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Yeah, I get that, but it's weird to be aware of and admit that it was a big factor in the decision.Sent from my SM-G900P using Tapatalk
Sounds like some feelings have been hurt by questioning the accuracy of conclusions drawn from limited information.
Quote from: kitten_mittons on November 21, 2014, 02:40:04 PMYeah, I get that, but it's weird to be aware of and admit that it was a big factor in the decision.Sent from my SM-G900P using TapatalkNot that weird of a thing for an idiot to say. You can tell them all day long what the law is and then they just do what they want anyway.
i just had to be the presiding juror on a three week long criminal trial this summer. you can pretty much assume, like everything else in real life, that the jurors are all pretty section L
I'm sitting third chair on this one, clams. The jurors heard the case, you all hear the podcast and I'm going to read this here thread. Judgments will be flying and if we're lucky maybe a few hard truths will be revealed to those who know what to look for.
Quote from: Tobias on November 21, 2014, 03:09:17 PMi just had to be the presiding juror on a three week long criminal trial this summer. you can pretty much assume, like everything else in real life, that the jurors are all pretty section LBeing on a jury does something to your average everday idiot that makes them worse by at least a factor of ten than they would ordinarily be. They feel empowered and important and therefore automatically smarter and better, which causes them to be less observant and more obstinate and obtuse. It's a really terrifying phenomenon.
consider that the 2L intern works for "the innocence project"
huh, so the Serial host wrote about his attorney back in 2001http://articles.baltimoresun.com/2001-07-19/news/0107190108_1_gutierrez-trust-fund-clients
"[Adnan Syed] participated in a National competition in which he built a solar vehicle that won 6th place in Topeka, KS last spring." (1996?)WOAH!
Next week is the final episode.