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| I would imagine that the fact that they were post-offense matters for the purposes of identification. A pre-offense tattoo would be useful for eyewitness identification of the perpetrator. A post-offense tattoo wouldn't be relevant in that sense. In that way I think you could get around this issue by calling an inmate as a character witness who met the defendant only after the tattoos were applied. Then you could argue the witness needed them for identifications. ("Gee, that looks like Larry, but I don't see his swastika tattoos on him today...")
I think when considering whether something is "unfairly prejudicial" judges and lay people often get too hung up on the "prejudicial" part without considering whether it's *unfairly* prejudicial. Of COURSE it's prejudicial, that's why we want the jury to see it! However, it's not unfairly so, and I would argue that the defendant had waived any right to that argument by dint of voluntarily getting them. I think you could also argue forfeiture by wrongdoing... Now, if he could show that he was held down by a cellmate and forcibly tattooed, that's another story.
By analogy- I had a protective order hearing where the petitioner was a 23 year old, 5'0", 105 pound woman. The respondent was 6'5", 280. Did I ask them both to stand up at the same time? You bet I did. Was that prejudicial? Of course, that's why I did it! But it wasn't *unfair*. What was unfair was this guy deciding to take a swing at his ex-girlfriend. It went a long way to showing that the punch that connected with her jaw wasn't a mistake, as he said it was. |
| Posts: 394 | Location: Waco, Tx | Registered: July 24, 2009 |
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