aggiehawg said:
This is still trial related. Dr. Fowler, a defense expert is now being "investigated" (read "trashed") by the Maryland state AG. Just like Judge Sullivan did in the Flynn case the AG is asking for comers to comment and submit their opinions. Which is not the way investigations are normally done. This is a dog pile to smear the guy.Quote:
Now it's happening, the threats are coming to fruition. The Washington Post reports that the Maryland Attorney General is planning to appoint a panel to audit Fowler's cases:Quote:
Maryland Attorney General Brian E. Frosh's office plans to appoint a panel of independent experts to audit and release a public report on all cases of deaths in police custody overseen by David Fowler, the state's former chief medical examiner who testified in Derek Chauvin's defense.The Maryland A.G. Statement reads, in full:Quote:
In a statement Friday, Frosh (D) said his office would be "consulting experts, examining similar audits in other jurisdictions, and doing a preliminary review of [the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner] data and protocols."
The statement called on those who have been "affected by the focus of the audit or members of the public with interest or expertise" to submit comments or materials to the Office of the Attorney General.
Fowler could not be immediately reached on Friday but said earlier he formed his opinion in collaboration with 13 other experts. He previously defended his work in a statement to The Washington Post: "I stand behind the outstanding work that all of our dedicated staff at the Maryland State Medical Examiner's Office performed during my tenure as the Chief ME."Quote:
"My office, in consultation with Governor Hogan's Chief Legal Counsel, has begun working to develop the process and timeline for the audit of in-custody death determinations made by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner (OCME) during the tenure of Dr. David Fowler. We are committed to overseeing a professional and independent audit that adheres to the highest standards of impartiality and integrity. We will be consulting experts, examining similar audits in other jurisdictions, and doing a preliminary review of OCME data and protocols.
Our intent is to appoint a panel of independent subject matter experts to perform the audit, and at the conclusion of the review, to release a public report on its findings.
"As we continue this process, we are also interested in receiving input from communities
affected by the focus of the audit or members of the public with interest or expertise in the work of the OCME. We invite anyone who would like to provide comments or materials to send them by June 7, 2021 to the Office of the Attorney General at OCMEaudit@oag.state.md.us, or to 200
St. Paul Place, Baltimore, MD 21202."LinkQuote:
It's not hard to understand what is happening. Maryland officials and the professional forensic participants in the targeting of Fowler, are seeking both retribution against Fowler, and making it difficult if not impossible for the three other officers awaiting trial to hire expert witnesses. Chauvin had two experts who testified one (Barry Brodd) had his house targeted and the other (Dr. David Fowler) his professional license attacked.
The Maryland "audit" panel will reach the conclusion the mob wants.
<sigh>
It all started with what happened to Joe the Plumber when he asked Obama a question in 2008. He was vilified, his personal information released by state and local employees, etc..Quote:
This kind of stuff has much more far-reaching consequences than just to the Floyd officers.
This is a shot across the bow for any experts who would consider offering testimony that is counter to the approved narrative.
Our society is being controlled more and more by leftist lynch mobs: politics, judicial system, mainstream media, social media, and entertainment. Scary stuff.
From Judge Cahill’s ruling on #DerekChauvin and cruelty: pic.twitter.com/62HnyzQJET
— Jason DeRusha (@DeRushaJ) May 12, 2021
aggiehawg said:From Judge Cahill’s ruling on #DerekChauvin and cruelty: pic.twitter.com/62HnyzQJET
— Jason DeRusha (@DeRushaJ) May 12, 2021
Floyd was talking and even yelling for well over four minutes of that time.
Called EMS twice. EMS didn't show up, despite the fire station being less than half a mile away.Quote:
They tried to let him sit in an air conditioned car. But he fought with them. And that is how he ended up on the hard pavement with a knee holding him down. It was Floyd's stupidity, not Chauvin's "cruelty" that caused that particular hardship for Floyd.
HtownAg92 said:No, he should be working from a standpoint of what the evidence showed. A judge make findings and enter a judgment that is contrary to what the jury found if the evidence did not support the jury's verdict.chickencoupe16 said:HtownAg92 said:Wow. A politically-driven and consequence-aware jury may be excused somewhat for ignoring evidence. A sitting judge doing it is just incredible.aggiehawg said:
Cahill will enhance Chauvin's sentence.LinkQuote:
Judge Cahill ruled that the following four sentencing aggravating factors will apply:Judge Cahill, however, ruled that Floyd was not "particularly vulnerable." Read Judge Cahill's full ruling here.
