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Suffolk native beaten in Charlottesville found not guilty of assaulting white supremacist

Unitedwestand13

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https://pilotonline.com/news/nation-world/virginia/article_d490e994-2940-11e8-875c-a31f3715af5e.html

Well that is the end of that particular dispute.
 
This line is particularly insightful. From the article:

[FONT=&quot]But in the end, the judge declared Harris not guilty because he said Harris didn't intend to hit Crews and only swung a flashlight at him believing Crews was attacking his friend with a flagpole.


What kind of nonsense reasoning is that? He didn't intend to hit him, but he swung a flashlight in self defense and only accidentally hit him? No, he meant to hit him.[/FONT]
 
Why was this not tried in front of a jury?

He may of waived a jurry trial hoping to find the best outcome. We've seen a few police officers opt for this option when they get charged.
 
He may of waived a jurry trial hoping to find the best outcome. We've seen a few police officers opt for this option when they get charged.

I'm woefully uninformed on this. How does that work? Does it depend on the defendant? Does the prosecution get to contest that?
 
I'm woefully uninformed on this. How does that work? Does it depend on the defendant? Does the prosecution get to contest that?

I am by no means a lawyer but my understanding is a defendant has the right to either have a jury or a bench (judge)trial. You go jury if you think you can get sympathy and bench if you are arguing a technicality in general.

I'm sure someone with more experience will explain how I've screwed that concept all up.
 
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