVER be enough" because the jury can convict just because they take a dislike to the accused. Members of the jury in the Scott Peterson case admitted as much after sentencing. That's one reason why prosecutors try to present defendants as ratbastards, even when that has nothing to do with guilt or innocence.
Circumstantial evidence is enough to cast suspicion on somebody, but it should NEVER be enough for a conviction. Eye witness testimony is better, but even that can be doubtful.
Never? (Those sweeping generalizations again.) Isn't what counts for conviction in a Jury trial the votes of the Jurers based on what they actually took into account, regardless of what they were told to take into acount/or not?
Of course. That's why I said "should NEVER be enough" because the jury can convict just because they take a dislike to the accused. Members of the jury in the Scott Peterson case admitted as much after sentencing. That's one reason why prosecutors try to present defendants as ratbastards, even when that has nothing to do with guilt or innocence.