GreasyGopher
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You have that backwards.
Why's that? I'm not following.
You have that backwards.
Why's that? I'm not following.
Innocence shouldn't have to be proven. It is a constitutional right that you are innocent and the guilt must be proven. That is the problem everyone has had with this whole process.
Sorry. It's my understanding that the accused players can't introduce any evidence that the accuser doesn't agree to include in the hearing. For example, the videotape.
Someone please correct me if I'm mistaken.
Also, thinking further about the introduction of the expert on the mental side of the assault. That expert literally destroys any behavioral evidence the players' attorneys may try to introduce. The panel will potentially have in the back of their mind "She just experienced a traumatic event, she wasn't thinking right."
Finally, after saying all this I feel it necessary to say, I'm all for the guilty being punished but they need a fair shot to prove their innocence first.
I call out anyone who posts misinformation on any subject. No one has a problem with that unless I'm defending the made up stuff that's posted on here about Coyle. Then the same handful of Claeys apologists come calling.
Coyle had very little say over the situation.
Blind.
Sorry. It's my understanding that the accused players can't introduce any evidence that the accuser doesn't agree to include in the hearing. For example, the videotape.
Someone please correct me if I'm mistaken.
Also, thinking further about the introduction of the expert on the mental side of the assault. That expert literally destroys any behavioral evidence the players' attorneys may try to introduce. The panel will potentially have in the back of their mind "She just experienced a traumatic event, she wasn't thinking right."
Finally, after saying all this I feel it necessary to say, I'm all for the guilty being punished but they need a fair shot to prove their innocence first.
"Each party may offer reliable information relevant to the issue and may object to the
information offered by the other party. The Panel Chair and the Panel have discretion to
determine what information should fairly be included or excluded.
The parties may also introduce relevant written documents, objects, films, or other materials as
exhibits. Each party is responsible for bringing copies of written materials in sufficient number
for distribution to Panel members and the opposing party at the hearing. "
From the end of part G in http://usenate.umn.edu/ssms/ssmsprocedures.pdf
I do remember hearing some stuff about the videotape, but I believe that only applied to whether it was furnished for the EOAA report. According to the above passage from SSMC Hearing Procedures the video should be allowed unless the accuser challenges it and can provide a good reason it should not be viewed by the committee.
Sorry. It's my understanding that the accused players can't introduce any evidence that the accuser doesn't agree to include in the hearing. For example, the videotape.
Someone please correct me if I'm mistaken.
Also, thinking further about the introduction of the expert on the mental side of the assault. That expert literally destroys any behavioral evidence the players' attorneys may try to introduce. The panel will potentially have in the back of their mind "She just experienced a traumatic event, she wasn't thinking right."
Finally, after saying all this I feel it necessary to say, I'm all for the guilty being punished but they need a fair shot to defend their innocence first.
"Each party may offer reliable information relevant to the issue and may object to the
information offered by the other party. The Panel Chair and the Panel have discretion to
determine what information should fairly be included or excluded.
The parties may also introduce relevant written documents, objects, films, or other materials as
exhibits. Each party is responsible for bringing copies of written materials in sufficient number
for distribution to Panel members and the opposing party at the hearing. "
From the end of part G in http://usenate.umn.edu/ssms/ssmsprocedures.pdf
I do remember hearing some stuff about the videotape, but I believe that only applied to whether it was furnished for the EOAA report. According to the above passage from SSMC Hearing Procedures the video should be allowed unless the accuser challenges it and can provide a good reason it should not be viewed by the committee.
You'd think it would be relevant but the University has already decided otherwise:
Pacyga also says the panel will not be allowed to review key evidence during the hearings, including a 90-second video that showed what police and the university determined was consensual sex between the reporting student and a football player.
University documents, the Student Sexual Misconduct Subcommittee stated the evidence will not be allowed because whether the student had consensual sexual contact with certain individuals “is irrelevant to whether there was consent with other accused students.”
Source is on page 14
Following up because I just remembered reading this article this morning. Pertaining to the videotape specifically:
"Pacyga also says the panel will not be allowed to review key evidence during the hearings, including a 90-second video that showed what police and the university determined was consensual sex between the reporting student and a football player.
