Wednesday, September 01, 2004

Kobe Bryant as martyr

I'm in my last semester of law school in Southern California. It has it's advantages, but you also have to deal with individuals like the one I'm going to tell you about.

Reacting to a flyer for the California Innocence Project:

Idiot: "Help an innocent person in prison? HA! How can they be innocent if they're in prison?"

Faith in the criminal justice comes easy to the spawn of filthy rich white people. For the rest of us, experience doesn't give us that luxury. Kobe Bryant spent hundreds of days looking into the gates of hell. The prosecutors violated his Brady Rights, trashed him in the press, and forced him to spend millions in his own defense. Now they have run for the hills, agreeing to dismiss with prejudice (this is a change in their former position; they wanted to keep the case open 'indefinitely.' My command of the English language is insufficient to describe my reaction to this).

Does anyone think for a second that, if Kobe Bryant weren't rich, he would be a free man today? (this is all arguendo, considering the lying little trollop who accused him would not have had sex with him if he were not rich).

I hope that people realize how easy it is to find yourself in the defendant's chair. The ordeal that cost Kobe Bryant millions of dollars, his good name, and a year of his life can serve as a lesson for everyone, if we're paying attention.

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