eric76 said:
aggiehawg said:
eric76 said:
There's also a possibility, however remote, that the judge could set aside a guilty verdict and either aquit the defendant or order a new trial.
I wouldn't count too much on this, though.
Welllll, not so fast. Cahill has struck me as a pretty fair judge who is a stickler on the law, thus far.
The trick here will be the jury instructions. Yes they are promulgated and uniform but it is the trial court's determination of whether sufficient evidence has been adduced at trial to warrant whether a certain instruction should even be given to the jury before they are charged.
This will be where the state court of appeals mandate on the third degree murder charge being reinstated come into play. Will he charge the jury on third degree murder (depraved mind element) or not?
So the judge can kind of l ead them in the right direction so as to allow and encourage the jury to come to the proper decision?
That sounds good.
Not exactly. Whether to give or withhold a jury instruction in any given case can be the grounds for reversible error. Judges tread lightly especially when already scolded by the state court of appeals. And that came pretty much out of the blue for Cahill.
The case law in Minnesota on third degree murder clearly excluded such a charge in the Chauvin case and Cahill rightly dismissed that charge last fast. Then more appeals in a completely unrelated and factually distinguishable case
Noor* case reversed that long settled case law. The
Noor decision is before the state supreme court in June to settle the issue but Cahill has to plow ahead with such uncertainty, i.e. fly by the seat of his pants.
*Noor case was the cop in a squad car responding to a 911 call of a possible sexual assault in an alley at night. The woman who had made the 911 call approached the squad car in the dark and Noor shot her from inside the squad car and across the body of his partner sitting next to him. I'm pretty sure the police training manual doesn't include the discharge of a weapon from inside a squad car, across the body of a fellow officer. Probably can discharge a weapon across the body of a civilian either, unless there is patent and direct threa to either.