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If the prosecution thinks the person is insane, then it should urge for insanity ironclad Send a noteboard - 22/06/2012 05:48:19 PM
I don't see what's backwards or bizarro about that. This isn't an US court thriller where the prosecution is out to proof the (possibly crazy) person is sane so they can sack him for the longest time possible (or even fry him).
Without having read much about the current state of the case maybe the prosecution is just doing what feels right for them and not what some people may expect or hope.

The defense has a lot of nerve calling it "necessity", of course. I hope he never sees the light of day again.
*MySmiley*

You mustn't be afraid to dream a little bigger, darling.
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Umm...so is the bizarro world located in Norway? - 22/06/2012 05:33:25 PM 572 Views
If the prosecution thinks the person is insane, then it should urge for insanity - 22/06/2012 05:48:19 PM 425 Views
The defence did not call it that, he did. - 22/06/2012 09:06:38 PM 594 Views
Every time I see it mentioned on the news I wonder about the purpose of it - 22/06/2012 11:57:17 PM 395 Views
There are conflicting medical evaluations of his sanity. - 23/06/2012 12:20:41 AM 428 Views
You can't be guilty if you're insane. - 24/06/2012 10:48:58 AM 466 Views
I'm proud of the way the court system has handled this case - 23/06/2012 09:18:55 AM 623 Views
Agreed. Norway's response has been a victory for civilisation against terrorism from start to finish - 23/06/2012 10:03:29 AM 409 Views
This is a ridiculous statement. *NM* - 23/06/2012 12:58:25 PM 175 Views
U.S. response. - 23/06/2012 04:22:16 PM 472 Views
It makes perfect sense when you look into it closely. - 23/06/2012 10:00:45 AM 432 Views

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