If I Had Planned The Conspiracy ...

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Offline Tom Sorensen

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Re: If I Had Planned The Conspiracy ...
« Reply #378 on: March 13, 2025, 03:06:23 PM »
2. The Warren Commission was a fact-finding investigation, not a criminal trial. Witnesses and evidence were not held to the standards of the Criminal (or Civil, for that matter) Rules of Evidence.

So, the WC conclusions are nothing more than opinions based upon questionable cherry picked evidence, right?

Or one could say that the commission fell short in the facts department when they got carried away with pinning the murders of JFK and Tippit on Oswald.

Offline Lance Payette

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Re: If I Had Planned The Conspiracy ...
« Reply #379 on: March 14, 2025, 12:40:00 AM »
2. The Warren Commission was a fact-finding investigation, not a criminal trial. Witnesses and evidence were not held to the standards of the Criminal (or Civil, for that matter) Rules of Evidence.

So, the WC conclusions are nothing more than opinions based upon questionable cherry picked evidence, right?
Again, I will attempt to educate you because I am a kindly model of suffering fools gladly.

The point of a criminal trial is not "Let's try to decide what's factually true, what actually happened." As stated in one USDOJ handbook, "The purpose of criminal trials is not to determine truth but to determine the probability of guilt." The point is whether the prosecution can convince a jury beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused is guilty. The game for the defense is to raise as many doubts as possible, even if they are absurd; hey, you never know what wacky theory the jury might buy. Contrary to what many of you folks believe, the deck is stacked heavily in favor of the accused. Better that ten guilty men go free than that one innocent man is convicted, etc., etc. Hence, many of the rules of evidence and procedure have the effect of blocking testimony and evidence of the sort all of us rely upon every day - hearsay, for example.

The focus of the CT community on "court stuff" and whether Oswald would have been found guilty at trial is a massive red herring. A not guilty verdict at a criminal trial would not have precluded the WC from deciding that Oswald nonetheless was the assassin or history from accepting this verdict. Do you seriously think the verdict of history will be that OJ didn't kill Nicole because a jury found him not guilty? The civil verdict of liability was directly contrary to the criminal verdict, and the verdict of history will surely be the same.

Even a full-blown civil or criminal trial ends up being simply the "opinion" of a judge or jury, and I've seen enough to know that those opinions are sometimes badly flawed. The fact that a matter has been litigated tells us little or nothing about the actual truth. The verdict of history is the consensus of those professionals who are most knowledgeable about the subject matter, simple as that. No one thinks historical investigation, research and analysis should be hamstrung by the rules and procedures of litigation. The verdict of history 60+ years after the JFKA is that Oswald acted alone. To change that verdict would require massive new and compelling evidence. A bushel of dubious Conspiracy Factoids and chain-of-custody arguments aren't going to do it.

There, I've done sufficient glad suffering for a while. I really am kind of a saint, doncha think?

Online John Mytton

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Re: If I Had Planned The Conspiracy ...
« Reply #380 on: March 14, 2025, 01:13:23 AM »
Again, I will attempt to educate you because I am a kindly model of suffering fools gladly.

The point of a criminal trial is not "Let's try to decide what's factually true, what actually happened." As stated in one USDOJ handbook, "The purpose of criminal trials is not to determine truth but to determine the probability of guilt." The point is whether the prosecution can convince a jury beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused is guilty. The game for the defense is to raise as many doubts as possible, even if they are absurd; hey, you never know what wacky theory the jury might buy. Contrary to what many of you folks believe, the deck is stacked heavily in favor of the accused. Better that ten guilty men go free than that one innocent man is convicted, etc., etc. Hence, many of the rules of evidence and procedure have the effect of blocking testimony and evidence of the sort all of us rely upon every day - hearsay, for example.

The focus of the CT community on "court stuff" and whether Oswald would have been found guilty at trial is a massive red herring. A not guilty verdict at a criminal trial would not have precluded the WC from deciding that Oswald nonetheless was the assassin or history from accepting this verdict. Do you seriously think the verdict of history will be that OJ didn't kill Nicole because a jury found him not guilty? The civil verdict of liability was directly contrary to the criminal verdict, and the verdict of history will surely be the same.

Even a full-blown civil or criminal trial ends up being simply the "opinion" of a judge or jury, and I've seen enough to know that those opinions are sometimes badly flawed. The fact that a matter has been litigated tells us little or nothing about the actual truth. The verdict of history is the consensus of those professionals who are most knowledgeable about the subject matter, simple as that. No one thinks historical investigation, research and analysis should be hamstrung by the rules and procedures of litigation. The verdict of history 60+ years after the JFKA is that Oswald acted alone. To change that verdict would require massive new and compelling evidence. A bushel of dubious Conspiracy Factoids and chain-of-custody arguments aren't going to do it.

There, I've done sufficient glad suffering for a while. I really am kind of a saint, doncha think?

Quote
The game for the defense is to raise as many doubts as possible, even if they are absurd; hey, you never know what wacky theory the jury might buy.



JohnM

Online Mitch Todd

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Re: If I had planned the conspiracy ...
« Reply #381 on: March 14, 2025, 02:57:30 AM »
No, "stories" told long after the fact do not constitute a valid chain of custody.  To see why, just ask yourself how McDonald could possibly know that the gun he initialed hours later in the personnel office was the same gun he handled in the theater?
Well then, you're outta luck, kid. In court, you still need to have witnesses come in to testify in order to validate any chain of custody, no matter the medium it comes packed in. You can't get away from those stories told long after fact.

