bamawriter
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Sep 24, 2010
- Messages
- 26,551
- Likes
- 17,123
If both your replies don't lead you to have "reasonable doubt" about the accuser's claims, then I don't know what else I can say.
Here's why I'm very much on the fence:
We know that the phones were destroyed, and we can justifiably draw a negative inference because of that.
However, the cops did get the records from the defendants and Bowles (and perhaps a few others, I'm a little unclear on that). If the accusers had any interaction via their phones with Bowles or either of the defendants, then those conversations were retrieved. At this point, the only real inference is that the girls destroyed evidence of conversations with each other. Any other conversations can be retrieved (and maybe they were, again, I'm a little unclear there).
One can choose to draw the conclusion that these two women conspired against these two men. But one does not have to reach that conclusion. It's easy to say that the phones are the smoking gun. But the problem is that we don't actually have the gun to know whether or not it's smoking.
Last edited: