Tags:
I'd write a summary of the day's events, but:
1) It was a very long and draining day
2) I've seen absolutely no evidence that anyone gives a damn.
Well, I'll lay out a basic framework at least, I'm trashed.
The trial was a bench trial, arguments presented only to a judge (I think the defendant waived the jury trial). Took place in traffic court, which is purportedly an unusual place for such a trial (there's a lot about this stuff I don't understand).
The thing went from about 9:30 all the way to 7 PM. About 2/3 of the room was full with Mandy's friends and family.
The charges were speeding, failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident, willful negligence . . . blanking on the other two.
Early on the prosecution presented witnesses including a guy who chased the perp down and was probably the only reason it didn't end up being an unsolved hit-and-run. He was an absolute angel.
Then a gal who was waiting at the light eastbound, basically watching the whole thing happen from a box seat. She was an angel too. Would like to hug both of them.
Then a bunch of police 'experts', mostly being asked stoopid-azz questions by the defense attorney who looked like a complete fool trying to discredit them.
Then at the end of the day the three guys in the car that killed Mandy-- first the back seat guy, then the twin brother in the passenger seat, then the other twin who was the driver.
All of them lied like rugs; the driver was most sophisticated. The prosecution had a fairly easy time making them look not very credible.
The defense attorney tried mostly in vain to liken Mandy's entering the intersection to a kid darting out unexpectedly between two parked cars, to make it seem like she'd threaded dangerously between standing vehicles to enter the intersection, to make a case that she'd "timed the light", and to make a case that she hit the car rather than the car hitting her (all of the technical experts made him look like an idiot with this tack, but he kept with it, even pretty clearly declaring that all of the technical experts were dishonest in his closing arguments.
The judge saw through all the BS I think, but in the end upheld all the charges except the willful negligence (or whatever it's called exactly) which is the only one that could have resulted in jail time.
The driver was sentenced with fines totaling 9 hundred and something, and was given the option to do bicycle related community service (64 hours) which he accepted, so no fines. Also supervision for I don't know how long.
The defendants and their families bolted immediately on the elevator so that the victim's family wouldn't seem them celebrating. Guessing they were coached to do so. I witnessed a major round of high-fiving among the 3 occupants as I was leaving.
I probably left enough out that this whole account makes no sense. Clarifying questions welcome.
Well, I'll lay out a basic framework at least, I'm trashed.
The trial was a bench trial, arguments presented only to a judge (I think the defendant waived the jury trial). Took place in traffic court, which is purportedly an unusual place for such a trial (there's a lot about this stuff I don't understand).
The thing went from about 9:30 all the way to 7 PM. About 2/3 of the room was full with Mandy's friends and family.
The charges were speeding, failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident, willful negligence . . . blanking on the other two.
Early on the prosecution presented witnesses including a guy who chased the perp down and was probably the only reason it didn't end up being an unsolved hit-and-run. He was an absolute angel.
Then a gal who was waiting at the light eastbound, basically watching the whole thing happen from a box seat. She was an angel too. Would like to hug both of them.
Then a bunch of police 'experts', mostly being asked stoopid-azz questions by the defense attorney who looked like a complete fool trying to discredit them.
Then at the end of the day the three guys in the car that killed Mandy-- first the back seat guy, then the twin brother in the passenger seat, then the other twin who was the driver.
All of them lied like rugs; the driver was most sophisticated. The prosecution had a fairly easy time making them look not very credible.
The defense attorney tried mostly in vain to liken Mandy's entering the intersection to a kid darting out unexpectedly between two parked cars, to make it seem like she'd threaded dangerously between standing vehicles to enter the intersection, to make a case that she'd "timed the light", and to make a case that she hit the car rather than the car hitting her (all of the technical experts made him look like an idiot with this tack, but he kept with it, even pretty clearly declaring that all of the technical experts were dishonest in his closing arguments.
The judge saw through all the BS I think, but in the end upheld all the charges except the willful negligence (or whatever it's called exactly) which is the only one that could have resulted in jail time.
The driver was sentenced with fines totaling 9 hundred and something, and was given the option to do bicycle related community service (64 hours) which he accepted, so no fines. Also supervision for I don't know how long.
The defendants and their families bolted immediately on the elevator so that the victim's family wouldn't seem them celebrating. Guessing they were coached to do so. I witnessed a major round of high-fiving among the 3 occupants as I was leaving.
I probably left enough out that this whole account makes no sense. Clarifying questions welcome.
203 members
1 member
270 members
1 member
261 members