- Jul 9, 2009
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I usually disagree with your point of view, but i treasure your honesty.But isn't that a presumption of guilt rather than innocence. Only a trial can say that.
I usually disagree with your point of view, but i treasure your honesty.But isn't that a presumption of guilt rather than innocence. Only a trial can say that.
That reminds me of the time when Mulla Nasrudin was a judge. After the prosecution presented its case that the defendant was guilty the Mulla slammed down the gavel and pronounced I believe you are right. The defense jumped to it's feet and presented a rebuttal. The Mulla slammed down his gavel again and said, I believe you are right. The court clerk then stood and said they can't both be right, to which the Mulla commented again, I believe you are right. I believe you believe you are right too.Since I’m not a court I’m under no obligation to presume innocence. I just look at the available evidence and that’s awfully clear.
I was cursed early in life. My Mother told me to be honest and Christianity told me I could never hide behind lies before God. Despite that fact, I think I am still dishonest in many ways. It takes more than just honesty, I think, to unearth deeply suppressed, i.e. unconscious feelings. Thank you though.I usually disagree with your point of view, but i treasure your honesty.
That reminds me of the time when Mulla Nasrudin was a judge. After the prosecution presented its case that the defendant was guilty the Mulla slammed down the gavel and pronounced I believe you are right. The defense jumped to it's feet and presented a rebuttal. The Mulla slammed down his gavel again and said, I believe you are right. The court clerk then stood and said they can't both be right, to which the Mulla commented again, I believe you are right. I believe you believe you are right too.
What we are dealing with here, I believe, is not guilt or innocence but the preservation of a sense that justice is actually justice and not somebody's favoritism. You may have any opinion you like but I will not support any opinion based on withholding evidence. It isn't the defendant but justice itself that then goes on trial. As interchange said, it is better the guilty go free than that faith in justice is corrupted by malpractice. Even monkeys know when the system isn't fair.
You have acknowledged the fact that withholding evidence wasn't right. You may have to eat the fact that these people will by that act get away free. The implications of interchange's post were obvious and very pertinent in my opinion.
You don't think the prosecutor should wait until the Judges ruling on Jan. 8th?That’s not how it works, as I said I’m fine with a mistrial, but the prosecution should begin a new trial immediately.
Can you be more specific about what you mean by 'that's not how it works'? I didn't think I was saying anything about how something works, only that the first thing I think of when a prosecution fucks up is that their case must not stand for justice to be done. I'm not saying anything or recommending anything as a course of action in this particular case, only that I understand and appreciate what interchange said, that his point was the first thing that came to my mind when I read the OP and to my mind thus very relevant. What should or should not happen in this case may well have been compromised by bad legal practice on the part of the government and that if people actually wind up escaping justice as a result, that is better than being found guilty unfairly. Perhaps you are focused on seeing that justice is done, that the guilty are punished, whereas to my mind the greater issue is the preservation of the principles of justice, that the most vital principle of a system of law is that it be fair by its own standards of fairness.That’s not how it works, as I said I’m fine with a mistrial, but the prosecution should begin a new trial immediately.
No retrial. Prosecution really screwed the pooch here.
Maybe it will discourage prosecutorial misconduct, willful negligence of the law by enforcement agencies and rein in an out of control FBI.Sucks, this will only encourage others to think they can steal with impunity.
I think you are reading your own link wrong. Nothing in it says the FBI did anything wrong.Maybe it will discourage prosecutorial misconduct, willful negligence of the law by enforcement agencies and rein in an out of control FBI.
Of course, there's no way they were complicit in withholding information for 3 or 4 years. Of course.I think you are reading your own link wrong. Nothing in it says the FBI did anything wrong.
It doesn't say the FBI withheld info. It says the prosecution withheld the info it got from the FBI.Of course, there's no way they were complicit in withholding information for 3 or 4 years. Of course.
Pretty clear prosecutorial misconduct to illegally suppress evidence that the FBI had procured.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/12/20/us/cliven-bundy-mistrail.html
'A federal judge declared a mistrial on Wednesday in the case of Nevada cattle ranchers and one of their supporters, whose dispute with the government over grazing rights turned into an armed standoff in 2014. The judge stated that prosecutors had improperly withheld evidence from the defense.
The ruling in Federal District Court in Las Vegas by Judge Gloria M. Navarro was the latest failure by federal prosecutors to convict participants in the standoff led by Cliven D. Bundy and his sons Ammon E. Bundy and Ryan C. Bundy. Two earlier trials against other defendants ended in hung juries.
The judge ruled that prosecutors violated the rights of the defendants — the three Bundys and a supporter, Ryan W. Payne — by failing to turn over an array of material ahead of the trial. That included video taken from within the Bundy ranch during the standoff by a federal informant, evidence that F.B.I. agents were involved in the standoff, and a threat assessment of the Bundys drafted by the government. She ruled verbally, and not in writing.
........
Among the withheld reports the judge mentioned, she said, was one in which government officials said the Bundys were not violent. “She cited all of that,” Ms. Bundy said. “At this point, I don’t know what kind of a case they have against us.”
............
The Bundys had long alleged misconduct by federal agents and prosecutors, and powerful evidence for their claims emerged last week in The Oregonian newspaper, which made public a complaint that a Bureau of Land Management agent had filed with the Justice Department. The agent alleged unprofessionalism, bias, heavy-handed tactics, and withholding of evidence by his colleagues during and after the standoff, and he said that after he informed prosecutors, he was removed from the case.
..........
"Andrea Parker, the wife of Eric Parker, an ally of the Bundys who pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor related to the standoff, said, “It’s great that they’re showing the malicious prosecution that’s been going on — by the prosecution, the F.B.I. and the B.L.M. It’s finally getting out there, it’s something we weren’t afforded or allowed at our trial.”
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nati...ac0fd7f097e_story.html?utm_term=.5b4aa6662ca9
"U.S. District Court Judge Gloria Navarro determined that the prosecution suppressed evidence from FBI surveillance cameras recording the Bundy family home and the presence of Bureau of Land Management snipers around the property in the days leading up to the standoff there. Additionally, the prosecution did not provide FBI logs, maps, reports and threat assessments that said the Bundy family was not dangerous.
Navarro pointed to assessments conducted by the FBI, the Southern Nevada Counter Terrorism Center and the BLM that said “the Bundy family is not violent” and that they “would probably get in your face, but not get into a shootout.”
The court “regrettably believes a mistrial is the only suitable option,” Navarro told the packed Nevada courtroom. “A fair trial at this point is impossible.”
It doesn't say the FBI withheld info. It says the prosecution withheld the info it got from the FBI.
Of course, there's no way they were complicit in withholding information for 3 or 4 years. Of course.
Maybe it will discourage prosecutorial misconduct, willful negligence of the law by enforcement agencies and rein in an out of control FBI.
Cliven Bundy is still a deadbeat thief and welfare cheat.
And yet in the battle of him vs government he was by far the lesser of two evils.
Bullshit. Bundy invited armed thugs to his ranch and threatened violence in defying court orders. He's a violent deadbeat thief.And yet in the battle of him vs government he was by far the lesser of two evils.
And another piece of the puzzle falls into place.Bullshit. Bundy invited armed thugs to his ranch and threatened violence in defying court orders. He's a violent deadbeat thief.
Keep in mind that the US attorney who brought the case resigned at the beginning of the Trump administration. Did the Trump appointees throw the case?
Bullshit. Bundy invited armed thugs to his ranch and threatened violence in defying court orders. He's a violent deadbeat thief.
Keep in mind that the US attorney who brought the case resigned at the beginning of the Trump administration. Did the Trump appointees throw the case?
