Saturday, February 02, 2008

IRS Code Brought to Light of Daywalker

Action star Wesley Snipes was found not guilty of federal tax-fraud and conspiracy charges Friday, but was convicted on three misdemeanor counts of failing to file a tax return.
Maybe there's some hope for our jury system. I wonder how this can be built on, and what the nightstalkers will do to try to suck the life out of the precedent?

I wish Aaron Russo was around to see this.

6 comments:

Kent McManigal said...

Any convictions on anything at all in this (or any other tax-)case are ridiculous. I have to wonder if the jurors thought "well, we can't let him get away totally free".

chris horton said...

Yeah, Kent, that was my first thought when I saw that on the news yesterday. I've also always wondered why SOMETHING always has to be put on the dockets of ANY case when a not guilty decision is decided by our "peers."

SamenoKami said...

I am wondering if this isn't the start of a 'Boston Tea Party.' This is the second guy in about 6 months that the Feds could not get convicted for IRS violations. I would love to see a whole bunch of jury nullifications on tax and/or gun issues.

Anonymous said...

It won't be, because when they realize how objectionable their actions seem to a jury, they'll find a way to either prevent or delay a trail by jury until the prosecuted simply give in.

Anonymous said...

*trial

Anonymous said...

Or they'll just get a corrupt judge, ala Jimm Larry Hendren, who disallows the jury to hear the defense.