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The Water Cooler
General Discussion
West Norman shooting yesterday; shooter was CLEET instructor
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<blockquote data-quote="Glocktogo" data-source="post: 4084996" data-attributes="member: 1132"><p>See my replies in red above. Again, the question is one of EXCESSIVE bail, not denial of bail. The latter is defensible, while the former is not. </p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Or that they didn't receive an <em>order of certiorari</em>. Correlation doesn't equal causation in this matter. Most appeals of this type are dismissed on technical issues. Appeals that exceed the bar for SCOTUS review have to be very carefully written, narrow in scope and still have standing by the time they reach SCOTUS. If an excessive bail appeal was submitted through the formal appeals process, it would most likely no longer have standing by the time it reached SCOTUS. Either an agreement for lowered bail would be reached, or more likely the underlying case would've already gone to trial and no longer have any relevance.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Glocktogo, post: 4084996, member: 1132"] See my replies in red above. Again, the question is one of EXCESSIVE bail, not denial of bail. The latter is defensible, while the former is not. Or that they didn't receive an [I]order of certiorari[/I]. Correlation doesn't equal causation in this matter. Most appeals of this type are dismissed on technical issues. Appeals that exceed the bar for SCOTUS review have to be very carefully written, narrow in scope and still have standing by the time they reach SCOTUS. If an excessive bail appeal was submitted through the formal appeals process, it would most likely no longer have standing by the time it reached SCOTUS. Either an agreement for lowered bail would be reached, or more likely the underlying case would've already gone to trial and no longer have any relevance. [/QUOTE]
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