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The Reid Scale: Classic Unsolved Murder Cases

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  • Hi Graham

    I too was showed (back in the 1960's) the 'murder house' in Kemp Town, Brighton. I'd never heard of Tony Mancini at the time, but have read what I've been able to find about the case. He was a lad, wasn't he?
    Sorry but I only just spotted your post...Mancini certainly was a bit of a lad, in later life at least...one small correction...the house is in Kemp Street, but that's nowhere near Kemp Town (which is to the East of the city centre)...Kemp Street is more central, fairly close to the Station, on the northern margins of what we used to call the "back terraces" or "back parallels" - the area has risen from being near-slum and as "North Laine" is now somewhat gentrified...

    All the best

    Dave

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    • Originally posted by Cogidubnus View Post
      Hi Graham



      Sorry but I only just spotted your post...Mancini certainly was a bit of a lad, in later life at least...one small correction...the house is in Kemp Street, but that's nowhere near Kemp Town (which is to the East of the city centre)...Kemp Street is more central, fairly close to the Station, on the northern margins of what we used to call the "back terraces" or "back parallels" - the area has risen from being near-slum and as "North Laine" is now somewhat gentrified...

      All the best

      Dave
      Dave, the mistake is entirely mine. I simply confused Kemp 'Street' with Kemp 'Town', not being all that familiar with Brighton. This was the best part of 45 years ago, so hopefully I can be forgiven.

      I knew someone who actually rented a room in Kemp Street, just a few doors away from 'the' house. Obviously the memory of Mancini was still alive and well even in the late 1960's.

      Graham
      We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

      Comment


      • Mancini, Robert Blake, OJ and Casey Anthony are all cases where I think most people think they did it but the jury said not guilty. I can't come up with an explanation for Mancini or Anthony but I believe OJ was misguided racial loyalty while Blake was because he was better liked than the victim.
        This my opinion and to the best of my knowledge, that is, if I'm not joking.

        Stan Reid

        Comment


        • Blake and OJ were both pre-crime celebrities so maybe that's an element in those examples as well.
          This my opinion and to the best of my knowledge, that is, if I'm not joking.

          Stan Reid

          Comment


          • The problem with the Casey Anthony trial seems to be with charging her with 1st degree murder. That requires proving motive, and planning. The prosecutor failed on both counts. He tried to prove motive based on her behavior after the crime, and you simply aren't allowed to do that. The defense attorney cut him off with objections, then provided lots of witnesses and photographic evidence that Anthony took good care of her daughter while she was alive. Being happy that someone is dead is not evidence that you killed them. You have to use behavior from and facts, or forensics from before the crime was committed as evidence of motive.

            Evidence of planning mainly relied on a Google search of "chloroform," which Anthony's mother testified she herself had done, and she was looking for chlorophyll, not chloroform, spelled it wrong, the misused the Google-correct feature. She did the "chloroform" search on her daughter's computer, but she later did a correctly spelled chlorophyll search on her own computer, and the prosecution had not looked at the history of the parents' computer.

            Interviewed after the trial, most jurors said they thought there had been an accident, that Anthony had been negligent in not calling 911, and had probably participated in the crime of hiding the body, but she was not guilty of 1st degree murder as defined by statute.

            If she'd been charged with negligent homicide, felony child abuse, or manslaughter, she probably would be in prison now.

            I think the jury acted correctly, because the fact is that, if they had found her guilty, she might have gotten a directed verdict of "not guilty," which the prosecutor would have gotten reviewed, and the process would have cost the state a lot of money, and in the end she'd still be free. Or she would have been freed on appeal, again, costing the state money.

            I don't know why she was charged with 1st degree murder, unless the district attorney bowed to public pressure. Florida has the death penalty, and the special circumstance of killing a child is one where he can ask for it, but only with a 1st degree murder conviction. Maybe he thought that with that in play, she would plea bargain, although, there was a rumor that she wasn't offered one, so I just don't know.

            But I agree with the jury verdict.

            I'm not very familiar with the Mancini case. The Blake case was weak. He may have done it, or not, but if he did, he covered his tracks pretty well. In the OJ case, the attorneys were clever in getting the bulk of the evidence thrown out on what was essentially a technicality, and ruining the life of Mark Fuhrman while they were at it. They got him to say under oath that he had never said what Americans call the "n-word" (just Google it if you don't know), in the last 10 years, then played a tape of him saying it fairly recently. The tape was an interview with a reporter for a book she was writing, and his use of the n-word involved quoting other police officers, eg: "Yes, they say [n-word] all the time; Sergeant X says [n-word] to a black officer's face." Then, back on the stand, Simpson's attorneys accused Fuhrman of lying when he claimed not to have said the n-word.

            Of course, he meant that he had never used it as an epithet, not that he had never said it at all. But they "Greg Bradyed" him, and so in order not to be guilty of the crime of lying under oath, he took the 5th, and answered every question with "I refuse to answer on the grounds that it may incriminate me."

