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Post by lene on May 23, 2005 11:36:21 GMT -5
It is bad luck if a man's alibi witnesses are his family. A person was sentenced to death based on testimonies from people who had EVERYTHING to gain by lying. One got out of prison in exchange for his testimony, one got back her impounded car, one got immunity and so forth. No one bothered to listen to a mother and two brothers who could provide an alibi at the time of the murder. No one bothered with the fact that the witness placed this individual on four different places at the same time, while a fifth person - who knew where he in fact had been at the time - was never brought to testify.
If someone decides to implicate you in a murder, it is bad luck if your family are your alibi witnesses.
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Post by sally104 on May 24, 2005 0:09:02 GMT -5
I suppose you are referring to a specific case. Then he can blame all those family members of accused killers who did lie in the past to give their loved one a false alibi. Yes, the testimony of five people should be believed over one person getting a deal. It is bad luck if a man's alibi witnesses are his family. A person was sentenced to death based on testimonies from people who had EVERYTHING to gain by lying. One got out of prison in exchange for his testimony, one got back her impounded car, one got immunity and so forth. No one bothered to listen to a mother and two brothers who could provide an alibi at the time of the murder. No one bothered with the fact that the witness placed this individual on four different places at the same time, while a fifth person - who knew where he in fact had been at the time - was never brought to testify. If someone decides to implicate you in a murder, it is bad luck if your family are your alibi witnesses.
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