In university documents, the Student Sexual Misconduct Subcommittee stated the evidence will not be allowed because whether the student had consensual sexual contact with certain individuals “is irrelevant to whether there was consent with other accused students.”
http://kstp.com/news/appeal-hearing...layers-university-of-minnesota/4381305/?cat=1
This is an absolute kangaroo court.
In only these kinds of hearings would anyone be dumb to say that a piece of evidence as probative as a video taken during the incident cannot come in because of relevance. They are literally little kids "playing court".
First, they are arguing that it shouldn't come in because it has nothing to do with the people who were not in the tape. Well, maybe, the U should have allowed each of the accused their own hearing. It's absolutely absurd to say that the accused must have 1 hearing and then not allow evidence because it is relevant to part of the group and not another part. LOL. What?
Second, evidence is almost never perfect (DNA evidence is pretty close), that does not mean it is not probative.
For example, let's say three people are being accused of robbing a liquor store and there was cell phone data that showed they were in the vicinity of the liquor store. Could you imagine an attorney arguing that the cell phone data is IRRELEVANT because "just because they were in the vicinity doesn't mean that they robbed the liquor store"? I'd get laughed out of the court room.
This panel believes that the testimony of a mental health professional is MORE relevant than a video tape of the incident? LOL.
Are there people who believe this is a fair process?
Just saw an interview with Ryan Pacyga on Kare 11. One interesting tibit: He got one of the panelists removed and replaced by looking through their twitter history and finding tweets that showed previous bias in the case. He said the tweets were in support of the gopher players suspension.
Two possibilities. Either Winfield is using a different strategy than the other players, or it's a question of money. I think Winfield Senior probably has a few bucks stashed away from his NFL career, so he may be in a better position to afford outside counsel.
This is an absolute kangaroo court.
In only these kinds of hearings would anyone be dumb to say that a piece of evidence as probative as a video taken during the incident cannot come in because of relevance. They are literally little kids "playing court".
First, they are arguing that it shouldn't come in because it has nothing to do with the people who were not in the tape. Well, maybe, the U should have allowed each of the accused their own hearing. It's absolutely absurd to say that the accused must have 1 hearing and then not allow evidence because it is relevant to part of the group and not another part. LOL. What?
Second, evidence is almost never perfect (DNA evidence is pretty close), that does not mean it is not probative.
For example, let's say three people are being accused of robbing a liquor store and there was cell phone data that showed they were in the vicinity of the liquor store. Could you imagine an attorney arguing that the cell phone data is IRRELEVANT because "just because they were in the vicinity doesn't mean that they robbed the liquor store"? I'd get laughed out of the court room.
This panel believes that the testimony of a mental health professional is MORE relevant than a video tape of the incident? LOL.
Are there people who believe this is a fair process?
If that's all you think matters, public opinion, that's extremely shallow. It usually takes the most public and trying situations to expose the failures of policies and processes like this one. The boycott accomplished its goal.
The boycott accomplished nothing.
The boycott accomplished nothing.
Way too many threads for me to figure this out. Ok, the hearings are today and Friday. When are the decisions made? Guess I'm thinking that National Signing Day is next week. Would we know before that?
The boycott was a complete success.
This is an absolute kangaroo court.
In only these kinds of hearings would anyone be dumb to say that a piece of evidence as probative as a video taken during the incident cannot come in because of relevance. They are literally little kids "playing court".
First, they are arguing that it shouldn't come in because it has nothing to do with the people who were not in the tape. Well, maybe, the U should have allowed each of the accused their own hearing. It's absolutely absurd to say that the accused must have 1 hearing and then not allow evidence because it is relevant to part of the group and not another part. LOL. What?
Second, evidence is almost never perfect (DNA evidence is pretty close), that does not mean it is not probative.
For example, let's say three people are being accused of robbing a liquor store and there was cell phone data that showed they were in the vicinity of the liquor store. Could you imagine an attorney arguing that the cell phone data is IRRELEVANT because "just because they were in the vicinity doesn't mean that they robbed the liquor store"? I'd get laughed out of the court room.
This panel believes that the testimony of a mental health professional is MORE relevant than a video tape of the incident? LOL.
Are there people who believe this is a fair process?
I think it is next Friday.I can't remember the exact date but it was after NSD.
Cleays???