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Originally posted by FrayAdjacent911
I agree with Steve on one point but not another. Yeah, the prosecution has to present it's case and provide evidence of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. It's American jurisprudence. However, just because a prosecution can't/didn't provide evidence beyond a reasonable doubt, it does not make the alleged actions of the accused acceptable.
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Not sure where you are going on this. As most posts state, his behavior is out of normal acceptance, but it has to cross the illegality line to be punishable.
I think the other generalizations of California might be applied to any populous state with major cities. Sounds more like a city vs country argument which we have within CA by the way. CA is not unlike the US as a whole, there are areas of great divergence of social, and ethnic backgrounds and gives rise to friction and misunderstandings among all of us, even down to our neighborhoods.