Quote from waggie945:
Secondly, "Obstruction of Justice" is indeed a crime. I am rather puzzled as to some of the logic on this thread that believes that it is not, and thus Martha Stewart should somehow go unpunished.
Waggs, we are obviously on opposite sides in this debate. Yes, of course you are right about "obstruction of justice" being a crime. However, it became obvious to many that there is wide latitude for the the justice system to abuse this law to inflict punishment on those it has a dislike for and that it cannot prove the actual allegations it seeks.
Thirdly, last time I checked, the SEC does in fact have the opportunity to charge Martha Stewart and her broker Peter Bakonovic for insider trading, which they actually did back in June of last year. My guess is that this charge will now move forward.
At this point, any other charges that may be brought about insider trading are irrelevant to this discussion of the fairness of the trial just ended. Let them make their insider trading case but not this ridiculous "you lied to us so we're sending you to jail" bull.
Fourthly, with all due respect, my goodfriend Pspr is wrong when he states that "it is not illegal to lie to most state and city investigators". Ever hear of making False Statements to a Peace Officer? I have. And does it ever get prosecuted? Yes it does!
Yes, some jurisdictions do have 'false statement' laws. But, many do not. When you are the subject of an investigation, I belive you should not be at risk of prosecution for your statements alone. That is my opinion of what the law SHOULD be. Did you read one of my earlier posts about how the police are permitted to lie to suspects during interrogation in an effort to obtain confessions? And, of the youngster who falsely confessed after such interrogation? I guess it is OK for the police, FBI, Congressmen, Senators, Presidents, etc. etc. to continue to lie to us?
Fifth, Stewart's attorney, Robert Morvillo is a moron. He put on a "bare-bones" defense in that he called only one witness and questioned him for just 20 minutes . . . and when it came to cross-examining the most damaging testimony of all, from Stewart's secretary Ann Armstrong ( a government witness ) who stated that Martha tried to delete the phone message from Peter Bacanovic about ImClone back on Dec. 27, 2001, Morvillo gently cross-examined her and then never undermined Armstrong's testimony in Morvillo's closing argument.
This is absolutely true, unless he some how pulls a rabbit out of the hat with a miracle appeal.
Sixth, Stewart is not being jailed because she stated that she "couldn't recall" her conversation with Sam Waksal, as a poster stated earlier. She is being jailed because the Jury found Stewart's secretary credible. She is being jailed because the message from Bacanovic . . . "Peter Bacanovic thinks ImClone is going to start trading downward" was later partly erased by Stewart following a telephone conversation with her lawyer, so said Armstrong. All the Jury had to do was ask the rhetorical question, "Gee, why did Martha want that message to be deleted?" Furthermore, the Jury found Stewart's girlfriend Marianna Pasternak credible and Stewart's business manager, Heidi DeLuca not.
So, the moral of this statement is that we better not erase messages on our answering systems or we may find ourselves in jail for doing so? ridiculous. And, I beleive that the statement that she couldn't recall the conversation with Sam Waksal WAS part of one of the counts.
Seventh, Stewart is a moron for even allowing this case to get this far . . . especially under such a backdrop over the last several years of Corporate Fraud and Wall Street greed. Her arrogance did her in. It is really as simple as that.
Probably, but if you were sure you were not guilty of securities fraud even if the full facts were discovered, wouldn't you want to be exonerated instead of copping a plea and paying possibly hundreds of thousands of dollars or more and being presumed guilty in the media?
The fact of the matter is that the Attorney General Bill Lockyer is not simply ignoring what San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsome has been doing with regards to allowing marriage licenses to be given out to members of the same-sex, as Pspr has indicated. Lockyer has already asked the California Supreme Court to decide the legality of same-sex marriage. The legal process just takes time . . .
Yes, but. As I stated before, the liberal Cal. Supremes refused to halt the activities of the SF mayor pending resolution through the series of court reviews that are going to take quite some time even though it is in violation of state law as it is now. This is nonsense. And, unlike AG's in another state, Lockyer took quite some time to act then replied with childish statements and dragged his feet when asked to take action by the Governor.
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/1077934257312_73343457?s_name=&no_ads=
P.S. If I had been on the jury that convicted Martha, it would have ended with aquittal or a hung jury because I beleive that a jury has the right and obligation to find for the defendant when it is obvious that a conviction would not serve justice inspite of the law.