Eluvatar's last few posts have dangerous implications for the integrity of our judicial system. Particularly this totally arbitrary set of rules he introduced with the express purpose of blocking the defense's evidence submission:
You may PM me the evidence you would like to submit. Please include arguments for the inclusion of each post or sentence which either (A) one or more Security Council members would prefer redacted or (B) come from the separate Security Council topic regarding disclosure of the original topic which you would like included. Please also PM the Vice Delegate the same PM you send me, verbatim.
I have very serious concerns about this. It would effectively allow even one member of the Security Council to veto the admission of evidence and/or filibuster the submission of evidence for the defense by creating hours upon hours of busy work for the defense attorney, along with the extra risk of having the evidence thrown out if there is even the slightest error in copying all that work yet again when sending it to the VD.
This means that for security-related crimes, it would become very difficult for a defendant to even understand the charges against them or the investigation which led to an indictment. It would shield the SC from legal scrutiny, and ultimately destroy the concept of a fair trial.
Bear in mind that this is for information that Eluvatar himself had ordered released for the express purpose of gathering evidence:
So ordered: The Security Council will promptly release its records regarding The Swedish Republic of New Kenya.
Then he rejects its submission as evidence and invents some terrific roadblocks with less than a day remaining in the evidence submission phase?
The final insult comes when Flem asks the justice to reverse these ludicrous new requirements, and Eluvatar replies that he cannot, because he can't make up new rules on the fly. Even though that's exactly what he did. While trying to block evidence that he himself had ordered be allowed into court.
Does anyone care to explain to me how exactly this is anything short of a mistrial? This isn't even touching on Flem's point that the prosecutor is on the SC, which only makes Eluvatar's requirement even more open to exploitation.
Is this how justice is normally dispensed in a democratic system?