veronica_rich: (Default)
veronica_rich ([personal profile] veronica_rich) wrote2011-07-05 07:00 pm

Anthony verdict

OK, Florida fen (and others, I suppose) - I kept up almost not at all with the whole Casey Anthony thing, aside from having heard her and her daughter's name once in a while in the news the past few years. (Yeah, you might think this hard to do, but I assure you, there's plenty else in the news to occupy me, since watching certain other topics is sort of part of my job.)

What do you think about today's acquittal?

[identity profile] captsparrow4evr.livejournal.com 2011-07-06 06:09 am (UTC)(link)
"Overcharged" is what they do to you when you go to a movie. "Mischarged" I think would be a better term for it. In any case, they didn't connect the dots clearly enough for the jury. I don't know that they had the evidence to do so.

[identity profile] gobsmacked.livejournal.com 2011-07-06 10:44 am (UTC)(link)
Well, "mis-charged" would mean making the wrong charges. The lawyer interviewed used "over-charged" and sort of explained he meant that the charges laid were the most serious charges that could be brought, e.g. Murder 1, instead of manslaughter, concealing a dead body, etc.
Hey, it's not *my* term. It is apparently not unique to this lawyer:
To file a criminal complaint for more serious crimes than the known facts support, most often to intimidate the accused into accepting a plea bargain.
That definition is from one of several online legal dictionaries (legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/over-charge) where I found it. It was actually apparently first used to refer to this case by CA's defense years ago, according to the quick google I just did