From what I'm piecing together, Thanas
might mean that the "law of the art" of seismologists is (by the Italian court) supposed to be to follow certain best practices. And that failing to follow these best practices, in a way resulting in death, can be a crime.
On its merits that sounds pretty damn stupid to me, since there is
no accepted procedure by which seismologists can accurately predict future earthquakes. Or by which they can reasonably know for certain which 'low-probability' quakes will actually happen.
Thanas wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:I feel that this is an undue burden to put on innocent persons.
Nearly all of Europe disagrees. We've been over this before. Restating your position in every thread about this will not make it stronger, nor will it make it any less tiresome. In fact, I flat out refuse to discuss something all over again with somebody who does not seem to remember the last arguments about this.
Oh, I remember- but then, I wasn't really talking to
you about the issue this time in the first place. Your getting cranky about the fact that I occasionally restate an opinion after
nine months in the context of a different case strikes me as unreasonable. Should I get snarky about someone who restates their opinion regarding, say, the death penalty twice in a one-year timespan?
For that matter, while many matters were addressed (including correction of many errors and misbeliefs on my part) in the earlier discussion... frankly, the issue I am mentioning now was
never really addressed:
My belief that such appeals are an undue burden on innocent defendants.
I get that the Italian taxpayers are the ones stuck paying for the scientists' legal defense while this witch-hunt goes on, not the scientists themselves. I get that in principle this lets the Italian courts reassure themselves that they are
really, really thorough. I get that this is a way to help resolve the issue of repeated errors in judgment, sometimes at multiple levels of the courts, to eliminate any possibility of a less-than-perfect ruling. I get that the Italian prosecutors are supposedly extremely fair... even if on the face of it the entire grounds of their case sounds ridiculous.*
But none of this actually addresses my point that this "you're guilty, you're innocent, wait no you're not,
maybe" methodology is inevitably going to be a burden on anyone.
It'd be
infinitely worse in the US where the prosecution can literally spend defendants into the ground by forcing them into costly legal battles, or coerce them into plea-bargaining or burning their life savings in an attempt to defend against a spurious charge.
But that doesn't make it a good thing to experience at the hands of the Italian courts, just because it'd be worse to experience it at the hands of the American courts.
So no, frankly, I am still not convinced it's a good idea for an appeals court to pick up the case of someone who's been found innocent and go "hmm, gee, there's an X% chance that the evidence was misweighted by the previous judge, let's spend another year thinking this over while you bite your nails and wonder whether you'll be going to prison."
It strikes me as a good way to do undue harm, even assuming (
which I do assume) that the Italian judiciary is reliable about compensating people for any direct losses that result from the costs and stress of prosecution appeals.
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*I mean, seriously, earthquake prediction is barely even an
art, let alone a science. Damned if I can see how it'd have precisely defined
lege artis when the art is too ill-defined for its laws to be well-known. And without well-known
lege artis, how can you charge someone with manslaughter for violating them?