- Chauvin abused a position of trust and authority
- Chauvin treated George Floyd with "particular cruelty"
- Children were present during the crimes
- Chauvin committed the crime "as a group with the active participation of at least three other persons"
"Particular cruelty"? When? How? He just de facto assigned intent to kill.
I hope that the appeals court guts Cahill in their opinion for the numerous baffling errors he made through this trial.
I firmly believe Chauvin should have been found not guilty. However, having been found guilty, shouldn't Cahill work from the standpoint that Chauvin actually did commit 2nd degree murder?
If so, the only possible point of contention that I see is "particular cruelty" but even that I could agree with if you're working from the standpoint that Chauvin intended to kill him, did so in a very slow manner, and kept on well after Floyd had no pulse.
For a similar example, I had a judge enter a judgment as a matter of law, overturning the jury's verdict, on punitive damages because the evidence did not show malice or a reckless disregard for the rights of the plaintiffs.
Such motions to the judge to ignore the jury's decision are rarely successful but if the jury has not applied the law to the facts or the judge believes insufficient facts were adduced at trial to justify their verdict under the law, he does have that power. In fact, one of Flynn's business partners was tried over the Turkish stuff, was convicted and the judge threw out the verdict. It can happen, it is just very rare.chickencoupe16 said:HtownAg92 said:No, he should be working from a standpoint of what the evidence showed. A judge make findings and enter a judgment that is contrary to what the jury found if the evidence did not support the jury's verdict.chickencoupe16 said:HtownAg92 said:Wow. A politically-driven and consequence-aware jury may be excused somewhat for ignoring evidence. A sitting judge doing it is just incredible.aggiehawg said:
Cahill will enhance Chauvin's sentence.LinkQuote:
Judge Cahill ruled that the following four sentencing aggravating factors will apply:Judge Cahill, however, ruled that Floyd was not "particularly vulnerable." Read Judge Cahill's full ruling here.
- Chauvin abused a position of trust and authority
- Chauvin treated George Floyd with "particular cruelty"
- Children were present during the crimes
- Chauvin committed the crime "as a group with the active participation of at least three other persons"
"Particular cruelty"? When? How? He just de facto assigned intent to kill.
I hope that the appeals court guts Cahill in their opinion for the numerous baffling errors he made through this trial.
I firmly believe Chauvin should have been found not guilty. However, having been found guilty, shouldn't Cahill work from the standpoint that Chauvin actually did commit 2nd degree murder?
If so, the only possible point of contention that I see is "particular cruelty" but even that I could agree with if you're working from the standpoint that Chauvin intended to kill him, did so in a very slow manner, and kept on well after Floyd had no pulse.
For a similar example, I had a judge enter a judgment as a matter of law, overturning the jury's verdict, on punitive damages because the evidence did not show malice or a reckless disregard for the rights of the plaintiffs.
I'm certainly not a lawyer and I'm not trying to argue, but that said... If a judge isn't supposed to take the jury's opinion into consideration, then why have a jury at all? Is it a case of if the judge is absolutely sure of something, then he overrides and if not, he defers to the jury? I'm not saying that Cahill should or shouldn't be absolutely sure about anything, just in general, I imagine there has to be some sort of threshold that is met.
I appreciate the feedback from actual lawyers like you and Hawg.
BREAKING: Minnesota officer's legal team makes new motion of prosecutorial misconduct - that the testimony of the medical examiner of George Floyd was coerced by the State and State agents pic.twitter.com/lhTypmEvZV
— Petrol Smuggler Poso (@JackPosobiec) May 12, 2021
ME Baker is very weak. Easily intimidated.Good Poster said:BREAKING: Minnesota officer's legal team makes new motion of prosecutorial misconduct - that the testimony of the medical examiner of George Floyd was coerced by the State and State agents pic.twitter.com/lhTypmEvZV
— Petrol Smuggler Poso (@JackPosobiec) May 12, 2021
How about that event of suddenly "finding" the blood gas test results right after it came up in the trial...just at the moment the prosecution needed them to refute testimony too. That has to figure in this whole story somehow too.aggiehawg said:ME Baker is very weak. Easily intimidated.Good Poster said:BREAKING: Minnesota officer's legal team makes new motion of prosecutorial misconduct - that the testimony of the medical examiner of George Floyd was coerced by the State and State agents pic.twitter.com/lhTypmEvZV
— Petrol Smuggler Poso (@JackPosobiec) May 12, 2021
Doubt he'll sack up now.
