Well the interesting one is the circumstance; public record factsSurely to some extent it depends on the seriousness of the alleged offence.
I'm not a huge rugby follower but I'm sure there have been All Blacks (one particular winger going back 7-8 years who was up for domestic abuse) who continued to play. Certainly there have been shitloads of NRL players who have continued to be picked, to do what is their job. Shaun Kenny-Dowall being one this year, who was up on domestic violence charges, was not available for selection due to his mental health but picked after that, pre trial. Kuggleijn has pleaded not guilty, yes - for those who are following?Surely to some extent it depends on the seriousness of the alleged offence.
Not necessarily; the flaw with the jury system is that you're asking non legal people to make decisions that have legal technicalities involved. The judge strongly implied that reasonable doubt had been met as a condition and the jury remained hung.But if it was cut and dried oneway or the other they'd have reached a verdict.
IMO it's absolutely a good thing that it's taken more seriously now.The fact the cops wouldn't have touched it 20 years ago is very likely a greater reflection on how the cops looked at those things back then than it is on this bloke's guilt or innocence (or that of those accused of similar things two decades back).
I agree; but in the same token these types of situations are very murky in my opinion, when you're down to he said, she said, with alcohol involved, and endless accounts of them sucking each others faces off throughout the night, and conversations in regards to contraception that others had heard, etc. I just think in todays age, the Tostee trial was a great scope on how quick we are to place blame upon the male in a situation where two parties are intoxicated and an incident happens.IMO it's absolutely a good thing that it's taken more seriously now.
Ftr, that was Kuggeleijn's decision Kuggeleijn steps down | Stuff.co.nzBeen plenty of All Blacks that have continued to play, pending court cases. And probably other sports. In a way he's unlucky he hadn't debuted before it. I have little doubt a current squad member would continue to be picked, but Scott is deemed a no go zone.
Is that right? I can understand why the selectors steer clear. But I think we all agree he'd 100% be there, ODIs and T20s, if not for the court case. And on the presumption of innocence, plus the fact I don't imagine it would raise a massive outcry in the media, I think I'd be picking him.
If you're guilty it's generally preferable to have trial by jury. Much better chance of convincing some of them that there is doubt.Still back the jury system over judge alone trials in criminal cases tbh
I believe he was, yes. Only a guess, but that's how I read it.Ftr, that was Kuggeleijn's decision Kuggeleijn steps down | Stuff.co.nz
Edit: Unless you believe he was given a nudge.
I'm 50/50 on whether he was pushed into it. As someone pointed out, it's happened to All Blacks before, so not a massive stretch that it was he who wanted out of the national spotlight until the trial was done with. Especially with the prospect of travelling with NZ or NZ A.I believe he was, yes. Only a guess, but that's how I read it.
I also can't see the difference between him playing for ND or NZ A. In fact, playing for ND puts him more in the spotlight in terms of the Super Smash. To me, it had to be NZCs way of saying we won't pick you for NZ until this thing is done, so we won't pick you for a pathway either. To me, he had the right to perform in the avenue of his employment and at the very least further prove his worth for the higher level should he found nit guilty.