• MushuChupacabra
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    5311 months ago

    A verdict in a court of law is based on what is presented, not on what happened. This is what makes it possible for people to commit a crime, and get away with it (or get framed for something that they didn’t do).

    This is a question that I do not want you to answer here, but one to ponder:

    If your son/nephew/younger was up for a part in a project that was directed by, and starring Kevin Spacey? What weight would you assign to that Not Guilty due to insufficient evidence verdict?

    • @[email protected]
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      -511 months ago

      Where does the judge say that evidence was insufficient for a verdict? I missed that part.

      Also, are we going to start questioning every verdict as if any accusation was true, even when proved differently in court?

      • MushuChupacabra
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        1011 months ago

        “Where does the judge say that evidence was insufficient for a verdict? I missed that part.”

        The primary cause of your confusion is your insistence on missing the point.

        “Also, are we going to start questioning every verdict as if any accusation was true, even when proved differently in court?”

        Again, missing the point. Who is talking about every verdict, besides yourself? This is Kevin Spacey specific.

        Do you believe that not getting convicted means that the accused did not do the thing that they are accused of?

        Is it your personal belief that Kevin Spacey is completely harmless with respect to sexual predation? Does your confidence extend far enough that you would have no qualms about a young male relative of yours work on a movie with Kevin Spacey?

        • @[email protected]
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          611 months ago

          Reading you comment I searched for the differences between being “not guilty” and being “innocent” and boy I didn’t know enough about the US justice system. I thought a “not guilty” verdict was the same as “the guy didn’t do it”. I stand corrected, though. Thanks for your input.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 months ago

            I’m not sure where you’re from. But that principle by no means is limited to the US but pretty much present in every western country.

            The whole idea is to prevent false convictions at the cost of guilty people walking free if their guilt can’t be proven.