Damn, why can't we just get rid of these guys... the hypocrisy is ripe with the Republican Christian party. Ugh.
trump has installed conservative justices who are going to protect Republicans.
The Halls of Justice is a misnomer, it's a Court of Law which has little if anything to do with Justice. Meanwhile, Julian Assange is in his 6th year of house arrest in the Ecuadorian Embassy. Millions being spent to try and arrest him on trumped up charges that have never been formally brought against him and now dropped altogether but he did something far worse than Gov. Greitens, Julian made a bunch of powerful people look bad and that is not allowed to go unpunished.
No chance of conviction without the photo. The article makes it look like there is a lack of prosecutorial will, but these last minute evidentiary rulings happen all the time—he cannot be a witness in his own case so he had to dismiss, however the case can be recharged. The problem is finding another prosecutor to take it—very unlikely unless their state AGs office is willing.
@bingst Someone could have told them the photo existed and that would give them probable cause to charge but certainly not convict. Then they would have been hoping the photo showed up. I had a case where I knew the stolen gun existed and had been in the defendant’s possession because I had a picture of it in the defendant’s room and it had unique markings but I didn’t have the gun. I charged and was working with a couple other confidential informants desperately trying to get the gun—I never did find it but the defendant ended up pleading guilty to the case because I had DNA on him in a different case. Sometimes you have to hope that investigations will lead you to the evidence to get a conviction and it is ethical as long as you have enough evidence to rise to the level of probable cause to believe the defendant committed the crime to support your charges. But you are supposed to dismiss if it becomes clear that you won’t be able to meet your burden of proof (beyond a reasonable doubt) at trial.
Doesn't this set a bad precedent? Any accused could call the prosecution as a witness and have the charges dismissed?!! Surely they have a procedure to cover such an event without dropping charges.
@Akfishlady Very shady indeed.
Judges would not allow this in a normal case, I think.
You can’t call a witness unless the testimony would be relevant to the case. I take extra ordinary steps to avoid becoming a witness in my own case. When I interviewed my witnesses I always have a third party present so I can call that third party to the stand if my witness changes his or her story. However, here the attorney was called by the defense!! The judge has to determine whether the relevancy of the prosecutor’s likely testimony was substily outweighed by unfair harm to the case. It must have been very relevant.
@RonHunt I can only go with my familiarity with ND law. Here another prosecutor could charge but it would be difficult to find one willing. Usually the state’s AG office is the best bet. Every state has different statutes of limitation.