If a jury can't be convinced to support a verdict unanimously, then the jury was not convinced- a hung jury may be a mistrial but it's not a conviction. It's hardly unusual for jurors to disagree about the details of a case, such as whether a self-defense plea is justified. It's happened to me; hasn't it happened to you?Flagg wrote:Simon, Dunn didn't "get off" you blithering twat. It was a hung jury on that single charge meaning that some if not most jurors were perfectly willing to convict him of first degree murder. If you can't be bothered to know the basic facts of the case then sit down and shut the fuck up.
Besides, your objection misses the point.
Dunn was (rightly) convicted of four counts of attempted murder against the people in the car.
In my opinion based on only the evidence available to me, he could have easily been convicted of second-degree murder against Davis, because his self-defense plea does not appear credible. I suppose there might be evidence I do not know, since literally everything I've heard about the case comes from these articles I see before me. But barring such evidence, Davis's self-defense plea is supported only by his testimony that he saw a weapon, which makes it nonsense. Without the self-defense plea, Davis is easily convicted of second degree murder.
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So far, so good. Once we've dispensed with the self-defense plea, some murder charge will stand up.
THEN and only then can we ask "Davis is a murderer. Is this murder also qualified to be called first degree murder?" So far you've presented two separate arguments for why it would be. One is that the murder was premeditated because he had to draw a weapon. The other is that the murder is aggravated child abuse because Davis was seventeen.
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Your premeditation argument is just plain silly, because drawing a weapon on one's person is not always a reasoned or considered action. "He drew a weapon" is not evidence that he carefully considered his actions before pulling the trigger. Try to make that stick and you have a problem. Because it's entirely plausible that Dunn drew the weapon with no intent to kill, only intent to commit assault with a deadly weapon (by threatening Davis). Then, in this hypothetical explanation, something else caused Dunn to pull the trigger, the intent to kill formed after he drew the weapon, without premeditation. IF that were true, then drawing the weapon wouldn't part of a plan to kill.
It's not necessarily likely, but we'd have a hard time proving otherwise if Dunn has a competent defense attorney. Reasonable doubt kicks in in our jury's mind, and Dunn doesn't get convicted of first degree murder. Oops.
So we'd need to find something else to make premeditation stick- some action taken by Dunn other than just picking up or pulling out a weapon already on his person, which proves that he was planning to kill Davis significantly before the moment he pulled the trigger, and had taken time to think and plan intelligently before pulling the trigger. I don't know what evidence of that sort is available; do you?
If such evidence was available, the prosecution should definitely have presented it. I hope they did, but I don't know if they did or not. If they did, it makes the jurors who voted against the first degree murder charge even stupider in my eyes.
Either the jury is even more inferior than I believe (though that is difficult to imagine) or the prosecutor screwed up by not adequately presenting the evidence that proves premeditation. In which case a jury that MIGHT have convicted Dunn of second-degree murder would likely wind up hung or acquitting on first-degree murder.
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Separately from this, you have argued that the murder is first-degree because it was committed against a minor, and is therefore child abuse. There are two separate questions here. One is whether Florida courts interpret it as child abuse when a random stranger kills a seventeen year old. We can argue about that later; I don't know one way or the other.
The second question is how to use the child abuse conviction to support the first degree murder charge. This runs into a problem.
Under Florida law, if I were to kill someone in the course of a robbery, it is first-degree murder even if there was no premeditation or specific intent to kill. The catch is that to convict me of first-degree murder under that law, Florida would first have to convict me of the robbery. If they can't prove I was stealing anything, or can't prove intent to commit robbery, they can't prove that the killing was committed in the course of the other felony. In which case the first-degree murder charge falls apart and leaves behind second-degree murder or manslaughter.
So, the question is: did the prosecutor think to charge Dunn with child abuse? If, according to you, the charge of aggravated child abuse could have been made to stick, then and only then would it be possible to convict Dunn of first-degree murder on account of him having killed a minor in the course of committing aggravated child abuse.
In which case the prosecutor screwed up by not actually bothering to charge Dunn with child abuse, when according to you that charge could have been made to stick, at least assuming the self-defense plea could be overcome.
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So when it comes to making first degree murder stick to Dunn, we have two possible routes to a conviction: the premeditation route, or the child abuse route.
If the child abuse route is valid, then we can only conclude that the prosecutor was incompetent, because as far as we know Dunn was not charged with child abuse. Whether or not that route actually IS valid is a separate question.
If the premeditation route is valid, it must be due to evidence other than "Dunn pulled out a gun." Either the prosecution failed to present this evidence, in which case the prosecutor was incompetent. Or the jury saw the evidence and (part of the jury) ignored it. In which case the jury is really really incompetent, even more so than I already thought they were on account of some of them accepting that seemingly ridiculous self-defense plea.
So, what do we call it?