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by cones688
4907 days ago
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Key point with regards to your opening paragraph is: " But the ordinary practice is to charge all the possible offenses committed in the indictment, even if they overlap, and then let the jury sort them out at trial." There is at least a passable amount of evidence for each of the charges, so naturally the prosecution will maximise the number of possible charges. This prevents the whole case falling through if of the one of the counts fails. |
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When people see that a small act like this causes such a number of charges that threatens a large portion of person's life in prison then it becomes an untrustworthy process. It gains the appearance of not being about justice but of something else. It is not good for a justice system to seem that it is more concerned over how a particular crime is committed versus what the crime is in of itself, because it creates a feeling of injustice. For example, why should a murderer be punished more severely because he chose one weapon over another?