This isn’t about Race. This is about the laws in Florida,
the Jury System, the prosecution and defense lawyers and the Constitution. Not
about GZ or TM.
Something happens. A crime is charged. A District Attorney
or Grand Jury, of both, agree there is enough evidence of a crime to prosecute.
Now here is the clue, folks, that we live in America: Innocent until Proven
Guilty. By a Jury. INNOCENT OF WRONG DOING. Get it? All Failed by the System. |
So, the prosecution gathers evidence and the defense gathers evidence. Here is Florida Jury instructions, in part:
To overcome the defendant’s presumption of innocence the
state has the
burden of proving that the crime was committed and the
defendantcommitted the crime.
It is to the evidence introduced in this trial, and to it alone that you are to
look for the proof.
The defendant is not required to present evidence or to prove anything.
So, the prosecution
must define the crime, then prove beyond a reasonable doubt the accused
committed the crime.
In the GZ vs TM case, the prosecution chose to prosecute the
wrong crime. The Jury unanimously found reasonable doubt on all the charges and
found “not guilty”. Carping about what
should have been the outcome, or was GZ a bad man, or was TM just an innocent
kid should not be the issue. The issue is did GZ do what he was charged
with? The Jury said “NO” loud and clear.
Now the dissection of what a million people think happened
goes on, and has no end in sight. For God’s sake folks, people are still
debating the OJ thing. This never ends. But, say what you want, in the eyes of
the Law, a person found “not guilty” is INNOCENT.
Maybe you could vent your hostility on, oh, the current trafficking
of slaves? Or, maybe the morons who deny climate change? Continue pushing the
moral lessons of this event with the hopes that things may get better some day.
But don’t subvert the system by second guessing the Jury. Say “The Prosecutors
Fucked Up” (quite likely they did) but go with the Jury. Lawyers around the
country repeatedly say that juries have an uncanny way of seeing the “doubt” in
cleaver arguments. Lobby to change the laws or even the Constitution, but move
on to more important things. Life is too short.
Image: http://wordsofthesentient.files.wordpress.com/2012/08/innocence-project.gif
Reasonable doubt: http://www.law.fsu.edu/library/flsupct/SC00-906/00-906comments5.pdf
No comments:
Post a Comment