Someone pointed this out elsewhere and it actually seems a plausible idea. Mainly because I find the disconnect between attempted murder and murder being a bit of a slam dunk if you convict for the first.
Apparently Florida allows you to try 1st Degree murder as both 1st and 2nd Degree, allowing a jury to fallback IF they can't all agree on the upper charge. But what someone threw out as a theory (and I thought wasn't bad) was that maybe some in the jury were dead set on a 1st Degree murder charge where others would only go for a 2nd. The jurors dug in and it resulted in a mistrial.
In the end, that's what this is. This trial will occur again with what is probably a less competant lawyer on the defenses side until the families money is exhausted.
Apparently Florida allows you to try 1st Degree murder as both 1st and 2nd Degree, allowing a jury to fallback IF they can't all agree on the upper charge. But what someone threw out as a theory (and I thought wasn't bad) was that maybe some in the jury were dead set on a 1st Degree murder charge where others would only go for a 2nd. The jurors dug in and it resulted in a mistrial.
In the end, that's what this is. This trial will occur again with what is probably a less competant lawyer on the defenses side until the families money is exhausted.
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