To: nickcarraway
Ah, the old DNA trick. Works every time.
2 posted on
12/14/2005 12:38:52 AM PST by
Jeff Chandler
(Peace Begins in the Womb)
To: nickcarraway
They'll still go for entrapment to suppress the evidence.
To: nickcarraway
Fleming's barrister, Richard Button, SC, challenged the officer in charge, Detective Sergeant Ashley Bryant, during Fleming's committal hearing yesterday. "Did you think at the time that it was legal for this trick to be played on the defendant?" he asked. The officer just asked for a map, the murderer provided the spit sample of his own accord.
4 posted on
12/14/2005 12:54:58 AM PST by
Triggerhippie
(Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose.)
To: nickcarraway
A local officer, who had previously spoken to him about trouble with a drover, went to his house. What the heck is a drover?
5 posted on
12/14/2005 1:58:54 AM PST by
Recovering_Democrat
(I am SO glad to no longer be associated with the party of Dependence on Government!)
To: nickcarraway
The moral of this story: don't drool on maps.
To: nickcarraway
Let me see if I've got this straight, the police have suspected this chap for over 20 years while in the meantime he has lost a leg, his ability to earn a living, he's a solitary heavy smoker, he drools when he studies and now the police sceme to collect his dribbles to imprison him where his state pension will be traded for a hospital bed; sounds like a good use for law enforcement funds to me.
16 posted on
12/14/2005 10:39:31 AM PST by
Old Professer
(Fix the problem, not the blame!)
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