This user has no status.
🏆 Top 1% Commenter
Well-Known Member
Well-Known Member
Moderator
A couple of things: none of us were at the proceedings (unless you were and are just saying you were not to protect some confidentiality). A lot of what you claim about the motives of the people and how things went down is plausible but is ultimately speculative. I am convinced by it, but the doubts I raise are not strictly about legal things. And I think part of the the confusion is that you think they are strictly about legal things.I was responding to a number of your posts, but it seems like you continue to misunderstand.
You don't get convicted of an act. You get convicted of violating one or multiple laws in the course of an act. The criminal act that Dubina committed was something that prosecutors (having seen the evidence produced from an investigation) believed they could prove in court violated a law against sexual imposition of a minor -- otherwise they would not have charged him with it. They also believed that it violated another law against assault, otherwise they would not have proposed/accepted the plea deal they did.
I think your misunderstanding stems from a belief that the criminal justice system's job is to label criminal acts. That is not what it does, and criminal acts anyways do not fall neatly into clear labels defined by the law. The fact that Dubina plead guilty to assault does not mean he was cleared of sexual imposition. It does not mean that he was convicted of a different "assault" act than the "sexual imposition" act he was initially charged with. It means the act he committed, which he was initially charged with as having violated a law against sexual imposition, was determined through a legal process (plea bargaining) to have violated a different law against assault. I've outlined the reasons the legal process may have worked out like that in my earlier posts.
The fact that Dubina was convicted of assault of the first degree means that he was not convicted of sexual imposition and there are consequences associated with that which you have admitted to, and which given the nature of the assault, make very little sense to people who think normally. That you continue to make it about not understanding the legal system is understandable, but I fear that you don't realize how far removed you are from normal thinking if you think that the problem is people not understanding the legal system. It is that a man by all appearances caused sexual harm is being convicted of causing general harm and avoids the largest complications of causing sexual harm, when it is hard to understand what harm he did without discussing the sexual nature of it.