He's a TP.You don't suppose Snipes is stupid enough
Everthing flows from that. Therefore, anything is possible.
Demosthenes wrote: The defense seems to think that winning a victory on the place of residence will get them a full acquittal. I am unclear on that concept.
By the way, our good Quatloos buddy Bill Branscum is attending the trial. (He's working for Snipes.) Teaparty moderator Robert Raymond is also there.
Something about this point bothered me, and I looked a little further. While a quick search doesn't find Supreme Court law on the matter, I don't think this is right. A properly-joined, properly-venued conspiracy count will not save substantive counts (here the failures to file) from dismissal on improper venue. Venue must be satisfied as to each count. That is part of the reason why prosecutors frequently charge what would otherwise be substantive crimes as overt acts in a conspiracy count.wserra wrote:The question is rendered pretty much academic because of the properly-joined conspiracy counts.Demosthenes wrote:And how important is the defendant's physical presence in a count where the lack of doing something is the crime. Where was Snipes when he didn't file the 2001 tax return?
He certainly said that he lived there. Many times.Bill E. Branscum wrote:If the residence at the Windermere address issue is death to counts three-through eight (and like Demo, I don't know that I completely see how that works) that should be a blow out. He never lived there, and the government should have been able to figure that out.
I'm sure the judge would apply airspace jurisdiction in that case.grixit wrote:Ladies and Gentlemen, regardless of the merits of the government's case, you must acquit my client for lack of jurisdiction. You see, my client has been assisting his good friend David Copperfield in the development of a new levitation demonstration, and on every occasion when the alleged acts took place, he was in fact, floating 10 feet above the ground, and therefor not being on US soil, was not within any applicable venue.
And yet, he applied for the Florida Homestead Exemption, and swore under oath on mutiple forms that it was his residence, and used it as his residence on his many movie contracts...He never lived there, and the government should have been able to figure that out.
I predict they're toast based on three pieces of evidence:In my view, I think the government may have been so focused on Snipes that Rosile and Kahn may well be "lost in the sauce."
If he indeed has property in Florida, I believe part of the purpose is to avail himself of the protection provided by Florida's homestead provision. While it doesn't protect him from tax liens and collections, it does preclude other judgment creditors. You can be in debt up to your eyeballs and have a multi-million dollar mansion in Florida, lose a civil case and not have to worry about a forced sale of your home.LPC wrote:...No, that's only evidence that he *claimed* a Florida residence. He might have been lying.
You don't suppose Snipes is stupid enought to take the stand and testify that he wasn't really a resident of Florida, but was a resident of (California, New York, or New Jersey, take your pick), but that he claimed to have a Florida residence in order to evade (I'm sorry, make that "avoid") the income taxes that would otherwise be payable to those other states?
I really don't think that admitting that he lied in order to avoid state income tax is really going to help his cause.
Oh, I don't necessarily think so. This is a complicated case, I just thought they'd get right down to filling in the blanks. My guess is that Demo, who was there in person, has a better feel about the jury. She thought it would take until later on tomorrow to get a verdict. So, I'm not worried. After tomorrow night, if no verdict, I think I will be.Doktor Avalanche wrote:This doesn't look good. I think a few of them are moving for acquital.
That's that. See you tomorrow.OCALA, Fla. -- The jury in the Wesley Snipes tax fraud trial has deliberated all day Wednesday, and so far they have not come to a verdict.
They'll be back again Thursday to continue deliberations at the Ocala federal courthouse. Wesley Snipes nor his attorneys have been at the courthouse all day.