Well, I was very busy last couple days (took my daughter to Disneyland yesterday

) and could not get signal for most of the day long enough to get the verdict. I could see there was one by the discussion, but couldn't find out what it was...frustrating! We were flying back today and this is the first time I've been able to get in front of a screen.
Anyway, not surprised at the hung jury but WHOA! at the guilties. I really didn't know what to expect there, but I am very pleased by it, but confuse me, jury. For me, the murder charge was the easy part. The difficulty for me would have been figuring out it it was M1 or M2. But the attempted murder would have taken some time. To be honest, I don't think Dunn was even trying to kill him. I can see that each bullet that was shot was aimed, IMO, right at Jordan.
So, I'm disappointed and I hope that they do go ahead with a retrial. It might be hard to see the point since he's going away, probably for the rest of his life, anyway. But it's totally the principle. It's incomplete justice. It's like the life that was taken didn't matter. It does seem there are some, at least one, who buys his story and their agreeing to attempted murder confounds me. It's like they feel like he had it coming because he attacked but Dunn should be held accountable for going overboard? But it's like they're also saying Jordan's actions almost got his friends killed. I can't...
If it was me, I would want the retrial and another chance to clear my son's name and have his killer be held accountable for his death. Nothing will bring Jordan back, but it's worth it. I'm happy, but it's incomplete. This trial went forward very quickly, hopefully the next one will too. And hopefully the prosecution does a better job. I said it before but I think they were rushing. When it got to them to cross examine or do redirect, they didn't have much to ask even though they should have, especially for Dunn. Prosecutors are usually chomping at the bit to get a chance to question the defendant, and they did. Guy did alright, but he could have done better. He seemed unprepared, he didn't bring his arguments home, he let Dunn run the show. Sometimes prosecutors think the jury is smart enough to figure it out if you don't spell it out for them. But you gotta assume sometimes and leave no stone unturned, no questions unasked, and put the puzzle pieces together yourself. The knock against Juan Martinez was that he'd take too long and he should just move on. But that's probably why he wins. He doesn't leave anything to chance and leave any room for any kind of doubt. He does the digging. That's what you gotta do.
Whoo! So much to say! I'm usually left with kind of an empty feeling after the trial is over. After the initial rush of feelings from the verdict. Even if it's one that makes me happy, it kind of melts to sadness. It doesn't bring the person back, lives are ruined, the families are left torn and broken hearted with the pain that will never go away. The only consolation is that their death was avenged in some way, and when it's not it's even worse.
I'm glad I have a place to come to discuss these cases and get it all out!