On the topic of the insanity defense; I would argue the point that habitual violent criminal behavior should be considered a sign of mental illness in and of itself. I'm all for treatment over punishment.
The insanity defense only works in the nature of the insanity prevented the person from respecting the nature of the crime. So you can be insane and still be found guilty of murder. Mind you they may not put you into a standard prison.
If it was because of my earlier rant, I'm sorry about that. Neoniveks post just struck me as being very defensive of the court's actions in this case
Because I really have to defend lawyers against this since they get a bad rep simple because ordinary people do not know what a lawyer actually does and this is one of those situations where you are assuming this lawyer has this powerful ability to manipulate the law. What do you think they can do?
1) The prosecution cannot withhold evidence. If evidence was withheld it was by a third party
2) The defense has the ability to appeal so they had years to mount the "Someone was already guilty" plea. Even if that doesn't work they can be let out of jail by the government (It is rarely used. Often it is done simply as a way out should there be overwhelming evidence of innocence and there are no more appeals)
Okay, perhaps I went overboard with calling him obviously innocent. It doesn't change the fact that the evidence was unfairly skewed against his favor, which I am blaming the prosecution for. Of course his innocence wasn't obvious in court. That's because important evidence was withheld from court.
So yeah. I hope people will finally get now why I'm blaming the prosecution for all this. They tampered with evidence, to skew the things against DeLunas favor.
And when did I ever make the impression of wanting to look hard-nosed?
The prosecution has no ability to tamper with the evidence and in fact they often have no part in the investigation.
Though perhaps I should read the article because tampering with police evidence is a rather impressive thing to do.
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Read the entire article and I have to say. The Prosecution was 100% not at fault and they played no part in his guilt. There are two people you can attribute fault to
1) The incompetent or overtaxed defense.
and
2) The police and investigators
The Prosecution cannot tamper with the evidence. They cannot withhold evidence that was given to the police, that is highly illegal and easily checkable. There are several things the prosecution CAN do that is illegal to hurt someone but you havn't given a realistic one.
It really is a sensationalist article. For all I know this man was truely guilty. I mean all this evidence and incompetence and there was no appeal? You have to step back and take in the whole story instead of picking one element you didn't like and attacking it.
What did the prosecution do? Here is what he didn't
1) He didn't base the case on nothing because it got past pretrial
2) He didn't tamper with evidence because they do not have that ability. Nor does he have the ability to withhold police evidence.
3) He didn't use underhanded tactics in court to get evidence stricken out that should have been submitted because there was no appeal.
Here is how it is. He would have had a trail and several appeals if the evidence was there. There would have been several lawyers involved.
Edit addition: I just realised that I am basically explaining why a lot of law shows are inaccurate.