Kellfire
Blackballed
Why is it? None of us have seen all the other evidence thats been put before the jury.
The video evidence is damning and I know a solicitor who is amazed that his defence was successful.
Why is it? None of us have seen all the other evidence thats been put before the jury.
The video evidence is damning and I know a solicitor who is amazed that his defence was successful.
Clearly not that damning that a 12 person jury unanimously found him not guilty!
Yep, it's sad that they have been so weak and that the prosecution have done such a terrible job.
Whats sad is that you're willing to convict someone on the basis of a grainy cctc video and a media witchhunt with absolutely no knowledge of what went on before the incident.
Amazed he got off given the CCTV footage. Hopefully the ECB will find him guilty of bringing the game into disrepute and suspend him for a while to at least teach him some sort of lesson. There's also talk now that him missing The Ashes could be his 5-match suspension punishment back-dated, which would be a joke.
I don't need to know the full details of what went on before to know that he went so far beyond self defence that he was, in my opinion, clearly guilty of affray at a bare minimum.
Sadly, it's a fact that it's harder to prosecute than it is to defend.
What if the other guy had a blade in his back pocket. Did he still go too far then? You don't have the full facts, therefore your opinion is irrelevant.
The bloke was backing away with his hands up and Stokes absolutely leathered him, knocking him out cold onto concrete. He could have killed him. Could possibly see the POV that it was self defence initially, when Ali had the bottle in his hand, but at the point he knocked out Hale the fight was over and Hale was clearly not looking to fight. I struggle to side with Stokes on this one.
I don't need to know the full details of what went on before to know that he went so far beyond self defence that he was, in my opinion, clearly guilty of affray at a bare minimum.
Sadly, it's a fact that it's harder to prosecute than it is to defend.
You want defendants to have to prove innocence more than the prosecution provide evidence of guilt?
I didn't say that so your faux-shock is moot.
What I mean is that it's more difficult to gain a successful prosecution than it is to gain a successful defence, ie. most crimes are NOT met with a guilty verdict.