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[personal profile] veronica_rich
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?

Date: 2011-07-06 06:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] captsparrow4evr.livejournal.com
"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.

Date: 2011-07-06 10:44 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gobsmacked.livejournal.com
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

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