Skip to comments.
Westerfield's Fate In Hands Of Jury: VERDICT WATCH BEGINS in Van Dam Murder Case
CourtTV ^
| August 8, 2002
| CourtTV
Posted on 08/08/2002 10:28:37 AM PDT by FresnoDA
|
Jury's hands After two months of hearing evidence, jurors have begun deliberating the fate of David Westerfield, who is accused of kidnapping and killing 7-year-old Danielle van Dam
|
TOPICS: Society
KEYWORDS: daniellevandam; davidwesterfield
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 101-120, 121-140, 141-160 ... 861-873 next last
To: connectthedots
I remember those verdicts, but it would shock me if this jury is any less hung up than we are here on these threads.
Maybe they want to beg Judge Mudd again to sequester them.
To: connectthedots
This case and your comments are really opening our eyes, thanks.
122
posted on
08/08/2002 12:31:35 PM PDT
by
Lucky
To: Steve0113
"Sorry, no sympathy here."
Ditto.
To: Steve0113
Until you have been confronted face to face with the corrupt judges and attorneys who treat the courts as their personal playground where they think they can do whatever the hell they want, you can't possibly imagine just how bad it is. I've been facing it for the last four years, but in the end, which is coming soon, a lot of those SOBs are going to the federal pen.
To: connectthedots
Too many prosecutors are more concerned with getting a conviction than whether they got the right guy once they focus on someone. I used to have a very low opinion of criminal defense attorneys until I understood how corrupt and dishonest prosecutors are. Criminla defense attorneys are angels compared to prosecutors.I agree about the prosecutors. Some defense attorneys, however, are just as bad as the prosecutors, and don't want to "upset" the judge (who hears all their cases) or the prosecution (with whom they have to work, and who might REALLY stick it to their next client) by putting up too good of a defense for a client who is unpopular (ie, rich, white, professional). The defense attorneys are in on the "game", some of them.
To: small_l_libertarian
I think the turtle has stuck his neck out too far. I can't see where sequestering the jury now will be of any help now.
126
posted on
08/08/2002 12:35:01 PM PDT
by
Krodg
To: Lucky
In my case, I just caught some judges tampering with a court file.
To: connectthedots
"In my case, I just caught some judges tampering with a court file."
E-gads! Why am I not surprised?
To: VRWC_minion
Thanks, I needed that!!! ROFLMAO
129
posted on
08/08/2002 12:38:13 PM PDT
by
Jaded
To: Krodg
Oh, I don't think it would do any good at this point, either - it just ticked me off yesterday that Mudd didn't sequester them (which also wouldn't have done any good yesterday) when the jurors themselves stated that they were being approached/influenced!
To: connectthedots
Oh man, watch your back, okay.
131
posted on
08/08/2002 12:38:51 PM PDT
by
Lucky
To: small_l_libertarian
I dunno. Those people are from SD. They have an idea of the history of the players. At least Dusek, Feldman, Blackbourne and Faulkner.
Despite Dozeoff's claim otherwise, most of the Reasonable Doubt came from HIS witnesses or people that were originally his witnesses. Graham, Faulkner, Dulaney, Shen and Blackbourne.
132
posted on
08/08/2002 12:43:21 PM PDT
by
Jaded
To: Lucky
Those are the identical thoughts I was just having. Sure don't want him fosterized!
To: connectthedots
Just wondering ... do you have several copies of all of your information stashed in various places (as insurance)?
To: Jaded
And...VAN DAM, Kemal, Brady, Stone....(Easton a no show...Libby a no show!)
To: Henrietta
Some defense attorneys, however, are just as bad as the prosecutors, and don't want to "upset" the judge (who hears all their cases) or the prosecution (with whom they have to work, and who might REALLY stick it to their next client) by putting up too good of a defense for a client who is unpopular (ie, rich, white, professional). The defense attorneys are in on the "game", some of them. You are absolutely correct. Too many defense attorneys, even the privately retained ones sellout their clients because they are too lazy and want to get along with the judges and prosecutors. Then there are those defense attorneys, a few in every county, whose clients seem to have their criminal charges dropped for technical reasons or are somehow simply never brought to trial and later the charges are quietly dismissed. Steve Thayer in Clark County is a perfect example, except if the prosecutor and judges want a conviction for political reasons.
In my situation, I caught a visiting judge, hand-picked of course, who committed perjury during a hearing. I forced the sheriff to investigate it; the opponents attorney agreed that the judge lied from the bench, the sheriff referred it to the prosecutor; and even thought the judges name is all over the report; the named suspect is "Last name: None; First name: None." True story! BTW, the other party was the sheriff, so he knew the prosecutor wasn't going to prosecute anyway.
To: JudyB1938
Yep. connectthedots is no fool. You would not believe how stupid/desperate people get when backed into a corner.
To: small_l_libertarian
Yeah, everday Mudd says the same thing 'one more, last chance'. : (
138
posted on
08/08/2002 12:47:00 PM PDT
by
Krodg
To: Jaded
Very good point, Jaded. This ain't their first rodeo.
To: the Deejay
I've caught them tampering with video tapes of court hearings, too!
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 101-120, 121-140, 141-160 ... 861-873 next last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson