What is the name of your state? CA
Just watched another 48 hours and they were documenting the case of Ryan Ferguson which I was astonished by. I have some legal questions based on the case in which his friend confessed to a murder 2 years after the fact that was just written about in a newspaper but the guy provided absolutely no details as to what occured and seemed clueless about the particulars. He named his friend Ryan Ferguson as his accomplice and actual killer.
As there was no evidence that the confessor did the crime, either circumstantial or tangible, and the confessor got key facts wrong, should he have even been charged in the first place?
Ryan Ferguson based on the confessor's statements was charged and tried as well and was convicted based on the confessor's statements in court, statements that the guy didn't make when he confessed and a witness who stated he could not identify anyone when he saw two people running from the scene but now can identify them 2 plus years later.
Obviously the confessor learned/was coached about the crime from the police while in jail.
Now I'm not saying Ryan is innocent, but how can a jury possibly convict based on this. Note, the show was obviously slanted and my questions are based on what I saw. If you say, one can't make a fair evaluation based on a 1 hour TV presentation, I'll accept that., it just seemed so bizarre and the jury seemed like idiots when interviewed later.
Just watched another 48 hours and they were documenting the case of Ryan Ferguson which I was astonished by. I have some legal questions based on the case in which his friend confessed to a murder 2 years after the fact that was just written about in a newspaper but the guy provided absolutely no details as to what occured and seemed clueless about the particulars. He named his friend Ryan Ferguson as his accomplice and actual killer.
As there was no evidence that the confessor did the crime, either circumstantial or tangible, and the confessor got key facts wrong, should he have even been charged in the first place?
Ryan Ferguson based on the confessor's statements was charged and tried as well and was convicted based on the confessor's statements in court, statements that the guy didn't make when he confessed and a witness who stated he could not identify anyone when he saw two people running from the scene but now can identify them 2 plus years later.
Obviously the confessor learned/was coached about the crime from the police while in jail.
Now I'm not saying Ryan is innocent, but how can a jury possibly convict based on this. Note, the show was obviously slanted and my questions are based on what I saw. If you say, one can't make a fair evaluation based on a 1 hour TV presentation, I'll accept that., it just seemed so bizarre and the jury seemed like idiots when interviewed later.