By the time she committed that intentional act of going in the hallway with two dogs, or if you believe her on anything, one dog with no muzzle, and no restraint, with this dog, knowing what it could do, the crime was complete. |
Diane Whipple was not the first victim of these dogs, ... She was the last victim. |
Excitement is bad for the prosecution. They want two to three days of quiet deliberations and one note that says we have a verdict. Anything short of that is bad news. |
He's just eager. He's a good guy; he just wanted to get himself out there. |
I can't think of another crime with three specific intents. It requires them to look into Jackson's mind. |
Jurors are locked in the jury room without a lawyer, and they are expected to master one of the most complicated areas of the law--conspiracy. |
One of the best weapons the DA has is the living relatives of the dead. |
She was alone, unable to even talk. and a dog was still running lose with her, and she tried to breathe again, her voice closed in again on her, the two holes in her larynx, and she crawled and she tried to push herself up, and she crawled some more to try to get home, and no one was there, no one, |
She was alone, unable to even talk... and a dog was still running loose with her, and she tried to breathe again, her voice closed in again on her, the two holes in her larynx, and she crawled and she tried to push herself up, and she crawled some more to try to get home, and no one was there, no one, |
That's what these people's recklessness did, caused that kind of death. |
These prisoners didn't choose poodles. They wanted tough, aggressive dogs, and they picked the best dog they could find, a dog which you heard evidence of is meaner than a pit bull. |
This woman looks like a very individual kind of person ... which I like as a person, but as a prosecutor you don't want people to stand out. |
You made it up, |