There is neither video nor DNA nor fingerprint evidence which implicates John Wilkes Booth in the slaying of Abraham Lincoln. There are no taped or written confessions and there are no witnesses to testify against him.
So, by the logic used, he should be exonerrated right?????
Wrong! Guess what? No Prosecutor could establish Booth's guilt beyond reasonable doubt in a court of Law at this point either!!
The wrong-headed assumptions used are to assume that simply because one form of evidence (not used in his INITTIAL conviction B.T.W.) does not exist, that that implies he is innocent. It does not. It's not appreciably different than a really good fingerprint. You can prove guilt with it, but not innocence.
I could murder someone right now, and there would be neither DNA nor fingerprint evidence of it.....
But that doesn't make me innocent.
The misuse and misunderstanding of DNA evidence, and what it proves is going to drum up numerous accounts of these individuals winning appeals and re-trials. 20 years after their convictions, after numerous witnesses have died, when State Attorneys realize they can't prove YET AGAIN that someone like Dewey is a duly tried and convicted murderer.
There is a chance that he is innocent (there always is).
There is also a chance that there are as yet un-discovered purple unicorns living on some non-descript island-chain in the South Pacific.
There is also an extremely likely chance that a murderer just beat the system. Prosecutors aren't perpetually pursuing re-convictions and appeals 20 years after a fact whereas a defender will feverishly jockey on your behalf for as many years as you will keep him on retainer. $$$$$$$$$ See the overturn of the Death penalty for the manifestly guilty Mumia Abu Jamal for an object lesson. (In similarly eerie fashion, some key witnesses are now dead in that case as well).
This is the anti-death-penalty lobby convincing people who don't know any better to do away with punishing criminals. It is also just as fair to conclude that since putative (and duly tried and convicted murderers) can escape life sentences after key prosecutorial witnesses have died.....That a death penalty should have been employed (and in a MORE TIMELY FASHION) so that a guilty man doesn't walk free.
Is there an alibi for this man? NO
Was DNA evidence submitted by the Prosecution in his initial conviction? NO
Is there a new suspect who has confessed to the crime? NO
Is there any NEW and contrary evidence to his guilt...any evidence of actual innocence? NO
Any video evidence of someone else? NO
Any evidence of Prosecutorial misconduct? NO (although the defense, as usual, tried and failed in that pursuit once too)
Just a lack of a certain type of evidence not always present at many crime scenes.
Here's how this racket works:
1.) He is awarded a retrial....
2.)Prosecutors know that time degrades (especially 20 years) their chances of proving guilt BEYOND REASONABLE DOUBT.
3.)So, they drop the charges because....THEIR WITNESSES ARE DEAD!
Here's a key:
If he had won a re-trial 5 or 10 years later....he'd have probably been convicted again.
A prosecutor couldn't win a re-trial of a man caught with his finger-prints on a bloody knife who had initially confessed to a murder which was witnessed by 25 people, if you tried him 40-years and 25 dead witnesses later, either.
C.T.B. understand this: You are celebrating the distinct possibility that a murderer just walked free.
But, then again, you are merely falling for the deceit of the anti-death-penalty lobby which simply despises punishing crime altogether.
What this story proves.........is that deranged judges shouldn't authorize defense attorneys 20-year ex post facto Mulligans. Not that we shoudn't use the Death Penalty.