The boy did kill him, right?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dzhH2hlNSfs
Except in real life Trump's cabinet applauded.
of course
the filthy kid was a filthy jew, wasn't he?
>>79129365
he was an Italian
>>79129365
He looked like an Eye-Tie, kinda Moorish, I thought.
Well, my vote's guilty, anyway.
Probably, the fact that the entire case gets subverted by one guy throwing out a bunch of slight inconsistencies and then not offering a plausible alternative is horseshit
So what if one of the jurors was prejudiced, or one of them just wanted to go to the baseball game he got tickets for, that doesn't make the kid any more innocent
>>79128562
>>79129777
the protagonist even says that he probably did it, but it's not about his innocence but about the proof of his guilt
>>79129777
But they weren't there to decide the kid's innocence. They were there to decide if he was guilty beyond beyond a reasonable doubt.
Which is exactly what Henry Fonda introduced. Reasonable doubts.
>>79128562
Why couldn't the kid produce his identical knife used in the killing? that's a big co-inkidink... Thing is, if you want a reputation for carrying an untraceable knife and being a tough guy, that carries over into the courtroom.
>>79129777
Look, as abhorrent as it is to let one of them keep living, it's just as important not to lend credence to an attention whore oldfag or a lying blind bitch.
When it comes down to it, the best metric is which side had the more Jewish lawyer. That's your tell for who's more desperate.
>>79129955
>the best metric is which side had the more Jewish lawyer. That's your tell for who's more desperate.
This is a pretty sure fire way to not get selected onto a jury by the way.
Yeah, and he got off because some liberal turd failed to understand what "reasonable doubt" means.
>>79128594
You mean Drumptheth? Hahaha!
>>79128562
protip: it doesn't matter
The movie just shows that we need the "not guilty until proven" system if we want to keep the actual innocent people out of prison as much as possible, with the cost of letting a small number of guilty people free.
Did he do it or not doesn't matter, that's just a plot device for the narrative
>>79128594
Childhood is idolizing Juror 8, Adulthood is realizing that Juror 10 makes more sense
>>79130516
Old age is realizing Juror 7 was right all along, and the baseball game was more important.