The DA's job is to win = to convict. They will used what ever legal means they can. The DA will try to use emotion as well as the facts convince a jury. If they have to resort to "drivel", they will. Again, winning in their primary goal, not justice.Heartland Patriot wrote:IMHO, if a prosecutor in the State of Texas has to rely on some trivial detail like .22 LR hollowpoint bullets to make his case, it must be pretty lousy to start with and now he or she is just trying some rhetorical drivel. Now, IANAL nor LEO, but on a human being the difference between a .22 HP and solid lead bullet just ain't going to be all that big a difference...PostShooter wrote:I can say from personal experience. I was serving on a jury in an armed robbery case last fall and the prosecutor zealously made the point that the perp was carrying a weapon loaded with hollow-point bullets. I can quote from memory that he called them "man-killing" rounds, even though they were only .22LR. I say "only." I guess a .22 HP can be just as deadly as a fist-sized rock, so ANY round is potentially a man-killer. No offense to .22 carriers.
PostShooter's experience on a Texas jury does give credence to the claim that some DAs will resort to rhetoric about "man-killer" bullets and other such nonsense.