03-04-2024, 03:34 PM
(03-04-2024, 01:42 PM)Maxmars Wrote: I wish I was more well-read or familiar with the kind of law practiced in your country.
I briefly scanned the judgement, and I understand that - from my layman's perspective, it was almost "stereotypically-framed" as a case of: angry or disaffected spouses, sudden death, and "must have been the spouse 'cause he has a believable motive" style murder charge.
It looked like they lacked convincing physical evidence of the murder itself... and even the judge was willing to forego a murder charge, if necessary, and entertain a manslaughter charge instead, to secure a conviction.
Presumably there is something socio-political in the considerations since they "opted" for a non-jury trial... which seems weird to me for a capital case... but I don't know how the law is in Australia, let alone how it is practiced. Pretty much as the British do, yes?
What was considered exculpatory in this case?
"What was considered exculpatory in this case?"
Basically because it was in the media for three years and his council did point to the way he was arrested at a public event as being "grandstanding" and spun that it relates to his work at the CCC...
I did mention his former client Gina for a reason.
There is no absolute answer to this whodunit, just healthy speculation.
Apparently he wrote a book...
I was not here.