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To: TheSpottedOwl
Well I do think it's important that we wait to condemn people until the evidence is in, not inuendo, not rumors, not some fifth generation story that may be embelished or completely fictitous.

I want to be fully supportive of police officers. I also want to be fully supportive of defendant's rights within reason.

Interrogating someone for 48 hours straight without representation present is very problematic for me. It goes way beyond individual rights, even though they are very important. A good officer knows you don't push the limits on constitutional rights because it's the best way to make sure a guilty person goes free. These guys ran the risk of blowing this case bigtime.

Thinking people see what these guys did and extrapolate the theory that this goes on all the time. Does it? Sadly I think it goes on more than most of us are willing to admit.

The police have a tough job. They have to extrapolate meaning. Those extrapolations may be accurate. They may be falacious. If they are falacious, and they get carried away, their actions may jeopardize the case.

When I was a kid I participated in one incident of vandalism. A bunch of similar vandalism had taken place, so the investigating officers were convinced that I was responsible for it all. That was a natural assumption. It was also a major screwup. It lead them to target me and let the actual perps get away with their acts.

I had picked an old lock. You could pick old locks with a screwdriver or a butter knife. These guys equated this with picking some modern locks. I tried to explain the difference and that I didn't know anything about the more modern locks. They were sure I was lying.

It is VERY dangerous to accept the theory that miniscule bits of evidence are proof positive of anything. A few pictures of girls 13 and above are not proof someone is a pedophile involving seven year olds, let alone a brutal murderer capable of mutilating or burning a young child's body.

At this point I believe that Westerfield is guilty. I also believe that group dynamics have created a situation where certain existant and non-existant evidence has been misinterpreted to buttress certain things that may be true, but were not in fact proven by the materials sited for that purpose by members of the public.

We all like to speculate. I think that's okay as long as we recognize the implications of what is proven and the reality of what isn't.

396 posted on 01/08/2003 10:59:39 AM PST by DoughtyOne (The UN stole it'spower from sovereign nations, whose citizens cannot not vote against it's policies.)
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To: DoughtyOne
Your point about the vandalism is something that I've brought up to my kids, repeatedly. Screw up and you'll get hung for things you didn't do. It's true.

I also support law enforcement, lord knows they have a difficult job. However, you can take anything at all and turn it into something else. It is very difficult to defend yourself against some allegations. Why didn't he keep quiet until he got a lawyer? Maybe because he didn't take it seriously? 48 hours of interrogation is plain wrong.

I just have this nagging feeling that something is missing in this case. I happened to see David Westerfield on tv at his sentencing, and stared at him trying to find something in his demeanor that would indicate guilt. Nada. Some speculation on my part: is he protecting someone else? Who on earth would you give your life up for?
397 posted on 01/08/2003 1:03:05 PM PST by TheSpottedOwl (When life gives you lemons, order a bottle of Tequila and some salt)
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