i don't have any issue with this, i know we're 'presumed innocent in the eyse of the law'.
maybe i'm just stuck on the verbiage used. "insufficient evidence" sounds a lot different than "cleared" or even "found no evidence to support pursing the case any further".
to me, it just sounds like code for "we know what happened, we just can't prove it".
well, 1st, they didn't say "no evidence", just "insufficient evidence". which, and this is just me, just doesn't instill a ton of confidence that absolutely, nothing happened. i don't know what did or didn't happen. it's just the choice of wording by the DA, and generally, i think they try to choose their words carefully. i would feel alot better about all of this had they said "we found no evidence supporting the claims, and will not be pursuing any criminal prosecution" or something along those lines.What are you thinking here Jake? There was no evidence to even bring charges against Von. If there was, we're talking about a completely different deal and there would be virtually no one on here (there's always one or two) would be supporting him.
Also, please keep in mind that there have been multiple high profile cases on other campuses where the strong accusations of rape vs young men have been totally fabricated and rushes to judgment all but ruined the lives of a lot of innocent young men....Duke Lacrosse, Univ of Virginia fraternity case where Rolling Stone perpetuated the lie and that wacko college chick at Columbia who dragged a stupid mattress around campus "in protest" after all evidence showed she completely made it all up.
And before somebody plays the tired "yeah but if it was your daughter" card....I have a daughter at UT...and I also have a son.
As a former Assistant District Attorney in Tennessee I can say that's as close to complete exoneration that you'll ever likely get by way of an official statement in my experience. The DA is not judge or jury and doesn't typically declare someone innocent in my experience.
I prosecuted many weak cases in the past for various reasons but when a DA declines to prosecute or take a case to the Grand Jury that's about as compelling as it gets. I think you're trying to make that statement into something it's not.
False accusations by uninvolved individuals made on different campuses.
i seriously don't get why everyone is so excited. "insufficient evidence" just means they couldn't find enough proof to prosecute. it doesn't mean that nothing happened, and he's completely innocent of all accusations.
there's a bigger picture folks.
i seriously don't get why everyone is so excited. "insufficient evidence" just means they couldn't find enough proof to prosecute. it doesn't mean that nothing happened, and he's completely innocent of all accusations.
there's a bigger picture folks.
am i reading this right?
that's not what the DA said.
insufficient evidence would probably mean there was lack of evidence to support a rape conviction. That would tell me there were no signs of an attack or resistance on the victim. If she had bruises, scratches, etc then there probably would have been support for filing a rape charge.
As a former Assistant District Attorney in Tennessee I can say that's as close to complete exoneration that you'll ever likely get by way of an official statement in my experience. The DA is not judge or jury and doesn't typically declare someone innocent in my experience.
I prosecuted many weak cases in the past for various reasons but when a DA declines to prosecute or take a case to the Grand Jury that's about as compelling as it gets. I think you're trying to make that statement into something it's not.
well, 1st, they didn't say "no evidence", just "insufficient evidence". which, and this is just me, just doesn't instill a ton of confidence that absolutely, nothing happened. i don't know what did or didn't happen. it's just the choice of wording by the DA, and generally, i think they try to choose their words carefully. i would feel alot better about all of this had they said "we found evidence supporting the claims, and will not be pursuing any criminal prosecution" or something along those lines.
2nd point, agreed 100%.
as to the original ?, what's my angle...it's simply that with the current state of affairs on college campuses, specifically in relation to football players and violence against women, the well documented issues in the NFL with the same issue......that i think UT has to tread lightly when deciding what to do next.
in all honesty, i won't have a problem if he's reinstated. but i would expect some, maybe severe, criticism given the current state of affairs.
but i won't have an issue if he's not either, i would completely understand why.
