It’s like when you try to blame your friend for knocking over a tower of blocks, but no one saw it happen, and there's not enough evidence to prove it.
Ex-Arizona cop is like the friend who knocked over the tower. He was supposed to protect people, but he killed an unarmed man, meaning the man didn’t have any weapons or tools to fight back.
Now, here’s how being acquitted works, it's like when a judge says, "I can't prove your friend did it for sure, so I'll say they’re not guilty."
What Happened in Court
In court, the cop said he was scared and thought the man was going to attack him. But the man was just walking.
It’s like if you told your teacher that you knocked over the tower because you were scared of a giant shadow, but no one saw the shadow or the tower fall.
The judge looked at all the evidence, like what people saw and heard, and decided there wasn’t enough to prove the cop definitely killed the man. So he was acquitted, meaning he’s not guilty in the eyes of the law.
It doesn't mean he didn't do it, just that the court couldn't be 100% sure.
Examples
- A former cop shot an unarmed man, but the jury didn’t think he was guilty.
- The cop said he felt threatened even though the man wasn't armed.
- The trial ended with the cop being set free.
Ask a question
See also
- What were the causes and long-term impacts of the Ferguson protests?
- 1212 ~ Number Synchronicities ~ Are You Seeing This ?
- AI Literacy: How do AI Image Generators Work?
- Analysis: Will Republicans stick with lame-duck Trump?
- 1 - What is an emotion?