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Miscellaneous See other Miscellaneous Articles Title: Three Cheers for the Casey Anthony Jurors Every once-in-awhile events occur that provide some optimism that real people rather than the sock-puppets who speak on behalf of institutional interests have a firm grip on reality. The jury in the Casey Anthony trial did precisely what they were directed to do by the court: deliberated on the evidence presented to them, and concluded that there was not the requisite degree of certitude to allow them to find this woman guilty of the murder charges brought against her. This was more than the percaled agents of "justice" could take. They know a "guilty" person when they see one: its whoever is charged with a crime by the state! The cable-TV bobbleheads lets call them Dennis Dullard and Amelia Airhead began screaming for vengeance, . . . not so much against Ms. Anthony, but against the jurors! Their screeches of rage were echoed by other lobotomized voices, one of whom urged doing away with the jury system altogether. Charles Dickens Madame Defarge was resurrected! Another shrieked at the "idiots on the jury," while another asked the most irrelevant question as it pertained to this defendant: "who killed Caylee then?" It was not the role of the jurors to find Caylees killer (if, indeed she was killed rather than dying accidentally). It is the function of the police to search for causal evidence and present it to prosecuting attorneys. If the prosecution concludes that there is "probable cause" to charge a defendant with a crime, it will do so, leaving to the jury the task of deciding whether, "beyond a reasonable doubt," there was sufficient evidence to convict the defendant. The jurors did what they were supposed to do, what the judge ordered them to do. If their critics want to blame someone for Caseys being found not guilty, they should focus on those who failed at their assigned task: the functionaries of the state! If blame is to be found, it can more readily be said that police investigators and prosecuting attorneys were unable to fulfill their roles. To blame the jurors who, by their verdict, said "you have not convinced us," is as irrational as a murderer blaming his victim for spilling his blood on his carpeting! Those who talk of abolishing the jury system would be better advised to urge abolishing the prosecution of criminals! Perhaps Dennis spent too many of his high school years in "drivers ed" classes, while Amelia was at cheerleaders practice on the day the legal system was discussed in civics class. Whatever the explanation, they knew what is foremost in the minds of all men and women of statist persuasion: the proof of a defendants guilt is found in the fact that he or she is charged with a crime! What more needs to be asked? How can "enquiring minds" be expected to give up such more pressing inquiries as the identity of the next "American Idol"? I have no defense to make of Casey Anthony as a person or a mother. I dont know that much about her to make any such judgment. Her alleged failure to notify anyone of Caylees being missing until thirty-one days later does not impress me as the epitome of responsible motherhood. But the jury was not assigned the task of judging this womans character. They understood what Dennis and Amelia did not: individuals are responsible for the consequences of their actions. In a world in which we have become accustomed to dealing with one another in highly abstract ways, it is easy for any of us to express opinions or courses of action without feeling any sense of responsibility for what we have put in motion. Don Boudreaux offered a powerful example of the adverse consequences of living in a world of abstractions. He spoke of the differences between the wartime experiences of soldiers on the ground who have to shoot, bayonet, or throw hand grenades at their victims and bomber pilots who may kill more than the foot-soldier, but whose acts appear to them only as distant "puffs of smoke." While Dennis and Amelia saw the implications of their commentaries as little more than "puffs of smoke," the jurors were required to daily confront Casey Anthony, face-to-face, and determine her life-or-death fate. In another case in which they had not been picked to sit in judgment of a defendant, some of these jurors might have been as impressed by Dennis and Amelias post-trial babblings as was your cousin Louise in Schenectady. But on this day, they made the choice to live responsibly. The words of one of the jurors, Jennifer Ford, should give encouragement that many of our neighbors can rise above the Madame Defarge lynch-mob mindset. As Ms. Ford so well expressed it: "If they want to charge and they want me to take someones life, they have to prove it. They have to prove it, or else Im a murderer too." Neither Dennis nor Amelia will have the slightest appreciation for Ms. Fords remarks. They will likely accuse her of being "soft on crime," or a "terrorist sympathizer," as they head for the hardware store for more rope!
Poster Comment: I saw Jennifer Ford interviewed on NightLine. She said that the state gave them nothing to convict. They had to go by the law and not speculation. She also said that a not guilty verdict does not mean innocent. It simply means that the prosecution did not prove its case.
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 3.
#1. To: christine (#0)
People watch too much CSI and think you need hard evidence to convict someone of anything, you don't. When the circumstantial evidence is as overwhelming as it is in this case, and she even admitted she lied to the police, then it is not hard to see who killed the little girl.
Regardless of whether one agrees or disagrees with the jury findings, at the end of the day, the decision of the jurists need to be respected. That means leaving them alone. Otherwise we can just forget about having any trials and and just go back to street justice and lynchings being the "law" of the land. If you think having juries is a good idea, then let this go. It's fine if you disagree, but disagree and let it go.
A innocent little girl's life was snuffed out here. How does anyone that calls themselves good let something like that go? I highly doubt that Casey Anthony is going to smiling much longer. She has no idea how hated she is.
#4. To: RickyJ (#3)
You don't have to look far to find injustice in the world. But if the jury system is inadequate, what would you suggest replacing it with? It seems lynchings is your answer. Yes? No? Oh, I suspect by now she does.
that cunt isn't worth the trouble of killing. sterilize the 'lying, no good-slut', though.
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