You don't get to be an old dog without learning a few tricks.
Shorai Powersports batteries are very trick!
Agree absolutely.
Where we differ is that there is a big difference between innocence and prima facie guilt which cannot quite be proven. Some juries struggle for days before reaching a verdict or simply give up.
Guilt must be proven beyond reasonable doubt. Jurisprudential scholars use algebra for this stuff but generally it means a 75% certainty in the jurors minds. Not 100%. Not 51%.
FYI the balance of probabilities is considered to be 66%.
Anyway I'm satisfied David Bain has been acquitted even if that goes against the grain.
I do not believe he should be compensated. The weight of evidence still points at him.
Stevens prints were also on the gun, is it not possible that the gun was handled wearing gloves giving the impression it was wiped down.
And even if it was wiped down, why would David have gone to the trouble of wiping it down and leave clear bloody finger prints on it, and what else did he kill to get the animal blood?
In this case it shouldn't be necessary to prove his innocence, he can prove that the information is unavailable because of the police, David had no input as to what evidence was collected, and was probably pressured by the police to agree to the burning down of the house. Thus not his fault.
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