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#21
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Dave wrote:
So the sail boat's insurance company doesn't like its chances of winning the case in court, and wants to try it in the press instead. Why am I not surprised? Dave, do you really think the sailboat skipper had *ANY* culpability in this accident? A becalmed sailboat being run over by a powerboat going 40+ knots is really not a case of remotely "equal blame" much less 100% the sailboat's fault. The fact that the powerboater was a sheriff's deputy who was not given a breathalyzer or blood test; and evidence of ColRegs deemed inadmissable, and evidence on the sailboat's lights being rejected by the DA (who is a freind of the deputy)... the whole situation reeks. DSK |
#22
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On 15 Aug 2008 11:13:03 -0500, Dave wrote:
On Fri, 15 Aug 2008 08:06:26 -0700, Alan Gomes said: And, as I said in the rest of what I wrote, it's hard to see how Perdock should not receive at least *some* (I would say MOST) of the blame, even if the guy had no running lights on at all and even if the helmsman was completely passed out drunk. I might well reach the same conclusion if I heard and saw the witnesses. But I'm not going to reach any conclusion based solely on a one-sided piece of advocacy flying in the face of what a court found. OJ is innocent. The jury said so! Juries NEVER get it wrong. |
#23
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On 18 Aug 2008 09:13:09 -0500, Dave wrote:
On Sun, 17 Aug 2008 11:03:14 -0700 (PDT), said: Dave, do you really think the sailboat skipper had *ANY* culpability in this accident? I don't really know, and neither do you. What you've seen as extensive coverage flogging one side's own version of the evidence. I've on many occasions read one side's brief and decided it looks like a slam dunk in that side's favor, only to reach a different conclusion after reading the other side's. And I've done enough advocacy pieces myself to know that even the weakest case can be made to look good with a bit of creativity and effort. I think any reasonable person has to think it sounds like it was taken directly from the script of any random B movie centered around a corrupt redneck sherriff's department. Your professional background could easily lead you astray. I think it has in this case. Surely with your resources, you can come up with the transcript of the trial and prove us all wrong? |
#24
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![]() wrote in message news ![]() On 18 Aug 2008 09:13:09 -0500, Dave wrote: On Sun, 17 Aug 2008 11:03:14 -0700 (PDT), said: Dave, do you really think the sailboat skipper had *ANY* culpability in this accident? I don't really know, and neither do you. What you've seen as extensive coverage flogging one side's own version of the evidence. I've on many occasions read one side's brief and decided it looks like a slam dunk in that side's favor, only to reach a different conclusion after reading the other side's. And I've done enough advocacy pieces myself to know that even the weakest case can be made to look good with a bit of creativity and effort. I think any reasonable person has to think it sounds like it was taken directly from the script of any random B movie centered around a corrupt redneck sherriff's department. Your professional background could easily lead you astray. I think it has in this case. Surely with your resources, you can come up with the transcript of the trial and prove us all wrong? It is very clear that Dave sides with the authorities every time. He is a paid lackey for the advocacy of increased government power at any cost, by any method. All it takes is one look at the photographic evidence for ANY unbiased person to conclude that the sailboat got run over from behind by a criminally careless operator of a high speed motor boat. It doesn't matter who was at the helm of the sailboat, it doesn't matter whether the helmsman was drunk or sober, black or white, male or female, sighted or blind, paralyzed or able-bodied. None of that would have made one iota of difference. Any sane man or woman can easily conclude the cause of the death and injury aboard the sailboat was the direct result of the actions of the helmsman of the motorboat. Nothing Dave can say changes these facts. The jury returned an incorrect decision based primarily upon law enforcement and the courts denying true due process by eliminating or manipulating certain vital evidence. This is all clear and one does not have to, like Dave, resort to the old saw that the jury got to see the faces of those who testified. Faces lie. The O.J. Simpson jury is a prime example of what happens when a jury is pathetically ignorant and biased, when the prosecution is crooked as hell and when the defense is clearly inept. This case is just more of the same and a prime example of how corrupt lawyers and courts have become of late. Wilbur Hubbard |
