If I ever raised a child who orchestrated a murder of a peer, and then continued to think it was a humorous game afterwards, I would kill myself.
I have no personal animosity towards you. In fact, when you are not completely (i.e., "balls out") volatile and angry, and you are more "evened out", you can be a very witty, funny and intelligent person. You are obviously very angry about this. I have no idea why, and at this point, truthfully, I do not care. I am not going to waste my time re-explaining the obvious to you.
I have no personal animosity towards you. In fact, when you are not completely (i.e., "balls out") volatile and angry, and you are more "evened out", you can be a very witty, funny and intelligent person. You are obviously very angry about this. I have no idea why, and at this point, truthfully, I do not care. I am not going to waste my time re-explaining the obvious to you.


If they can't reasonably dispute whose DNA is indicated, they have to go for contamination. If the contamination arguments aren’t wholly convincing, they are obliged to dispute the identification. Where at all possible, both arguments are used to sow vital seeds of doubt in the jury's mind about the robustness of the science and the handling of the evidence. You should see the cartwheels they turn on the A6 thread trying to explain away the DNA evidence. It’s what the defence does, even in cases where the evidence is overwhelming. Sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn’t.
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