So an "honest" lawyer would deliberately obscure the truth by not presenting all evidence?
Stop playing. He's the prosecutor. It's not his job to present all the evidence so you can stop acting like it is.
If his job is supposed to be limited to only presenting certain evidence, then why did the system allow him to present evidence that he knew would be damaging to his own case?
The system allows him to do what he did. And the same system provides the remedy against him for doing what he did. God allows us to do whatever we want too. That doesn't mean there isn't gonna be a price to be paid.
Why not simply institute a rule that a prosecutor may only present evidence, no matter how deceptive or false, that only supports his case?
What on earth do you think a prosecutor is supposed to do? He's supposed to only present evidence that supports his case. You're just talking silly now.
It's the same thing with a defense attorney. Even if he knows his client is guilty, if he starts presenting evidence in such a way that he is deliberately not defending his client, he can be disbarred.
So would you say any time a prosecutor presents all evidence instead of evidence that only supports him should be barred from practice?
Yep. That's what a trial is for. There is NEVER any reason for a prosecutor to present ALL the evidence to a grand jury unless he doesn't want to prosecute. Any 1st year law student can tell you that.
What do you think would have happened if the lawyer had withheld evidence and taken the case to trial, only for all evidence to then come to light?
What do you mean? That's what happens in nearly 99% of the cases. Prosecutors, when sending cases to grand juries, rarely if ever, present ALL the evidence.
They run that risk all the time of evidence coming out during trial that damages their case. That's why defense attorneys have to do their homework too. That's how due process is supposed to work. The prosecutor indicts and the defendant gets his day in court to disprove what the prosecutor says.
The prosecutor is not supposed to bypass the process.
But in this case, you had a prosecutor do what the defense attorney would normally do in a trial. But there was no trial. Why? Because that due process was denied because the prosecutor decided he didn't want to prosecute.
Do you really think a trial jury would see the same evidence and somehow come to a conclusion that Wilson murdered Michael Brown?
Man you're talking some out right prejudicial unjustice right now. This is the kinda crap that keeps people at odds with the justice system.
I don't care if they would have seen the same evidence or not during the trial. That's up to a defense attorney to pull out.
The prosecutor is supposed to be trying to prosecute. He isn't supposed to be trying to present evidence that dissuades a prosecution.
from one end of the country to the other, at the city, county, state and federal level, you can see that if a prosecutor wants to indict, it's pretty much a forgone conclusion with grand juries.
But you keep talking about him presenting all the evidence. SMH. That's NOT HIS JOB with a grand jury.
And I noted that I regret that choice on my part. I brought in a common piece of discussion among people when talking about such high-profile cases, especially when the evidence as presented is so overwhelming against the case the media has presented. You have turned the money aspect on me in a way that I did not foresee, and it has taken away from the judicial discussion. I regret having gone down that road, Zaac.
Then please stop talking about it and I won't mention it.:thumbsup:
In what way is this double-speak or, as you put it, "Say(ing) one thing out one side of your mouth and then something else out the other?"
You said you regretted mentioning it and in your next statement went right back to talking about it as one aspect of the case.
You have demonstrated a desire to see further action on this case.
Nope. The case is done unless the DOJ wants to do something. This is a separate issue. I've demonstrated a desire to see the law upheld. He deliberately didn't do his job. He should be disbarred and removed from his position.
You have stated that some sort of charge should have come against Wilson, even though the evidence presented as corroborated Wilson's testimony and has silenced many of the "eyewitnesses" who later recanted their stories.
What I have stated is that Wilson should have been indicted and the case sent to trial. If you've got two months of evidence that you present to a grand jury, than there is more than enough probable cause available for an indictment and a jury trial.
I've been accused many times of being a Limbaugh or Hannity parrot because I am rather conservative in my views. I do not listen to either man. I have noticed that the people who most often accuse others of "listening to Rush" or "listening to Hannity" actually listen to them more than the person they are accusing.
Oh gosh. I've told you already. I listen all the time. I listen to conservative talk. I listen to liberal talk and anything in between. I like to know what people are saying.
And you don't have to listen to the shows for me to know that your comments are the direct result of repeating what someone else has parroted from listening to the shows.
I get it. That's how things work. People hear it one place. It gets blogged and reposted and talked about and people like the way something was said and they adopt the talking point. The folks on the left do it. The folks on the right do it.
I certainly don't want you to think that I'm "spitting in your face," Zaac. If it came off as such, then you have my sincere apologies. I might ferociously argue a point with someone, and I may quote them to drive home points they have made, but I have never knowingly "spat in someone's face" in a debate. It's difficult for me to "choose to believe the political right's portrayal that the media was falsely portraying" when the evidence has shown that the 'political right' got this one right. The media did falsely portray this case.
But Tony, that's not what we've been talking about. The media is always sensationalizing and getting ahead of the actual facts.
I'm talking about a prosecutor who well knew that it is rare, if ever, that a prosecutor will present ALL of the evidence to a grand jury especially while not giving them any direction. There is simply no reason to do so unless you don't want to prosecute.
I take issue with Officer Wilson in that he is so callous that he killed a man and says he would do everything again the same way. As a follower of Jesus Christ, I can't help but take issue with that . But maybe he doesn't know Jesus. But my feelings about the aforementioned has nothing to do with my feelings about the prosecutor.
The bar is so low for getting a grand jury indictment that the prosecutor wouldn't have had to do anything but show the jury a picture of Michael Brown's dead body and tell them that he was shot by Officer Wilson's gun but they weren't sure if the shooting was warranted. BOOM! Indictment.
That's literally how easy it is. Over several years time, you could probably count on one hand the number of grand jury hearings nationwide in which ALL available evidence is placed before a grand jury. It doesn't happen because it just isn't necessary.
The grand juries essentially work for the same jurisdiction as does the prosecutor. There's no reason for a grand jury to not give a prosecutor an indictment unless the prosecutor doesn't want to prosecute.
That's when you give them ALL the evidence. That's when you don't give them instruction about what to charge the defendant with.
He didn't want to prosecute and needs to be disbarred for making a mockery out of the judicial process.
Why? Because, and I use the word correctly here, it is a money maker for them. Racially charged headlines, particularly in the case of a death, bring in viewers in droves and drives up ad revenue. I know that sounds callous and harsh, but I didn't make the rule on that one. There's a reason news stories about a black man killing a white man rarely rate the evening news, when a story about a white man killing a black man garners hours of coverage. It's a guaranteed increase in revenue for the network. Blame the system on that one.
But that shouldn't have any bearing on a prosecutor doing his job.