Vol8188
revolUTion in the air!
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2011
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when judge kept asking zimmeran if he was going to testify and lawyer objecting.
Everyone on twitter needs to tweet this:
@FBIPressOffice RT @theonlyemanny Yo @OliviaGrace18 I'm sending two black men to walk pass your house right now you silly whore you!
The guy who tweeted this is a verified singer on twitter. Never heard of him, but should be brought to attention of authorities. The person he is tweeting at was the female witness on stand.
Well, not watching it so I don't know what the colloquy was. I know that sometimes in criminal court the judge has to hear from the defendant certain things as regards waiver of a defense or a plea, or what have you. That cannot come from the lawyer because it has to be clear on the record that it is the defendant himself stipulating to it. Otherwise, defendant can claim he wanted to do x y z, and just didn't understand his rights and his lawyer got it wrong.
But that's just a guess as to why she was asking him.
A neighbor who had been a victim of a burglary while she was at home testified. I thought that jurors would be very sympathetic to her. Zimmerman visited her and helped install a lock on her slicing glass door and told her that she was welcome to visit his wife. O'Mara asked if she thought Zimmerman did too much or made her uncomfortable, and she said no, that she was very appreciative.
It was bizarre. She asked him once at start of the day if he was going to testify, then asked again after lunch. And she was asking knowing that they had more witnesses to present. I've never handled any criminal cases, but I've always thought judge will ask the Defendant after Defense has finished with their witnesses. I don't think any error, but just weird.
You know, thinking about it, it is possible that she had in her mind a plan to put in place regarding the gallery or security or something in case he did and maybe that was what it was about.
Well, not watching it so I don't know what the colloquy was. I know that sometimes in criminal court the judge has to hear from the defendant certain things as regards waiver of a defense or a plea, or what have you. That cannot come from the lawyer because it has to be clear on the record that it is the defendant himself stipulating to it. Otherwise, defendant can claim he wanted to do x y z, and just didn't understand his rights and his lawyer got it wrong.
But that's just a guess as to why she was asking him.
Could that not have been discussed with his attorney? If that was so shouldn't the attorney be aware of her reasoning?
Probably but these people have been working under intense conditions for a few weeks and a marathon session yesterday. How they are not just fumbling everything right now is a miracle.
