I think they also placed reflector plates on the moon, and someone in the US or Mexico fires a lazer (or similar, from something akin to an observatory) to it each day, recording the time it takes for the light to come back to earth, thus accurately measuring the distance of the moon from earth...
That sounds remarkably like the MJ case. There are a few people (were children, now adults) who testify that he abused them many many times over years. There's also all the circumstantial evidence of Jackson arranging for the boys to stay in his room every night (moving their families over to be...
I don't know what happened to him, or what went through his mind, but there have been several crashes at other airshows where the pilot ejects just before the plane crashes. Perhaps he thought he could avoid crashing, and ejecting would certainly see the plane crashing into the public :shrug:
You compare my comparison to Charlie Manson and Hitler, and accuse me of a silly comment :lol:
Just to be clear, what evidence is there against Jimmy Savile?
Many people have had car accidents that have involved fatalities, and they haven't all gone to prison. Comparing the number of deaths (11 in this case) doesn't make sense, as cars and aircraft are quite different.
Yep.
I don't agree. People have died, it is tragic. But the pilot is another human and deserves fair justice (and I don't know what that is in this case). If the interest of loved ones was the only concern, then perhaps the pilot would be locked up even if he didn't do anything wrong (I'm not...
Ok, understood. From a libel point of view, Bozza wants people to be careful what they say in this thread. You can say things about Jackson without fear of libel, because he's dead (the same is not true of the people in the documentary).
Law aside, I haven't read the detail about this case, so...
It's possible (and I'm not saying this is what happened) that he made a mistake which caused the crash, but that that mistake was not negligent, and therefore it's not manslaughter. People do make mistakes that lead to the death of others, and it's not always manslaughter.