this post was submitted on 26 Jul 2023
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Movies and TV Shows
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Not guilty means not guilty. Thats kind of how our justice system works.
It’s a bit more reliable than a pitchfork mob on social media looking to fulfill their confirmation bias on someone that actually could be innocent.
Literally not how the justice system works lol. You have to prove them guilty beyond reasonable doubt (surely you've heard this phrase before), which means 100% proof. If you commit a crime and there is ANY doubt, you will get a not guilty verdict. You say it yourself in this reply, that he could be innocent. Nobody is arguing that. He could also be guilty and we may never know for sure.
There are 2 burdens of proof in trials, 1 for civil trials, and 1 for criminal trials. Civil trials require a burden of proof "beyond a reasonable doubt" and it is much lower than the burden of proof required for criminal trials, which is "beyond a shadow of a doubt". The burden of proof you are describing for Kevin Spacey's criminal trial is actually "beyond a shadow of a doubt", which essentially requires reliable eyewitnesses or a smoking gun, as they say.
That said, Spacey also defeated a civil trial in the US last October for a different set of accusations, so there is that 🤷
I can't claim to know the truth in he said/he said situations like these, but common sense would indicate that there's probably some truth to multiple accusations of impropriety. Victims often don't opt to speak out publicly and go to court unless they think they can win and scam artists are rare.
You clearly didn't do a web search for the burdens of proof in the UK court system. Beyond a reasonable doubt is the name for the burden of proof in criminal cases.