Posted on 06/22/2013 2:24:03 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
The jurors are now selected in State of Florida v. George Zimmerman and opening statements are scheduled for Monday. Today was a wrap up day, to resolve as any lingering issues that Judge Nelson hadnt yet decided, and do general housekeeping in preparation for the trial.
Since first examining the evidence of this case Ive been highly skeptical of both the States ability to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, murder in the second degree, as well as the States ability to disprove, beyond a reasonable doubt, self-defense.
What Ive seen over the course of the Frye hearing and jury selection has only reinforced that perception. Indeed, it seems likely that this will be a long, painful and perhaps humiliating trial for the State. Heres why.
Its called the Pre-Trial Motions Phase not the Lets-Do-It-As-We-Go Phase
Normally, before a trial begins, the pretrial motions phase of a case is substantively concluded well before the trial proper begins. This allows for the trial to start with a relatively fixed body of evidence for the trial, shared by both sides, with each side constructing its own compelling narrative from the elements of that evidence.
This isnt what happened here. Literally one working day before opening statements (and actually nine days after the technical start of trial, as jury selection is technically part of the trial phase), the court is still deciding what evidence will be allowed.
As an illustration, consider two issues that were raised today. One is whether evidence on Trayvon Martins cell phone records can be used, even though its not been fully authenticated yet. Why hasnt it been authenticated? Because the defense is the one who wants it admitted and they only just finally received it from the state 3 weekdays before jury selection began. And were not talking about a small number of recordsit includes, for example, thousands of photos. The defense argues quite reasonably that they simply havent had time to conduct a reasonable review of the discovery. The judges ruling? Well decide [on admissibility] as we go along. Wow.
The other issue is whether two particular witnesses may testify to statement they heard Zimmerman utter. In truth, however, thats not the real issue. The real issue is why such questions remain unsettled one work day before the opening statements? One result of it is that the defense is now forced to start the trial, give their opening statement and frame out the compelling narrative to the jury, and do so without yet knowing whether potentially valuable witness testimony could be included.
Either the old Bait-and-Switch or the Look, a Squirrel strategy
Another seemingly benign (and not necessarily inappropriate during trial) motion today was to perpetuate the testimony of one of George Zimmermans professors. This can happen when a witness becomes unavailable. The parties videotape formal testimony of the witness in advance, with both sides of the court giving full examination, with direct, cross-examination, etc. The video can then be shown to the jurors during trial. Keep in mind, the state has yet to decide whether to actually show the video, they just have it in case they do decide.
Not unheard of certainly, and not necessarily wrong for Judge Nelson to grant. Still, a few things sent off a red flag. One is that OMara noted that the defense hasnt yet deposed the witness. This isnt totally unheard of with a case that has 220 witnesses. Because of the enormity of effort to depose each one, both sides must categorize their witnesses by how likely they are to actually call them. The A list will almost certainly be called, perhaps someone from B, less likely for C, etc. My guess is (and let me be clear this is only a guess) that the witness is pretty low on the list, and thats the reason they have not yet been deposed by the defense.
So the cynic in me thinks the state may be trying to do one of two things. One, they could have put him low on the list to bury him from the defense, only to raise them to as effectively an A-list witness on the eve of trial. Such last-minute scrambling also has the side-effect of likely destroying the last few hours of sleep OMara and West might have this weekend.
Let me ask you guys this: six women? An all-woman jury? Nobody sees a problem with this? All the prosecution has to do is put up some pictures of Trayvon as a baby wearing footy pajamas and Zimmerman will fry. Furthermore, most men understand the nature of physical confrontation in situations like these. Women most often don’t. Whatever happens, I’m not expecting a sane, logical process.
That seems like a scenario that women would tend to fear.
http://pjmedia.com/blog/the-backwards-trial-a-george-zimmerman-prosecution-primer/
This is purely political - the leftwing racebaiters pushing their agenda! This report 9at the link) is an excellent summary of what and why this is happening. Truly CW2!!!
Excerpt:
The Facts: Normally, the prosecution is the natural ally of the police. Using their investigation the facts prosecutors are able to establish all of the elements of the offense and win a conviction. In the Zimmerman case, the prosecution must ignore, try to explain away, or try to construct reasonable doubt about the case of the police a bizarre state of affairs.
The Sanford Police Department conducted an unbiased and competent investigation, and the local prosecutor, Norm Wolfinger, declined to press charges because all of the evidence supported Zimmermans self-defense claim under Florida law, and none contradicted it. Prosecutor investigator Dale Gilbreath admitted this on April 20, 2012.
However, that investigation and its results did not fit the narrative, and so Corey was tasked not with doing justice, but with charging and convicting Zimmerman regardless of the evidence. Coreys office has never produced the slightest evidence proving that the Sanford Police failed in their duty or exhibited racial bias.
That being the case, what are the grounds for charging Zimmerman with any crime?
The fact that they only turned over about 5% of the information on Trayvon’s phone and tried to delete most of it is a crime, not just failure to hand over information. The excuse that he had pictures of underage girls on it isn’t enough to refuse to hand over images that include pictures of items he probably stole.
” That being the case, what are the grounds for charging Zimmerman with any crime?”
There are none.
Ditto that!
Maybe Sharpton will be nice, and buy each of us an ice tea, and a package of “Skillets”
: )
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