Ho-lee Shyt. Turns out the jury AND the judge were watching a different case than you Ms. Hawg.aggiehawg said:From Judge Cahill’s ruling on #DerekChauvin and cruelty: pic.twitter.com/62HnyzQJET
— Jason DeRusha (@DeRushaJ) May 12, 2021
Floyd was talking and even yelling for well over four minutes of that time.
They saw the same case. They just didn't apply the law. Neither Cahill nor the jury gave two ****s about the law.Tony Franklins Other Shoe said:Ho-lee Shyt. Turns out the jury AND the judge were watching a different case than you Ms. Hawg.aggiehawg said:From Judge Cahill’s ruling on #DerekChauvin and cruelty: pic.twitter.com/62HnyzQJET
— Jason DeRusha (@DeRushaJ) May 12, 2021
Floyd was talking and even yelling for well over four minutes of that time.
Oh please.LDA9336 said:
Hawg has already admitted: " The law and the legal system that I was taught 40 years ago is not what I am seeing today."
Her opinions should he treated accordingly.
Sorry.LDA9336 said:Ag with kids said:Oh please.LDA9336 said:
Hawg has already admitted: " The law and the legal system that I was taught 40 years ago is not what I am seeing today."
Her opinions should he treated accordingly.
Do tell exactly how the law and the legal system has changed from 40 years ago.
I'd kind of need to know that info to evaluate it.
Not sure how you missed that I was quoting Hawg. You should direct your question to her.
Judges ran their courtrooms and seldom tolerated any funny business by attorneys. If anything they were generally harder on the prosecution than defense attorneys because the judge's function was to ensure a defendant's Constitutional rights to due process were preserved while in their court.Ag with kids said:Sorry.LDA9336 said:Ag with kids said:Oh please.LDA9336 said:
Hawg has already admitted: " The law and the legal system that I was taught 40 years ago is not what I am seeing today."
Her opinions should he treated accordingly.
Do tell exactly how the law and the legal system has changed from 40 years ago.
I'd kind of need to know that info to evaluate it.
Not sure how you missed that I was quoting Hawg. You should direct your question to her.
A few drinks last night. Misread the post.
And I'll treat her opinion much higher than yours, thanks.
Quote:
By all rights, Chauvin's convictions should be reversed on appeal and a retrial ordered by the appellate court. Sadly, I don't believe even the appellate courts will put the law above politics and fear of mob rule.
Pumpkinhead said:
Are there not thousands of criminal trials across the U.S. each year? Isn't a trial like this with the level of publicity and media coverage and politicians weighing in an incredibly rare and unusual situation?
How many other trials anywhere in the States is currently being talked about on this message board? None?
Understandable folks may disagree or disagree about the verdict in this case.
But generalizing this case as having any meaning in the state or future of our court systems...it is just one very rare type of case. I am leery of trying to read too much into any higher repercussions or meaning in it.
This case was a notable example, but the narrative of racial division, tension, white supremacy, etc. that has been forced on the country since before even Trump's presidency has had an effect on the state of the court system. I practice in the civil world, and it absolutely has affected my practice. I'll be danged if I recommend fighting a race case in any city right now, or pretty much anywhere for that matter. Tooth-and-nail fighter clients are reluctant to go anywhere near a courtroom because of bad pub, cancel culture crap, and odds against getting a fair jury.Pumpkinhead said:
Are there not thousands of criminal trials across the U.S. each year? Isn't a trial like this with the level of publicity and media coverage and politicians weighing in an incredibly rare and unusual situation?
How many other trials anywhere in the States is currently being talked about on this message board? None?
Understandable folks may disagree or disagree about the verdict in this case.
