HighLineGRIZ said:
UMGriz75 said:
HighLineGRIZ said:
Again, it's he said, she said. He said that this happend. Maybe it did and the defense will have the opportunity to explore that in trial. Maybe she, and other witnisses at the ball have another side of that particular event. I don't know and you don't know. We weren't there.
I understand the theory: if she said it, it's what happened. If he said it, "it's he said, she said." In this case, there are witness statements for JJ's "version." She has not substantively contradicted those statements.
Wrong. It's all "he said, she said" at this point. Prosecution hasn't had the opportunity to contradict JJ's motion yet. Guess that's why they have a trial... Nice try on trying to categorize my position though. Again. Only position I have is that people shouldn't be dreaming up speculations of what happened or make judgements on the character of people they don't know.
Well, you got past TNT's 23 pages of endless dreaming speculations just fine, so perhaps your protests are their own evidence of the speculation you prefer rather than the facts as they exist.
However, your point is, in fact, wrong.
Both sides have taken extensive witness statements, under oath and otherwise, of the other. There is little to "speculate" about regarding Jane Doe's contradictory statements. There is no speculation. She made them. They are now part of the public record.
They are not "he said/she said." Instead, the main prosecution weaknesses in this case comes from "she said/she said," and "she said/she did."
Anytime a case revolves around contradictory complaining witness statements, that is just the beginning of the problems for the prosecution.
Any time you have to parse the meaning of "it's" and "all" and "good" and just about every other word she ever uttered, the case is in trouble because juries are ordinarily extremely sensitive to the continuing and endless explanations from the complaining witness that "what I meant was ...," over and over again throughout a case, at each turn sounding more and more like "I didn't set this up very well, let me re-tell the story to make it sound better," even as that is invariably the open door to make it worse. This case already has the fatal rot of contradictory stories by the complaining witness.
And blowing a gasket about it, pretending the facts are not already well established is either a simple ignorance of where the case is at at this point, or a fantasy hope that it isn't because you don't like how the evidence is lining up, adds little to the discussion except to inform knowledgeable readers that you aren't one of them.
As I noted earlier, there are three statements by the two people actually present at the time. Two of the statements are by Jane Doe. Two of the three statements are in favor of JJ's view of the case.