Difference between revisions of "User:RahalMccall69"

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(About Utah- Heber City and paying the steep price of progress)
(N.J. Court- Rap Lyrics Introduced at Trial Were Prejudicial)
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Give him, oh, three seconds, and, like a lot of Heber dwellers, he will rattle <a href=http://www.buycelinebags.com/celine-doctor-frame-42>Celine Doctor Frame Bags</a> off everything Heber has going for it. The reservoirs on either end of town Deer Creek on the south, Jordanelle on the north the Provo River in between, the 90 holes of public golf, the mountains in all directions, the view of Timp, the airport with the 7,000-foot <a href=http://www.buycelinebags.com/celine-luggage-43>Celine Luggage</a> runway, the best fishing lake in the state 30 minutes up Daniels Canyon, the clean air, the room to roam, the nice people, the excellent schools and teachers, the world-class skiing and hundred-dollar steaks and everything else next door in Park City, the rodeo, the cowboy culture, the easy  commutes to Provo and Salt Lake City, and in case you might not have known it, the city recently passed an ordinance that spells out that every resident has the right to have chickens in their yard.
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The New Jersey State Supreme Court ruled yesterday that rap lyrics introduced at a defendant s murder trial were prejudicial and should not have been allowed聽into evidence. The N.J. Supreme Court upheld an appellate court s ruling that reversed the conviction.
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The case stems from the November 8, 2005, shooting of Lamont Peterson. Peterson was hit seven times in the back, torso and head, and told police on the way to the hospital that Vonte Skinner shot him. While searching Skinner s car, police found several notebooks of rap lyrics 鈥?many of which included violent themes. The <a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com/19-porte-monnaie>Porte-Monnaie</a> lyrics were read at Skinner s first trial, which ended in a mistrial when the jury couldn t reach a verdict.
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The defense objected to the introduction of the lyrics before Skinner s retrial, but a court again ruled them admissible. Skinner s rap handle was apparently Real Threat; he has a Threat tattoo. At the second trial, a detective testifying for the State read extensively from defendant鈥檚 lyrics to the jury, the Supreme Court wrote in its opinion. The trial transcript of that uninterrupted reading stretches thirteen pages. The material was replete with expletives and included graphic depictions of violence, bloodshed, death, maiming, and dismemberment.
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But the court says those lyrics weren't affiliated with the alleged crimes.
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Those verses, along with several more pages not reproduced here, plainly depict various crimes and other bad acts, but those crimes and acts were unconnected to the specific facts of the attempted-murder charge against defendant. The State did not attempt to clarify or explain the lyrics in any way, despite their heavy use of slang and otherwise esoteric language. <>..]
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Defendant reportedly has composed rap lyrics as a form of self-expression since he was a child. <a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com/18-pochette-louis-vuitton>Pochette Louis Vuitton</a> In fact, the record reveals evidence that some of defendant鈥檚 work had been produced in connection with a rap music label. Although it is not clear when each individual verse of the lyrics found in defendant鈥檚 notebooks was written, the State concedes that many of the lyrics found in defendant鈥檚 car and read to the jury were composed long before the circumstances underlying the instant offense took place.
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The court ruled 6-0, with one judge abstaining. The court also compared Skinner's lyrics to those of writers a bit more famous.
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The difficulty in identifying probative value in fictional or other forms of artistic self-expressive endeavors is that one cannot presume that, simply because an author has chosen to write about certain topics, he or she has acted in accordance with those views. One would not presume that Bob Marley, who wrote the well-known song 鈥淚 Shot the Sheriff,鈥?actually shot a sheriff, or that Edgar Allan Poe buried a <a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com/21-sacs-du-soir>Sacs du soir Louis Vuitton</a> man beneath his floorboards, as depicted in his short story 鈥淭he Tell-Tale Heart,鈥?simply because of their respective artistic endeavors on those subjects.
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Skinner had been sentenced to 30 years in prison. Read the full opinion of the court below.

Revision as of 23:55, 9 August 2014

@@@ The New Jersey State Supreme Court ruled yesterday that rap lyrics introduced at a defendant s murder trial were prejudicial and should not have been allowed聽into evidence. The N.J. Supreme Court upheld an appellate court s ruling that reversed the conviction. The case stems from the November 8, 2005, shooting of Lamont Peterson. Peterson was hit seven times in the back, torso and head, and told police on the way to the hospital that Vonte Skinner shot him. While searching Skinner s car, police found several notebooks of rap lyrics 鈥?many of which included violent themes. The <a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com/19-porte-monnaie>Porte-Monnaie</a> lyrics were read at Skinner s first trial, which ended in a mistrial when the jury couldn t reach a verdict. The defense objected to the introduction of the lyrics before Skinner s retrial, but a court again ruled them admissible. Skinner s rap handle was apparently Real Threat; he has a Threat tattoo. At the second trial, a detective testifying for the State read extensively from defendant鈥檚 lyrics to the jury, the Supreme Court wrote in its opinion. The trial transcript of that uninterrupted reading stretches thirteen pages. The material was replete with expletives and included graphic depictions of violence, bloodshed, death, maiming, and dismemberment.


But the court says those lyrics weren't affiliated with the alleged crimes. Those verses, along with several more pages not reproduced here, plainly depict various crimes and other bad acts, but those crimes and acts were unconnected to the specific facts of the attempted-murder charge against defendant. The State did not attempt to clarify or explain the lyrics in any way, despite their heavy use of slang and otherwise esoteric language. <>..] Defendant reportedly has composed rap lyrics as a form of self-expression since he was a child. <a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com/18-pochette-louis-vuitton>Pochette Louis Vuitton</a> In fact, the record reveals evidence that some of defendant鈥檚 work had been produced in connection with a rap music label. Although it is not clear when each individual verse of the lyrics found in defendant鈥檚 notebooks was written, the State concedes that many of the lyrics found in defendant鈥檚 car and read to the jury were composed long before the circumstances underlying the instant offense took place. The court ruled 6-0, with one judge abstaining. The court also compared Skinner's lyrics to those of writers a bit more famous. The difficulty in identifying probative value in fictional or other forms of artistic self-expressive endeavors is that one cannot presume that, simply because an author has chosen to write about certain topics, he or she has acted in accordance with those views. One would not presume that Bob Marley, who wrote the well-known song 鈥淚 Shot the Sheriff,鈥?actually shot a sheriff, or that Edgar Allan Poe buried a <a href=http://www.louisvuitton-pascher.com/21-sacs-du-soir>Sacs du soir Louis Vuitton</a> man beneath his floorboards, as depicted in his short story 鈥淭he Tell-Tale Heart,鈥?simply because of their respective artistic endeavors on those subjects. Skinner had been sentenced to 30 years in prison. Read the full opinion of the court below.

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