• @OsrsNeedsF2P@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    Republican Mark Edgington, 53, told the New Hampshire Bulletin last week that he had hoped voters would look past his 1989 second-degree murder conviction, but that it becoming public had caused him and his family distress.

    What

    He maintains his innocence and told the Bulletin that he was hiding in the motel bathroom during the killing was carried out by a friend.

    Great leader he would be

    • partial_accumen
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      365 months ago

      “Who among us hasn’t hidden in a motel bathroom while their friend murdered the manager outside? I ask you! When brought to justice, where I was innocent, I instead pled ‘no contest’ as an innocent person would. I’ll paraphrase my Lord and savior Jesus Christ when I say ‘Let ye who hasn’t been convicted of murder cast the first stone’!” -Edgington probably

      • @ryven@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        185 months ago

        Innocent people plead guilty or no contest to charges all the time, tbh. I think what’s crazy is running for office as a member of the party famous for its calls of “law and order” after spending eight years in the big house at the hands of the “law.” You might think that would clue you in that maybe the legal system is not all it’s cracked up to be.

        • @Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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          25 months ago

          I mean, the first part is fucked up too, y’all just normalised it - as if falsely pleading guilty falls under telling the truth.

          And all for the sake of the system itself to function normally or by direct & intentional design, to make professionals (judges, lawyers, etc) appear more successful by some counting metric.