Even this judge has admitted that now that "more things have come out" she's "not sure I would rule the same way" on this matter. She made this statement during the whole debacle where the defense attorney opened the door to the affair coming out. You can hear the judge make this statement around the 2:49 mark on this clip. This judge is a flake and a wet noodle.sugar magnolia wrote: ↑Fri Feb 02, 2024 6:34 amThanks for that clarification. During trial testimony, I tend to rely on the Judge's decisions on admissibility of evidence. They know the rules and facts and law much better than the general public, and what seems ridiculous to us may be perfectly valid law. The viewing public's take on things is colored by our extraneous knowledge gleaned from media reports (whether factual or not) and is quite possibly completely irrelevant to the charges. I have to believe that, in most cases, the jury is relying only on admissible evidence heard during trial and reaches a verdict based on how the testimony and evidence apply directly to the crime charged.Maybenaut wrote: ↑Fri Feb 02, 2024 12:02 amWell, not entirely. She’s charged with a specific negligent act. The danger is that she would be convicted of some other negligent act that she’s not charged with, or just for being a bad parent or a bad person in general.RVInit wrote: ↑Thu Feb 01, 2024 10:59 pm Oh, here are some more suppressed gems - when his room, which his mother cleaned, was searched, right out in the open is an empty bottle of booze and a half full bottle of booze, hard liquor. He's 15 years old. So, yeah, great parenting going on here. And again, the photos were suppressed because the judge is concerned about Mrs Crumbley being shown as a "bad parent". Bad parenting is the whole freaking negligent thing.
Just for those of you not watching the trial, don't be totally baffled if she is acquitted.
The exception to the rule making “prior bad acts” inadmissible is large enough that the rule often only exists at its edges; the government can almost always find a reason that the evidence is relevant and not unduly prejudicial. It gladdens my little defense-attorney heart to see a judge actually apply the rule.
"Well, s/he might not have done this thing, but s/he damn sure did something to be punished for and this is our chance to do so" is a hell of a way to get a guilty verdict.
Edit - just by the way, this clip does not contain all the drama that happened in front of the jury. This is after the jury has been removed. And everything the defense attorney says in this clip is nonsense as the witness makes clear. After all the drama this attorney really made a fool of herself and her client and the jury heard it all. So, this judge is not helping the defense one bit. At all. Being a wet noodle is allowing the jury to see what a complete and utter train wreck Shannon Smith is. Having said that, enough of Ms Crumbleys failure to parent her son is being left out that she could get acquitted. I think there is about a 50/50 chance. Not super good, not bad either.