            The thing about taking the 5th, is that it has to apply to every question you are asked under oath during a particular proceeding. Fuhrman could not answer the question about evidence gathering, then take the fifth for the questions about the n-word. It was all or nothing. Once he took the 5th regarding the n-word, the judge instructed the jury to disregard all of Fuhrman's prior testimony.

            Comment


            • I would prefer a system with a rotating pool of professional jurors with no lawyer say regarding its makeup. In the present form, you get a jury that both sides think is stupid enough to believe their rendition of events. We need something better than that when a defendant's life and/or justice is at stake.
              Last edited by sdreid; 01-21-2013, 12:45 PM.
              This my opinion and to the best of my knowledge, that is, if I'm not joking.

              Stan Reid

              Comment


              • Originally posted by sdreid View Post
                I would prefer a system with a rotating pool of professional jurors with no lawyer say regarding its makeup. In the present form, you get a jury that both sides think is stupid enough to believe their rendition of events. We need something better than that when a defendant's life and/or justice is at stake.
                I think that would be a bad idea.

                Professional jurors mean that you have people whose livelihoods are at stake, and they may start to worry that, for example, if they participate in too many hung juries, they may lose their jobs, prompting hold-out jurors to vote with the majority to preserve their incomes.

                Juries are not as stupid as you might think. I've served on juries, and there was no one stupid. Several people had college degrees. Everyone was employed except for a student, and me, because I was pregnant, and had already stopped working. Everyone worked very hard to return a fair verdict, and was very civic-minded, and polite, even to the jurors who disagreed. In fact, it really was a model of civility, and nothing like any TV show I've seen, but, of course, there was nothing dramatic about it, either. Some people were more intelligent than others, and there was one person who had not finished high school-- but only one. There was also one who was only 19-years-old, but she was actually very mature, and impressed me a lot.

                There were several people who were very hostile to the idea of being on a jury, and they got discharged. There were also a couple of people who clearly lied about their circumstances to get off. There was one person who really was stupid, and didn't understand the concept of the burden of proof being on the prosecution, and the why the defense was not required to put on a case. She was discharged.

                You have to get into the jury pool somehow, around here, and that means you either have to register a car, or be registered to vote, and that is going to eliminate most people who genuinely have subpar intelligence. Also, if you actually have something wrong with you, that's an easy way to get off a jury. If you had a head injury, and have memory impairment, or if you were in special ed. all through school for a reading disability, those things will get you dismissed.

                Lawyers have only so many peremptory challenges. After that, they have to challenge for cause. "Too smart" is not a cause, and no lawyer is going to waste a peremptory challenge on someone for being smart, and then realize they need it a lot more for the hostile white guy, who isn't actually a member of the Klan. Besides, most lawyers think they are pretty darned smart themselves, and aren't about to give a juror credit for "smarter than me."

                The myth of the stupid juror really needs to die, and soon.

                Comment


                • I don't expect it to change nor has my view.
                  This my opinion and to the best of my knowledge, that is, if I'm not joking.

                  Stan Reid

                  Comment


                  • Some still remain the prime "suspect" after they are convicted and their conviction is later overturned.
                    This my opinion and to the best of my knowledge, that is, if I'm not joking.

                    Stan Reid

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by sdreid View Post
                      Some still remain the prime "suspect" after they are convicted and their conviction is later overturned.
                      Or not convicted. OJ Simpson. Lizzie Borden. I remember being about eight years old, and naive, and there was some trial in the news that ended in a surprising "not guilty." I asked my mother if that meant the police had to go back and look for someone else, and my mother said no, as far as the police were concerned, they'd gotten the right person, the jury just didn't convict.

                      There is a process in the US by which someone found "not guilty," or whose charges are dismissed, but still has a cloud over his head, can seek a verdict of actual innocence. I've forgotten what it's called, though.

                      Comment


                      • Hi Rivkah

                        There is a process in the US by which someone found "not guilty," or whose charges are dismissed, but still has a cloud over his head, can seek a verdict of actual innocence. I've forgotten what it's called, though.
                        I believe the term you seek is "Election"

                        All the best

                        Dave

                        Comment


                        • It's called a "writ of actual innocence."

                          ETA: the same thing might be called "election" in the UK, that I don't know.

                          Comment


                          • I was attempting a "funny" Rivkah...clearly I did not succeed...

                            All the best

                            Dave

                            Comment


                            • In Illinois, it's called a Certificate of Innocence. Alan Beaman is seeking one but the state is fighting it because it would leave them open for damages.
                              This my opinion and to the best of my knowledge, that is, if I'm not joking.

                              Stan Reid

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Cogidubnus View Post
                                I was attempting a "funny" Rivkah...clearly I did not succeed...

                                All the best

                                Dave
                                You'll have to spell it out, because I still don't get it.

                                Comment

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