UMGriz75
Well-known member
Well, I haven't had to call you any names yet, but it is obvious you can't discuss anything in a civil manner.horribilisfan8184 said:Since you don't know what the offers were before and after her deposition I can see why you wouldn't understand Luke's interpretation of events, or his choices. But never let false factual speculation dampen your enthusiasm for espousing and defending cock-sure opinions solidly based on degraded effluent.UMGriz75 said:Reading what Luke himself was "reading into it" -- full dismissal and vindication -- I think one of us is ignoring "realities" here.horribilisfan8184 said:Your reading things into what it means for him to do this deal simply ignores the realities of what he was faced with, and his comfort level with leaving things to chance.
Luke's Facebook page celebrated the "dismissal" of the charges, his full vindication, and his prospective return to Bobcat football.
I pointed out above that Luke had been misinformed or misunderstood. The fact is "deferred prosecution," as reported by the Billings Gazette, is neither a dismissal, vindication nor does it remove the student athlete conduct code handicap of "criminal charges" since deferring prosecution of them does not dismiss the charges.
Still following, Sparky?
Luke has since taken down his Facebook page, and I suspect out of embarrassment after learning that he did not get what he thought he got.
Indeed, in the interim, he is subject to most of the actual penalties that a guilty verdict would imply, and including the risk that the "ex" would manufacture another confrontation -- the risk being the automatic revocation of the deferred prosecution agreement.
After reading your description of the deposition, expert witnesses, etc, it seemed clear that his best course of action to get the actual "vindication" he sought was to ask for a trial, since you described a scenario that made it impossible to meet the "beyond a reasonable doubt" standard.
For some reason, you want to argue and call names and spit and foam about it. I don't know why. The facts, if as clear as you claim, would have the direct result Luke wants. All other alternatives propose risk at various levels. I'm not reading anything into anything, that's simply how the law works. Perhaps you are retreating from the "facts" as you strongly stated them, but that does not change the definition of a "deferred prosecution agreement" nor the things that "can go wrong" during the time frame involved. The fact is, it is not what Luke thought it was.
Perhaps he had relied on you for the advice?