Online Martin Weidmann

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Re: If I Had Planned The Conspiracy ...
« Reply #382 on: March 14, 2025, 10:09:04 AM »
Again, I will attempt to educate you because I am a kindly model of suffering fools gladly.

The point of a criminal trial is not "Let's try to decide what's factually true, what actually happened." As stated in one USDOJ handbook, "The purpose of criminal trials is not to determine truth but to determine the probability of guilt." The point is whether the prosecution can convince a jury beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused is guilty. The game for the defense is to raise as many doubts as possible, even if they are absurd; hey, you never know what wacky theory the jury might buy. Contrary to what many of you folks believe, the deck is stacked heavily in favor of the accused. Better that ten guilty men go free than that one innocent man is convicted, etc., etc. Hence, many of the rules of evidence and procedure have the effect of blocking testimony and evidence of the sort all of us rely upon every day - hearsay, for example.

The focus of the CT community on "court stuff" and whether Oswald would have been found guilty at trial is a massive red herring. A not guilty verdict at a criminal trial would not have precluded the WC from deciding that Oswald nonetheless was the assassin or history from accepting this verdict. Do you seriously think the verdict of history will be that OJ didn't kill Nicole because a jury found him not guilty? The civil verdict of liability was directly contrary to the criminal verdict, and the verdict of history will surely be the same.

Even a full-blown civil or criminal trial ends up being simply the "opinion" of a judge or jury, and I've seen enough to know that those opinions are sometimes badly flawed. The fact that a matter has been litigated tells us little or nothing about the actual truth. The verdict of history is the consensus of those professionals who are most knowledgeable about the subject matter, simple as that. No one thinks historical investigation, research and analysis should be hamstrung by the rules and procedures of litigation. The verdict of history 60+ years after the JFKA is that Oswald acted alone. To change that verdict would require massive new and compelling evidence. A bushel of dubious Conspiracy Factoids and chain-of-custody arguments aren't going to do it.

There, I've done sufficient glad suffering for a while. I really am kind of a saint, doncha think?

Again, I will attempt to educate you because I am a kindly model of suffering fools gladly.

But in no way are you an arrogant jerk, right?

The point of a criminal trial is not "Let's try to decide what's factually true, what actually happened."

Kicking in an open door?

A not guilty verdict at a criminal trial would not have precluded the WC from deciding that Oswald nonetheless was the assassin

True, but that still would be a mere conclusion based on questionable cherry picked evidence.

And, of course, if there had been a trial and a verdict, there wouldn't have been a WC and all the "evidence" would have been challegend instead of being cherry picked and blindly accepted

The verdict of history 60+ years after the JFKA is that Oswald acted alone.

Really? And here is little old me thinking that history is written by the victor, regardless if it is true or not.

Even a full-blown civil or criminal trial ends up being simply the "opinion" of a judge or jury, and I've seen enough to know that those opinions are sometimes badly flawed.

But the opinion of a government commission that tried to hide the evidence for 75 years couldn't possibly be flawed?

There, I've done sufficient glad suffering for a while. I really am kind of a saint, doncha think?

You and your fragile ego don't want to know what I think.
« Last Edit: March 14, 2025, 10:15:59 AM by Martin Weidmann »

Online Martin Weidmann

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Re: If I had planned the conspiracy ...
« Reply #383 on: March 14, 2025, 10:18:45 AM »
It would seem that Mitch can't or doesn't want to answer my question;

Bob Carroll, the first police officer to have unambiguous custody of the pistol and in whose presence the pistol remained until Hill, Carroll, et al, marked it

Where exactly did Carroll say that the revolver remained in his presence until it was marked?

So, I'll just assume that his claim is bogus.

Offline Jonithan Carl

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Re: If I had planned the conspiracy ...
« Reply #384 on: March 15, 2025, 08:12:09 AM »
The Warren Commission was, in effect, the FBI investigation of the JFK assassination.
Less than 48 hours after the assassination Hoover let it be known that the outcome of the investigation was going to be that Oswald was the lone assassin.
This isn't a joke or an exaggeration - the outcome of the investigation was decided before the investigation had really got going.
The loyalty of FBI agents was not to the truth or justice or any of that...their loyalty was to the Bureau and the Bureau was Hoover.
Hoover was the FBI and the FBI was Hoover.

This is a very uncomfortable fact for Lone Nutters, who swallow down the Warren Commission's findings wholesale, because it pulls the rug out from under any notions of "truth".
Trying to present the Oswald-Did-It [ODI] theory as a result of the search for some kind of "truth" is a sick joke and the perpetuation of this sick joke is an indicator of a serious malfunction within society.

There is no more extreme mentality than that of the Lone Nutter.
The Warren Commission’s conclusions have been debated for decades, with many questioning the FBI’s role and Hoover’s influence. Whether one believes Oswald acted alone or not, skepticism about the investigation’s impartiality remains. True justice depends on transparency and accountability—key factors that continue to drive discussions about this case.
« Last Edit: March 15, 2025, 08:14:24 AM by Jonithan Carl »