Ponderable

Are you personally selecting the term "illegal" for a jury's verdict, or just quoting a nincompoop blog headline writer's sensational use of that word?

If it's your word, what criminal statute are you relying upon for your opinion?
Illegal alien, do you not understand the term?
 
Are you personally selecting the term "illegal" for a jury's verdict, or just quoting a nincompoop blog headline writer's sensational use of that word?

If it's your word, what criminal statute are you relying upon for your opinion?


k28390977.jpg
 
Are you personally selecting the term "illegal" for a jury's verdict, or just quoting a nincompoop blog headline writer's sensational use of that word?

If it's your word, what criminal statute are you relying upon for your opinion?
Perhaps "Illegal Alien 'Not Guilty' ... would have been the blogger or the internet "news" cite's editor's job to catch before it goes out. But there are so many times this oversight function of editor has been deemed unnecessary no matter any news organization's size, value, political leaning, etc. in the race to have a breaking news alert 23 seconds faster than their competition.
 
Perhaps "Illegal Alien 'Not Guilty' ... would have been the blogger or the internet "news" cite's editor's job to catch before it goes out. But there are so many times this oversight function of editor has been deemed unnecessary no matter any news organization's size, value, political leaning, etc. in the race to have a breaking news alert 23 seconds faster than their competition.
Lil 'joe's sources are usually just one guy in his mom's basement . . . kinda like him.
 
Re: Steinle

I'm hearing it was a prosecutorial error, they chose to try and convict on murder instead of manslaughter. They would likely have had success if they had gone for the lesser charge. You don't get to shoot for the higher charge and end up with a conviction on lesser, it's all or nothing.
 
Re: Steinle

I'm hearing it was a prosecutorial error, they chose to try and convict on murder instead of manslaughter. They would likely have had success if they had gone for the lesser charge. You don't get to shoot for the higher charge and end up with a conviction on lesser, it's all or nothing.
Didn't you call this one?
 
Re: Steinle

I'm hearing it was a prosecutorial error, they chose to try and convict on murder instead of manslaughter. They would likely have had success if they had gone for the lesser charge. You don't get to shoot for the higher charge and end up with a conviction on lesser, it's all or nothing.
The jury could have found this guy guilty of lessor crimes, including manslaughter. They decided he was only guilty of being a felon in possession of a firearm.
These prosecutors must have attended law school with the same group of prosecutors who failed to convict OJ.
Seven felony convictions and the guy has been deported five times....when he killed Steinle he was once again in the country illegally.
It's no wonder folks want a border fence...
_______________________________________________
The jury, which included three immigrants, found 54-year-old Jose Ines Garcia Zarate guilty of being a felon in possession of a firearm, but after nearly a week of deliberations it acquitted the five-time-deported Mexican national on first-degree and second-degree murder charges as well as involuntary manslaughter.
http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/11/30/kate-steinle-shooting-jury-reaches-verdict/
 
Only Ten Percent of the 1,859 Refugees Admitted into U.S. in November Are Muslim
10 hours ago
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&sou...MTAD&usg=AOvVaw14nVjxn8maH5VEfKEwJ8HM&ampcf=1
In FY 2016, the last full year of the Obama administration, 46 percent of the 84,995 refugees admitted into the country were Muslim.

“A total of 38,901 Muslim refugees entered the U.S. in fiscal year 2016, making up almost half (46%) of the nearly 85,000 refugees who entered the country in that period, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of data from the State Department’s Refugee Processing Center,” Pew Research reported, adding that in FY 2016, the United States “admitted the highest number of Muslim refugees of any year since data on self-reported religious affiliations first became publicly available in 2002.”
 
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