7/17/21….NOW man MUST still face ANOTHER TRIAL! HOW MUCH đź’° SHOULD THIS FALSELY ACCUSED/SENTENCED MAN RECEIVE? I THINK $1 MILLION TAX FREE FOR EVERY YEAR HE WAS IN COURT SYSTEM + PRISON!
Ken Heisner
I’ll never understand with holding evidence for the defendant . Why is that not a crime the prosecutor police have to be held at the highest standards. Hiring both the prosecutor and law enforcement they all need physiological pre employment testing.
Joshua Daniels
The comic book guy was probably doing an insurance fraud deal and ended up blaming this man. So sad.
Robert McDonnold
Imagine the guilt that the jury feels for finding him guilty. Yeah, jury duty. Thanks Bob
Joseph Jarbeau
Cops lie beat and kill us while we pay their salaries, medical, dental and pensions. Theirs nothing you can do about it. We got a Union and you don't. HA! HA! on you America. We're going to get you cause we have the guns and a crooked legal system.
Goatcha
Even if he's guilty, the sentence is crazy. All these people who get 2 years, 5 years, 20 years max for murder, he gets 67 years for a theft where no one was hurt.
Edensasp
Absolute immunity: In 1976, the Supreme Court decided that prosecutors have absolute immunity—and so cannot be sued—for misconduct related to their advocacy in the courtroom. Imbler v. Pachtman, 424 U.S. 409 (1976). The Court expressed concerned that if prosecutors could be sued for decisions they make, they may start second-guessing themselves: “[It is] better to leave unredressed the wrongs done by dishonest officers than to subject those who try to do their duty to the constant dread of retaliation.” Id. at 428. That means prosecutors cannot be sued for injuries caused by their own misconduct—for example, coercing witnesses to lie, hiding evidence of innocence, or fabricating evidence of guilt—even when they’ve intentionally violated an individual’s constitutional rights or caused a wrongful conviction.
Paul Mackerer
Even if he is guilty 21 years is long enough. What is it with these long sentences.
They never let you see discovery. They commit crimes by prosecuting innocent people.
Withholding exculpatory evidence….. CHA-CHINGGGGG!!!
7/17/21….NOW man MUST still face ANOTHER TRIAL!
HOW MUCH đź’° SHOULD THIS FALSELY ACCUSED/SENTENCED MAN RECEIVE?
I THINK $1 MILLION TAX FREE FOR EVERY YEAR HE WAS IN COURT SYSTEM + PRISON!
I’ll never understand with holding evidence for the defendant . Why is that not a crime the prosecutor police have to be held at the highest standards. Hiring both the prosecutor and law enforcement they all need physiological pre employment testing.
The comic book guy was probably doing an insurance fraud deal and ended up blaming this man. So sad.
Imagine the guilt that the jury feels for finding him guilty. Yeah, jury duty.
Thanks
Bob
Cops lie beat and kill us while we pay their salaries, medical, dental
and pensions. Theirs nothing you can do about it. We got a Union and
you don't. HA! HA! on you America. We're going to get you
cause we have the guns and a crooked legal system.
Even if he's guilty, the sentence is crazy. All these people who get 2 years, 5 years, 20 years max for murder, he gets 67 years for a theft where no one was hurt.
Absolute immunity: In 1976, the Supreme Court decided that prosecutors have absolute
immunity—and so cannot be sued—for misconduct related to their advocacy
in the courtroom. Imbler v. Pachtman, 424 U.S. 409 (1976). The Court
expressed concerned that if prosecutors could be sued for decisions they
make, they may start second-guessing themselves: “[It is] better to
leave unredressed the wrongs done by dishonest officers than to subject
those who try to do their duty to the constant dread of retaliation.”
Id. at 428. That means prosecutors cannot be sued for injuries caused by
their own misconduct—for example, coercing witnesses to lie, hiding
evidence of innocence, or fabricating evidence of guilt—even when
they’ve intentionally violated an individual’s constitutional rights or
caused a wrongful conviction.
Even if he is guilty 21 years is long enough. What is it with these long sentences.