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To: runningbear
Thank you for the ping rb! I have been away from puter and TV for the last couple of weeks and I was taken aback when I saw today that Whect and Lee were signed onto the Dream Team Jr. I kind of expected Lee but not Whect.
39 posted on 08/13/2003 5:30:07 PM PDT by Jackie-O
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To: Devil_Anse; Velveeta; Sandylapper; maggie mae
You all have freepmail! ;0)
41 posted on 08/13/2003 5:34:33 PM PDT by Jackie-O
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To: Jackie-O
Jackie don't worry about Cyril Wecht. He will tell the truth. He is nobody's puppet. Not even for the fee. If he proves me wrong I'll crack up and have a breakdown!! FOFL. Seriously tho, at this point, I DO trust him. Who knows, he may even keep Lee honest.
43 posted on 08/13/2003 5:48:04 PM PDT by Canadian Outrage (All us Western Canuks belong South)
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To: Jackie-O
yeah, I thought of you on this too,,,,, but the rest to follow shortly... Geragos wants to make sure he can shore up the experts?
68 posted on 08/13/2003 7:10:17 PM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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To: Jackie-O; All
Have you read this book? It sounds good.

Prosecutors: A Year in the Life of a District Attorney's Office

by Gary Delsohn

Editorial Reviews From Publishers Weekly

In 2001, Sacramento Bee reporter Delsohn spent a year trailing after assistant district attorneys as they prosecuted some of the 13,000 felonies that occur in that city in any given year. The concept is not a new one: Baltimore Sun reporter David Simon did the same thing 15 years ago with great success in Homicide, which chronicled a year's worth of murder investigations in Baltimore. New concept or not, Delsohn does a deft job of highlighting the complexities of the cases that he encounters. As Delsohn sees it, "For all the talk prosecutors like to engage in about how their number-one priority is to seek justice, not just win trials, it's numbers-trials completed, trials won, and trials lost-that mean everything." Despite this somewhat jaded view, the half-dozen cases that Delsohn tracks during the year belie this sentiment. While the verdicts are sometimes imperfect, the overall lesson of the book is that justice is, in the end, usually done. The murder cases include a bakery robbery gone sour, a doctor who throws his young daughter to her death, a drugged wacko who videotapes himself hanging his girlfriend and a Ukrainian immigrant who murders his family. Like episodes from Law and Order, each of these cases illustrates how the tactical decisions of a murder trial play out against the backdrop of very real defendants and victims. While this volume would have been served better by less lawyer banter and a tighter focus, the perennial struggle between the DAs and defense attorneys will appeal to those junkies who can't get enough of bloody crimes and courtroom drama.

Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

72 posted on 08/13/2003 7:20:51 PM PDT by runningbear (Lurkers beware, Freeping is public opinions based on facts, theories, and news online.......)
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