This was my point too, but apparently I’m too dumb to understand the General’s nuanced argument.
Come on, don't be so hard on yourself.
In answer to the question - I don't know, it's particularly hypothetical as I wasn't on jury.
But, as I stated yesterday, the high bar in my opinion wasn't met.
I suppose the only factor that might have swayed me, hypothetically, is the fact that it's almost certain that one of two people did it, and also as I stated yesterday, it's very unlikely Sheila did. But the prosecution didn't persuade me of that, I did, using common sense. I'm guessing and there's no room for a guess when you're a juror - you're instructed that you have to be sure that the evidence has removed doubt.
What I would say, JM's testimony aside, if the prosecution are depending on the silencer as some sort of definitive proof, then I'm afraid the case is weakened as a result.
But he still did it, the horrible, little ****