Thursday, February 22, 2007

STATE COURT JUSTICE: A CASH FLOW RECESS

Remember Brian Nichols, the Atlanta area Purpose-Driven Judge Killer?

Well, he's on trial for one of his acts during the crime spree, except he's not. The State Agency responsible for such things has stopped supporting defense expenses after the trial started. In short, the defense can't afford to continue. So the Judge assigned (this judge is still alive) to the matter has just given the State a "time out" so it can get its mind right about paying for the defense.

I have no idea whether this is a Southern Thing, A Racial Thing, A Bureaucratic Thing or an Auditing Thing, but it's damn sure a big thing!

When a major trial is commenced real lives are put through real stress. Just to declare a "half time" doesn't reduce the strain, both emotional and practical on all concerned, especially the next of kin to the decendents and injured in that caper.

To be clear, I'm not criticizing the Judge. What choice did he have? Still, it's not like this is the first major criminal trial in the history of Georgia. There's gotta be a seamless method to fund necessary expenses to keep the justice system going.

After all, this is not Iraq. Oh, wait, they get plenty of money from us. Never mind.

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3 Comments:

At 10:56 AM, February 23, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

RE: Georgia, "Free James Brown"! Oh, that's right, he's dead. Well at least bury him. "Bury James Brown"!

 
At 1:27 PM, February 26, 2007, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I am sure the PC and left think he is discriminated against because he is black. Not of course, because he killed a few people in open view, including a judge.

 
At 1:42 PM, February 26, 2007, Blogger UMRBlog said...

Anon 1327,

You'll get no argument from me. Throw a trial, get it done and deep-six the guy!

Now that the state has managed to disrupt the guy's trial, he'll be able to argue some kind of discrimination (based upon race, poverty, flat feet, he doesn't care). My gripe is with letting bureaurcrats take the pace of a trial out of the Judge's and Lawyers' hands.

TYFCB

 

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