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<blockquote data-quote="wkmac" data-source="post: 855490" data-attributes="member: 2189"><p>When I used the term prosecution, that was also meant to include the cops, sorry for the lack of clarification. And the prosecutors office does have it's own investigative staff that goes over the evidence as well. My neighbor is a homicide detective and over the weekend he kept saying she was going to get off and like yourself, most everyone thought she was the most logical choice. I can't say I really kept up with the case in detail but just hearing other folk talk about it, I thought she'd get convicted as well. But I also sensed people were acting off raw emotion more than anything else because they saw a dead child and someone's got to pay.</p><p></p><p>As to her walking away from this? I disagree. She's a pariah now. She was found "not guilty" of the evidence and not innocent because it was determined the killer was someone else and we should remember that. The killer still has not been found and proven which I said in my previous post. </p><p></p><p>Her family is likely (I think they have) to disown her and I can't see many friends sticking by her either. She may not be in the prison everyone wanted to see her in but her life will be a prison from here on out. My guess is her life will spiral downward into deeper depths, maybe drugs and alcohol to kill the reality of it all and then at some point she may just end it. The public may not have got it's blood lust filled but justice in the end may still be served and vastly cheaper to the taxpayers along with the metal torture of it all that would be illegal for the state prison to apply. Karma always balances in life IMO.</p><p></p><p>No, regardless of the fact that she walked out of a death sentence doesn't mean she didn't walk right into one!</p><p></p><p>And I wonder having such a weak case going for the death penalty if that played with the jury and against the state. Had they gone after life or some lesser sentence, would the jury have been more swayed to take a chance and convict? Death penalty if it's going to be used should only come into play if there is a valid confession or eye witnesses. Way to many circumstantial evidence cases being overturned by groups like the Innocence Project and DNA evidence.</p><p></p><p><a href="http://lewrockwell.com/anderson/anderson319.html" target="_blank"><span style="color: #ff0000">This </span></a>may not be what a lot of people want to hear and I understand that, but he has a point IMO.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="wkmac, post: 855490, member: 2189"] When I used the term prosecution, that was also meant to include the cops, sorry for the lack of clarification. And the prosecutors office does have it's own investigative staff that goes over the evidence as well. My neighbor is a homicide detective and over the weekend he kept saying she was going to get off and like yourself, most everyone thought she was the most logical choice. I can't say I really kept up with the case in detail but just hearing other folk talk about it, I thought she'd get convicted as well. But I also sensed people were acting off raw emotion more than anything else because they saw a dead child and someone's got to pay. As to her walking away from this? I disagree. She's a pariah now. She was found "not guilty" of the evidence and not innocent because it was determined the killer was someone else and we should remember that. The killer still has not been found and proven which I said in my previous post. Her family is likely (I think they have) to disown her and I can't see many friends sticking by her either. She may not be in the prison everyone wanted to see her in but her life will be a prison from here on out. My guess is her life will spiral downward into deeper depths, maybe drugs and alcohol to kill the reality of it all and then at some point she may just end it. The public may not have got it's blood lust filled but justice in the end may still be served and vastly cheaper to the taxpayers along with the metal torture of it all that would be illegal for the state prison to apply. Karma always balances in life IMO. No, regardless of the fact that she walked out of a death sentence doesn't mean she didn't walk right into one! And I wonder having such a weak case going for the death penalty if that played with the jury and against the state. Had they gone after life or some lesser sentence, would the jury have been more swayed to take a chance and convict? Death penalty if it's going to be used should only come into play if there is a valid confession or eye witnesses. Way to many circumstantial evidence cases being overturned by groups like the Innocence Project and DNA evidence. [URL="http://lewrockwell.com/anderson/anderson319.html"][COLOR=#ff0000]This [/COLOR][/URL]may not be what a lot of people want to hear and I understand that, but he has a point IMO. [/QUOTE]
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