Still a bit confusing, sorry. She saw M&M at the bank, in the parking
lot, but she said that SUNOCO is on that same parking lot in the same
shopping center, but SUNOCO is one mile away, neither bank or SUNOCO
is in any shopping center at all, and the two businesses are on
opposite sides of the highway. So much for placing Muhamad at the
scene. Your opinion so far?

--- In cia-drugs@yahoogroups.com, "muckblit" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I would like to hear your opinion on one idea.
> 
> John Muhamad of Muhamad and Malvo, DC-area snipers during Iraqwar
> voting, was only tried for one murder, that of Dean Meyers.
> 
> Muhamad only represented himself for part of that trial. While he was
> representing himself, a witness perjured herself to place him at the
> scene of the crime. Muhamad did not attack her testimony.
> 
> What do you think of that?
> 
> The witness was a woman who worked at First Virginia Bank. I put the
> mapquest map in cia-drugs photos, showing that the bank is a mile from
> the crime scene. Why play lawyer yet pass up the opportunity to crush
> a softball and send it over the outfield fence as Matlock or Perry
Mason?
> 
> By crush a softball, I mean it was this easy. Matlock: "You say your
> bank is in the same shopping center as SUNOCO. What is the name of the
> shopping center?"
> 
> "The bank is not actually in a shopping center"
> 
> "What is the name of the shopping center SUNOCO is in then?"
> 
> "SUNOCO is not actually in a shopping center either".
> 
> "You said they were in the same shopping center, and then you said
> that neither is actually in any shopping center. Are they in the same
> parking lot?"
> 
> "No"
> 
> "Do you realize that your bank is exactly one mile from SUNOCO?"
> 
> "If you say so"
> 
> "Your bank and SUNOCO are on opposite sides of six lanes of highway, a
> grass median strip, two sidewalks, and two parking lots. Neither is in
> a shopping center. Did you tell the prosecution before this trial that
> you saw the defendant in the same shopping center where you worked?"
> 
> "No, they told me to say that"
> 
> "The prosecution suborned you to perjure yourself by claiming to have
> seen the defendant at the scene of the crime?"
> 
> "Exactly, yes."
> 
> "Were your two co-workers lying here today when they called you a liar
> about events the day of the murder?"
> 
> "I guess not"
> 
> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cia-drugs/message/44045
>


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