http://www.montereyherald.com/news/ci_1 ... ck_check=1
All of this squares with both what others have said AND with what I've said. Davis exchanged words - we don't know what words - with Moore's girlfriend, and then Davis WAS RETREATING from her, with her advancing toward him, at which point Moore rushed Davis and knocked him down.In a lengthy statement in a halting voice, Moore expressed sorrow for Davis, as well as his family and friends, said he accepted full responsibility for his actions, which he called "an error in judgment," and asked the judge for "a second chance."
"I have a much deeper understanding of life, death, relationships and responsibility (as a result of the crime)," Moore said. "I will forever carry the burden of this man's death, and I'm asking for an opportunity to be a good role model in society."
Moore's attorney, Paul Meltzer of Santa Cruz, characterized his client as the father of a 6-month-old son, a college graduate with an excellent work history as an engineer, and a person known for being kind, gentle, concerned for others, honest and family oriented. He said the evidence showed that Moore pushed Davis once without further violence or threats, and said his client never intended to seriously harm Davis.
Meltzer said Moore had no history of ill feelings toward the homeless, pointing out that he volunteered at Bay Area soup kitchens on numerous occasions, and had given his time to Habitat For Humanity, building homes for the indigent.
Prosecutor Gary Thelander acknowledged Moore's apparently exemplary life, but asked Hayes for a sentence of felony probation — not a misdemeanor. He made a dramatic point when he turned to the packed courtroom.
"Would all of the people who are here today for Mr. Davis please stand up?" Thelander said.
When no one stood, Thelander turned to the judge.
"There is no one to speak for Mr. Davis except, apparently, me — a member of the government," he said. "This is how the system is supposed to work: Everyone should have a voice — even Mr. Davis."
Thelander described Davis as a man, obviously drunk, who moved with a gait that was more of a shuffle.
"What Mr. Davis was asking for was an opportunity to wash windshields to earn a living to buy something to drink, or to eat, or to keep himself warm," said Thelander, who noted that Davis "wasn't born homeless to disenfranchised" and served as a United Nations peacekeeper for three years in Lebanon.
Thelander said surveillance video showed Davis backing away from Moore's girlfriend as she walked toward him, apparently shouting, before Moore knocked him down.
The judge said his review of the video showed that although Moore pushed Davis, there was no forceful tackling, and that Moore immediately stepped back and raised his hands after Davis fell.
"To me, that's an indication that Mr. Moore was surprised that the victim went to the ground, which may or may not be due, in part, to the intoxication of the victim," he said. "What I saw in the videotape did not rise to the level of felonious contact."
Moore's initial reaction was in appropriate, as Davis was retreating, but he also seems surprised at how easily Davis went down, and he steps back, indicating that even he was aware that Davis was not a real physical threat.
I want to be clear that I don't condone drunken homelessness. But even homeless drunks deserve a bit of mercy from those whose comfortable lives insulate them from how pitiless the world can be when you're a homeless bum.