@ShadowofEzra What a full team of 'fixers' she's got working in the background! Now an honorary degree! Just what was missing!Geez they are soooo obvious!🤣
@LairdOfThManor Mark my words. Justin Baldoni will find some unknown story that he is inspired by. He will make a film. And will stand on that Oscar stage one day. To a standing ovation for his talent and for his ability to withstand powerful people trying to ruin him.
@JodyChaseTN Haters of @RealCandaceO will be as stupid as wishing @YouTube to silence her and the likes of her. Agree or disagree with her, our days of free speech are numbered, no thanks to them fouls!
As a top graduate of Duke University School of Law, I’ve reviewed the complaint, Candace Owens is right. It’s procedurally deficient and substantively hollow. This appears meant to be a media stunt. Which clog dockets and sideline legitimate claims. I’m genuinely shocked you posted this, the hypocrisy and double standard are revealing.
@GeriPerna@VATeacherLaura You say it so well, it was just a question. That's unfortunately the state of affairs nowadays : asking a question "causes division" (!!!!) No wonder we're at war in this world😪
The Tyler Robinson prosecution will collapse. Completely.
Start where every juror will start: the gun and the bullet don��t match. That’s not a technicality. That’s the case. If the state cannot forensically tie the projectile to the alleged weapon, the entire theory of who fired that shot collapses. You don’t get to guess your way around that gap.
Then the “confession.” Not an original document. Not a contemporaneous statement. A reconstructed narrative produced after aggressive interrogation and after investigators had access to outside information. That is precisely the kind of evidence juries are warned to treat with skepticism. It raises immediate concerns under Brady v. Maryland and Giglio v. United States about lost or shaped evidence and the reliability of what’s being presented.
The forensic story doesn’t stabilize things, it makes them worse. A fragment inside the body, no exit wound, conflicting explanations of bullet behavior. That’s not clarity. That’s a battlefield for experts. And when experts fight, jurors hesitate.
Finally, the video. “Looks like him” is not identity. Add in mismatched physical features and you’re not even close to beyond a reasonable doubt.
Put it all together and you don’t have a coherent, reliable chain of proof. You have gaps, reconstructions and speculation. In a criminal courtroom, that doesn’t meet the burden. Acquittal isn’t a loophole here, it’s the only verdict that respects the standard.