• AlecSadler
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    12 hours ago

    Anyone smarter than me in law know if there is even a remote chance he walks?

    • Pollo_Jack@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      Aside from the nullification and hung jurys, there’s a good chance for a mistrial from them parading him around and letting everyone in the US know he fought for them.

    • garbagebagel@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      I’m not good at law but I have heard from people smarter than me that there are chances for at least a hung jury (I think could be retried) and there’s also another option called jury nullification, where the jury essentially says, “yeah we know he is guilty but we don’t agree with the law in this case” and acquits.

      • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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        11 hours ago

        The jury nullification thing pisses me off.

        I get that people don’t want Luigi to go to jail but wishing for juries to just make up the law based on the vibe of the case is just bonkers.

        The court system is a joke already.

        • TJDetweiler@lemmy.ca
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          3 hours ago

          I’m going to copy WoodScientist’s post. Don’t know how to tag, sorry, but credit goes to him for this.

          "I would say that jury nullification isn’t just some accident of the legal system, but the primary reason we have juries in the first place.

          Judges will say that juries are meant to just decide the simple facts of the case. But what sane person would ever design a system that assigns 12 random untrained nobodies to do that task? If all that mattered was judging the facts of the case, why not have 12 legal scholars instead? Why isn’t “juror” a profession, just like being a lawyer or judge is? If we want people to just apply the letter of the law to the facts of a case, why not fill juries with professionals, each who had a legal degree, and who have sat as jurors hundreds of times? Judging evidence and reading law is a skill. And it’s one that can be educated on, trained, and practiced. Why do we have amateur juries, when professional juries would clearly do their purported job so much better? Or why not just do what some countries do, and have most or all trials decided solely by judges? What exactly is the point of a jury? Compared to everything else in the courtroom, the jurors, the ones actually deciding guilt or innocence, are a bunch of untrained amateurs. On its face, it makes no damn sense!

          No, the true reason, and really the only reason, we have juries at all is so that juries can serve to judge both the accused AND the law. Juries are meant to be the final line of defense against unjust laws and prosecution. It is possible for a law itself to be criminal or corrupt. Legislative systems can easily be taken over by a tiny wealthy or powerful minority of the population, and they can end up passing laws criminalizing behaviors that the vast majority of the population don’t even consider to be crimes.

          The entire purpose of having a jury is that it places the final power of guilt and innocence directly in the hands of the people. Juries are meant as a final line of defense against corrupt laws passed by a minority against the wishes of the greater majority. An unaccountable elite can pass whatever ridiculous self-serving laws they want. But if the common people simply refuse to uphold those laws in the jury box, those laws are meaningless.

          THAT is the purpose of a jury. It is the only reason juries are worth the trouble. A bunch of rank amateurs will never be able to judge the facts of a case better than actual trained legal scholars with years of experience. But by empowering juries, it places the final authority of the law firmly in the hands of the people. That is the value of having a jury at all.

          Jury nullification is not just some strange quirk or odd loophole in our justice system. It’s the entire reason we have juries in the first place."

        • Pollo_Jack@lemmy.world
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          7 hours ago

          Jury’s have kind of always been vibes. There’s plenty of black kids that got the guilty verdict and hung and later it was revealed to be the womans father or friend of the family that raped.

          It is important to be more than a clockwork orange, understand the law but don’t apply it with such rigidity as to be devoid of morals or humanity.

        • Freefall@lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          He isn’t a threat to the public. No need to lock him up. Odds are good he won’t reoffend either.

        • mcherm@lemmy.world
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          8 hours ago

          I have two arguments to defend jury nullification. First of all, in our system “jury nullification” is NOT a policy. It is the name for the inevitable fact to that members of a jury can decide to vote “innocent” without being subject to some kind of interrogation.

          My second argument is this: I think jury nullification is actually a good policy, because the only thing it produces are delays unless fully 12 out of 12 randomly selected citizens think this application of the law is completely unfair. If the citizenry believes a law is unfair with that much unanimity it probably IS unfair.

          • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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            8 hours ago

            Well, to your first point, jurors cannot be held accountable for their verdict. Obviously if they could the whole system breaks down. Jurors can exploit this protection to return a false verdict with impunity, but it is exactly that - false testament. Others will try to say that jury nullification is an intended feature of the legal system but IMO it’s just exploiting a limitation.

            Secondly, you’re not talking about an unfair law, you’re talking about an unjust outcome. All laws will produce unjust outcomes in some specific circumstances. However a law against murder reduces more harm than it causes, so it’s worth upholding.

            To me, the idea of having juries decide to set aside the law in cases they feel are unjust is an absurdity. Imagine if Trump were on trial and the jury unanimously returned not-guilty despite obvious guilt.

        • zergtoshi@lemmy.world
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          10 hours ago

          Why let only judges make the jokes then and not the people in the jury too?
          Imho that’s a fairness in a sometimes unfair system.

          • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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            8 hours ago

            It’s really not a “fairness” because every case will be heard by different jurors with no legal experience.

            The “fairness” you’re talking about will depend on the popularity of the accused.

            Do you honestly believe Luigi would enjoy the support he has of he were an aging overweight bald guy?

            At its core, jury nullification is about deciding cases based on the vibe.

            • zergtoshi@lemmy.world
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              7 hours ago

              I do believe that the perception of the action of which Luigi got accused weighes orders of magnitude more than the perception of his appearance or his popularity.
              It’s not him who was popular in the first place.
              It was what was done.
              Accusing him of it in turn made him popular. That would’ve worked for other people too.

              • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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                6 hours ago

                That’s not the type of popularity I’m talking about.

                Luigi is young, approachable, affable, and not unattractive. I don’t believe for a moment that someone without those qualities would enjoy any sympathy from a jury.

                • Slowter1134@lemmy.world
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                  5 hours ago

                  Full hearted agreement. Pretty privilege is an observable phenomenon and Luigi is a cutie.

                  Heck, you could even argue that sharing a name with one of the Mario Bros from Nintendo makes Luigi seem family-friendly, silly, and meme-able.

                  Either of which could explain a future where Luigi would be found innocent by jury nullification where an amorphous blob that represents every other possibility would be found guilty.

                  However, the only way to be sure is to test the hypothesis. So to all you scientists out there, go forth and collect more data points!

          • notabot@lemm.ee
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            10 hours ago

            Because that’s how lynch mobs got off without penalties too. It’s very much a case of being careful what you wish for in this case. If he gets off because the jury says it’s OK to gun someone down without direct provocation, you can bet that others will too. You shot a gay man for no reason? No problem, the jury says that’s fine. You shot someone you suspect of having sympathies for Democrats? Head home, the jury was packed with MAGAs.

            • Lightor@lemmy.world
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              4 hours ago

              Rich people and people in government already get away with this stuff. Our president is a felon. If people in power aren’t bound by the law then citizens will act. Only holding the people who act accountable is ensuring that the people in power never have consequences.

            • zergtoshi@lemmy.world
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              9 hours ago

              Well, given that jury nullification is a thing and considering how rarely it happens, I’d rather risk the scenarios outlined by you than having no way of giving a not guilty verdict to people this way who do something illegal but legitimate.

    • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      No. He’s going to die in prison. I’m not happy about that fact. I’m just telling the truth. Just like there’s zero chance Charles Manson ever gets out. There’s zero chance Luigi gets out.

      • thefluffiest@feddit.nl
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        11 hours ago

        Might happen. Then when a sensible government gets in, somewhere down the line, we pardon him and make him secretary of HHS

        • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          Any government that puts this man, who murders strangers after getting emotional from reading books, in charge of HHS is not sensible.