Quote:
Originally Posted by Mr MojoRisin
I understand what you are trying to say. Unfortunately it really doesn't apply here.
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What I said does apply to the discussion. The problem is the discussion does not apply to what happened (which NO ONE on here knows). In fact there is only one person who knows what happened from start to finish.
Gad, ....
.... I have now listened to the Professor. When he is speaking about "unethical" I trust he is not suggesting that any administrative action will be initiated to "dink" the prosecutor for preparing a probable cause affidavit that favors the prosecution, as opposed to assisting the accused. And, although I would never "presume" to know what is happening in his mind, I do not believe he intended to suggest such a thing, but was speaking in "ethics" in a broad term of inappropriateness as opposed to a legal concept that would support licensing consequences.
I am putting what he said in the context of his entire remarks ... he said the affidavit was "thin" ... he did not say it was false ... and he did say "if" the prosecution can prove what it says .... and he speaks in terms of "what" is known now ... the time line could be critical in what was reported by the media and what was known to LE (then the prosecutor) and WHEN on that time line. The Professor's remarks pre-suppose that all of the information was known to LE and the prosecutor BEFORE the affidavit was prepared and VERIFIED as being true BEFORE the affidavit was prepared. He even makes his comments in light of "what we now know"???? Really? He doesn't know jack shit about the evidence .... any more than we do.
I am not sure what he means by being "thin" also ...
Two men meet and get into a confrontration or "street brawl" ... one pulls a pistol, shoots at the other one, and kills the other one with the pistol. It is a homicide. Did he intend to shoot him? Yes. Did he die? Yes.
Professor: It is a homicide. In Texas:
Murder =
"A person commits an offense if he:
(1) intentionally or knowingly causes the death of an individual;
(2) intends to cause serious bodily injury and commits an act clearly dangerous to human life that causes the death of an individual; ..."
I have no reason to believe that Florida law differs in any meaningful way.
He intended to shoot Trayvon. He intended to cause serious bodily injury, which shooting someone customarily does, and he committed an act (shooting Trayvon) that was clearly dangerous to Trayvon's life (shooting usually does that) and Trayvon died ... which was caused by the shooting ...." (which often happens when one shoots another person).
Is that "thin" ........... ? The evidence against Oswald was "thin"!
The Professor could just as easily take the other side of that fact situation, but he aligns himself historically with the defense side....particularly when he is hustling his next theatrical stage.
As for the "dispatcher" giving directives to Zimmerman ... huh? So what? Does anyone actually believe that a dispatcher has any "authority" to tell anyone what to do that would create any criminal consequences if the citizen refused to "obey" the dispatcher's instructions? Let me repeat that ...... dispatcher!