Howdy Blues,
I just find it hard to believe, but totally possible, that a intelligent grown man would not know the names of a street that you can see from his house that he has lived in for over 12 years. It just doesn't add up.
Then you have no imagination at all. I'm looking out my front window right now and can see the back yards of two homes that are in a sub-division next to the one I live in. The sub-divisions are fenced off from each other, but they can see my street, and I can see a bit of theirs. I have no clue what the name of that street is. I have no reason to exit my sub-division (a mile's drive), take a right, travel another mile and a half or so, turn into their sub-division, drive around it looking for the street that I can see from my window just so I'll know what the name of that street is. And I've got Rhino beat by a full year. Been here in this same home for 13 now.
If I had any reason to want to know, I could certainly look up the name of that street, and if I ever witness a crime or need to direct firefighters to one of the homes I can see from here, I would do that post haste, but whether it adds up to you or not, for now, I don't know the street's name, and I'll thank you not to presume to imply that I would be lying about it like you did with Rhino.
Martin still in pain and suffering before he died after being shot. What's so had to believe or understand about that?
Are you kidding? I never said I didn't believe it. The question is, is it legal for the medical examiner who performed the autopsy on his body to
change the testimony that he delivered in deposition while on the stand , in the presence of the jury and in open court? You
do realize a
trial under the laws of Florida and the Constitution of the United States of America is what we're discussing here, don't you?
Based on the amount of blood that bled out of the GSW it is fairly easy for a trained ME to tell how long a person, or animal, lived after being shot.
Even the ME didn't testify that it was "easy" to tell, "fairly" or otherwise. He gave a range of one to 10 minutes that he might have lived after being shot. That's a range of
10 times the minimum before you reach the maximum, and even then, that is a different range than he gave during deposition(s), and he didn't bother to notify the prosecution that
any of his testimony was going to be at variance with their deposition(s) of him. As it turned out, that was just one of several issues he changed his testimony about.
And what did he base the new range on? Well, he told the court, he based it not on his training or expertise in his field, but on the facts surrounding a case that he was not the ME on, that he did not perform the autopsy on, and that he only knew of because he was doing research specifically on the Zimmerman case
on his own, something he is neither qualified nor authorized by our justice system to do. He claimed to have no independent memory of a single fact he supposedly documented in his official report, so instead of bringing that report to court, or asking to refer to it to refresh his memory, he wrote several pages of notes in anticipation of both the prosecution's and defense's questions and was literally
reading those answers in response to
everything he was asked about, and that's where the utterance about Trayvon being in pain and continuing to suffer came from.
There are rules of evidence, and rules about how evidence comes in, as well as rules against evidence that tends to provide prejudicial, as opposed to probative, value for the jurors, and that pain and suffering stuff violated all of it.
If you're not well-informed enough to discuss the nuances and legalities of the trial, perhaps you'd be better-received in a thread about all the Tweeters and FaceBookers who are
threatening to kill Zimmerman after the prosecution blows this case so bad that a mistrial, directed acquittal or jury verdict for acquittal comes down the pike. You appear to be out of your depth here.
Blues