But generalizing this case as having much to stay about the general state or future of our court systems...it was just one very rare type of court case. I would be leery of trying to read too much into it. Regardless of which side you were on in this one.
^richardag said:Pumpkinhead said:
Are there not thousands of criminal trials across the U.S. each year? Isn't a trial like this with the level of publicity and media coverage and politicians weighing in an incredibly rare and unusual situation?
How many other trials anywhere in the States is currently being talked about on this message board? None?
Understandable folks may disagree or disagree about the verdict in this case.
But generalizing this case as having any meaning in the state or future of our court systems...it is just one very rare type of case. I am leery of trying to read too much into any higher repercussions or meaning in it.
Missed the Flynn trial did you. Or the Manafort or Stone trials.
🚨 EXPLOSIVE new filing from the legal counsel of former Minneapolis Police Officer Tou Thao. It is being argued that Dr. Baker (who conducted George Floyd’s autopsy) was threatened/coerced into changing his initial findings to include ‘neck compression’ & other false claims. pic.twitter.com/9eOrUY2hKL
— 𝒥𝒾𝓁𝓁𝒾𝒶𝓃 🇺🇸 (@_jmarie94) May 12, 2021
Quote:
Dr. Mitchell spoke with Dr. Baker before Dr. Baker finalized his findings on June 1, 2020. Id. During the conversation between Dr. Mitchell and Dr. Baker, the following transpired:
a. Dr. Mitchell "called Baker and said first of all Baker should fire his public information officer". Id.
b. "Then Mitchell asked [Baker] what happened, because Mitchell didn't think it sounded like Baker's words." Id.
c. "Baker said that he didn't think the neck compression played a part" Id. 27-CR-20-12949 Filed in District Court State of Minnesota 5/12/2021 12:30 PM 3
6. Over the weekend, Dr. Mitchell thought about Dr. Baker more. Id. After the phone conversation between Dr. Mitchell and Dr. Baker, Dr. Mitchell decided he was going to release an op-ed critical of Dr. Baker's findings in the Washington Post. Id. Dr. Mitchell first called Dr. Baker to let him know. Id. The following transpired:
a. Dr. Mitchell called Dr. "Baker first to let him know that he was going to be critical of Baker's findings". Id. "In this conversation, Mitchell said, you don't want to be the medical examiner who tells everyone they didn't see what they saw. You don't want to be the smartest person in the room and be wrong. Said there was a way to articulate the cause and manner of death that ensures you are telling the truth about what you are observing and via all of the investigation. Mitchell said neck compression has to be in the diagnosis." Id.
7. Following the two conversations, on Monday June 1, 2020, the Hennepin County Medical Examiner issued a Press Release Report containing the final autopsy findings. See Exhibit 2.
a. The final autopsy findings included neck compression. Id. This was contrary to Dr. Baker's conclusion before speaking with Dr. Mitchell twice.
...
Under Minn. Stat. 609.27 subd. 1(3) Dr. Mitchell's conduct meets the elements to be found guilty of committing the crime of coercion. Dr. Mitchell orally made the threat to unlawfully injure Dr. Baker's trade unless Dr. Baker changed his autopsy findings. Dr. Mitchell told Dr. Baker to include neck compression in the final findings and warned Dr. Baker he was going to publish a damaging op-ed in the Washington Post. After Dr. Baker changed his findings, Dr. Mitchell did not publish the op-ed. Moreover, Dr. Mitchell unlawfully injured Dr. Fowler's trade by penning an open letter which resulted in an investigation into every death report in Maryland during Dr. Fowler's tenure. Dr. Mitchell has set the stage that he will threaten the trade and professional reputation of any physician who suggests that Mr. Floyd's death could be labeled as "undetermined".
Erosion doesn't happen overnight or over months. It is constant and relentless.Pumpkinhead said:
Are there not thousands of criminal trials across the U.S. each year? Isn't a trial like this with the level of publicity and media coverage and politicians weighing in an incredibly rare and unusual situation?
How many other trials anywhere in the States is currently being talked about on this message board? None?
Understandable folks may disagree or disagree about the verdict in this case.
But generalizing this case as having much to stay about the general state or future of our court systems...it was just one very rare type of court case. I would be leery of trying to read too much into it. Regardless of which side you were on in this one.