Posted on 11/22/2006 12:12:09 PM PST by color_tear
I don't think you really want help.
I agree with you 100% so I think you misunderstood what I posted.
No harm, no foul...or considering the day "no fowl". LOL!!
Happy Thanksgiving!!
FRegards,
Sorry sir, you misunderstood me or I should say I've not expressed myself clearly. English is not my first laguage.
I'm an outsider looking at the case, or maybe I should say I'm a new comer to the system. I do have questions because I've never experienced this kind of reactions from conservatives before, even talk show hosts I listen all the time.
If you read all responses, most of them blame the jury. I understand that. But from my stand point of view, why no blame to the civil court jury for voting "GUILTY" to make a statement? Why nobody point out those black jurors at the civil court was Swedish hostage?
That's how I look at it, from a person who is not a white or a black but who is an America.
To tell the truth, I really learn a lot from this thread, a real eye opener.
Thanks! Happy Thanksgiving!
Not to open up this can of worms again... but!
The way the evidence was mis-handled by the police introduced a heck of a lot of doubt into the blood evidence and the glove evidence, which were at the heart of the Prosecution's case. Whether that mis-handling was due to incompetence or because of a scheme to concoct evidence does not matter at the end of the day.
But the fact remains that a Detective found one glove at the crime scene, and that same Detective later vaulted the wall and was by himself on OJ's property when he found the matching glove.
The fact remains that you have the police searched the Bronco and the crime scene time and time again for OJ's blood, and found none until after a Detective took OJ's blood sample, put it in his pocket, and visited the crime scene and the Bronco. If you remember, in the days after the murders, OJ's attorneys obstructed like crazy in order to delay the taking of OJ's blood. At the trial, we found out why. If the Police had obtained OJ's blood in a timely fashion, there would not have been four or five failed searches of the crime scene and the Bronco before Van Atter had a chance to visit them with his little vial of blood.
Once doubt is introduced into the glove evidence and the blood evidence, the Prosecution was down to footprints and barking dogs, and the case was lost.
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