#25
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On 18 Aug 2008 10:26:02 -0500, Dave wrote:
On Mon, 18 Aug 2008 10:35:22 -0400, said: Your professional background could easily lead you astray. I think it has in this case. Surely with your resources, you can come up with the transcript of the trial and prove us all wrong? It ain't worth the effort. cop out. |
#26
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![]() wrote in message ... On 18 Aug 2008 10:26:02 -0500, Dave wrote: On Mon, 18 Aug 2008 10:35:22 -0400, said: Your professional background could easily lead you astray. I think it has in this case. Surely with your resources, you can come up with the transcript of the trial and prove us all wrong? It ain't worth the effort. cop out. He's clearly afraid to open his eyes and his mind as he just might decide he should change it. . . Wilbur Hubbard |
#27
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On 18 Aug 2008 13:10:01 -0500, Dave wrote:
On Mon, 18 Aug 2008 12:04:03 -0400, said: Your professional background could easily lead you astray. I think it has in this case. Surely with your resources, you can come up with the transcript of the trial and prove us all wrong? It ain't worth the effort. cop out. Hey, you wanna pay my outrageous rates for getting the case number, locating a service company to go over to the court house, find the entire transcript (if there is one) and photocopy it, and then reviewing it, just let me know and I'll send you a retainer letter. Sometimes people will spend a whole day that they could spend doing something else, doing something for someone just to try and be helpful. I guess you aren't one of those people. |
#28
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wrote in message
... On 18 Aug 2008 13:10:01 -0500, Dave wrote: On Mon, 18 Aug 2008 12:04:03 -0400, said: Your professional background could easily lead you astray. I think it has in this case. Surely with your resources, you can come up with the transcript of the trial and prove us all wrong? It ain't worth the effort. cop out. Hey, you wanna pay my outrageous rates for getting the case number, locating a service company to go over to the court house, find the entire transcript (if there is one) and photocopy it, and then reviewing it, just let me know and I'll send you a retainer letter. Sometimes people will spend a whole day that they could spend doing something else, doing something for someone just to try and be helpful. I guess you aren't one of those people. ?? He's only asking for $5. LOL -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
#29
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dougking...@ said:
Dave, do you really think the sailboat skipper had *ANY* culpability in this accident? Dave wrote: I don't really know, and neither do you. False. The problem can be analysed fairly easily: What action could a becalmed sailboat skipper have taken to avoid being run down by a powerboat going 40+ knots? What action could a powerboat skipper going 40+ knots take to avoid a becalmed sailboat? If the jury was not instructed to consider the case along these lines (and they almost certainly weren't, since they didn't even bring ColRegs into it), then the jury could not possibly arrive at a fair conclusion. This is a more important issue than whther the sailboats lights were on (and the exclusion of testimony that they were looks kinda suspicious), who had been drinking (and the lack of any testing of the powerboat driver again looks suspicious), etc etc. Even if the reportage of the incident & trial are all highly biased, as you claim, the basic facts lead one to believe that this was a case of the grossest kind of injustice. As a lawyer & officer of the court, you should be outraged, not smugly self-satisfied. Unless you've been a deputy sheriff yourself, and once got away with drunken manslaughter due to cronyism, I really don't quite understand your attitude. .... What you've seen as extensive coverage flogging one side's own version of the evidence. I've on many occasions read one side's brief and decided it looks like a slam dunk in that side's favor, only to reach a different conclusion after reading the other side's. And I've done enough advocacy pieces myself to know that even the weakest case can be made to look good with a bit of creativity and effort. And excluding evidence, and instructing juries to ignore facts, etc etc. One of the problems we have in this country is that the courts are getting further & further away from anybody's idea of 'fair.' Regards- Doug King |
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