


Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
dicion wrote:This whole murder charge thing aside...They have already said that there were demonstrators in front of the store with revenge on their minds...
Revenge? For someone shooting a gang-banger who participated in an armed robbery?
Revenge, against this pharmacist, who was just doing his job, in his store, who didn't ask for the men to come in and point guns at him?
That is perhaps the dumbest thing I have ever heard.
http://www.dreamindemon.com/2009/05/28/ ... ed-robber/Although, a crowd of angry citizens did protest outside of the store, calling the shooting racially motivated. Because well, you know…the two robbers pointing guns at the employees and threatening to kill them were black. Had they been white, I am guessing they think Jerome and the two ladies would have handed over the cash and narcotics, lamented about the current economy while they all shared a Coke and some cherry flavored Twizzlers.
That's exactly what the defense should do in closing arguments. Claim the prosecution has not proven it wasn't self defense.HGWC wrote:That's all true. What if? The prosecutor though is going to play this video. There's no evidence at all that the guy who was killed presented any immediate threat to the pharmacist at any point in the whole sequence. What you guys are suggesting is that all the defense team has to do then is stand up and claim that the prosecution hasn't proven that it wasn't self defense. That isn't a defense to prosecution under Texas law. What if he had a gun, what if he was reaching for a gun, what if he was trying to get up and the pharmacist was afraid he had a gun? I would be afraid to face the jury and that video with just that as proof of self defense.
Rather than play judge and jury to this guy, I think it's more important for us to put ourselves in his shoes right before he pulled the trigger. Did it look to you like he was in any particular danger from this kid? Doesn't look that way to me. I would be really afraid it would look like that to the jury. Looks to me like he had quite a few better choices like not going back into the store in the first place. Like not chasing the first guy with a gun, who apparently didn't actually steal anything. BTW, what happened to the other rounds in his .45 revolver, and why did he trade it for a .380? Like running his mouth to the press telling a story that now doesn't appear to match the video. Seems there's a lot for us to learn about what not to do.
Frost wrote:It seems that a lot of people commenting in this thread not only have access to other videos of the incident from multiple angles, but are also psychic.
Or he got lucky with that shot.surprise_i'm_armed wrote:Since the pharmacist's aim was so good with the head shot, and having been wounded in one of his hands, it seems that he could have kept his distance from the wounded youth and shot him from a distance.
Great point. Everyone wants sympathy/empathy for themselves, their family, friends, and those with whom they agree. To me the whole idea of a judge ruling blindly only by the facts and the law is the same as being judged by a computer. Not what I want from a judge. Of course, I don't want judges interpreting the law or giving leniency in a manner with which I disagree. This is why it's important to elect politicians who will appoint judges who think like we think - or elect the judges directly, as is often the case in Texas.ClarkLZeuss wrote:Something that just occurred to me from reading another thread is that many of us despise the idea of a judge ruling on a case out of "empathy," rather than the correct way, of blindly judging by the facts and the law. However, what many of us mean by this is that we don't want any empathy given for the perps (example: we're already theorizing, and bemoaning, headlines like "Teenager Has Life Cut Tragically Short"). But we're fine with empathy given to the pharmacist, by the jury. But justice has to be blind.