The afflicted believed to have seen the spectors of the accused and been tormented by them. Spectral Evidence is the girls' claims that the spectors harmed them that were heard in court. It's like witness testimony about ghosts.
nothing
There was actually no evidence at all to prove the accused of their "crimes." It actually all started when someone who really didn't like someone else accused her of doing some really 'evil' things and should be killed before any harm is done. These people were really just having fun with science and physics.
spectral evidence - form of evidence based upon dreams and visions.
By todays standards the "evidence" would not have got to court. It was hearsay, spite, mass hysteria, religious fanaticism and superstition.
none witches were cool and great
spectral evidence
Torture was no utilized for getting confessions during the Salem Witch Trials.
Eyewitness accounts. Although most of those people were threatened or tortured into giving false testimony. There wasnt actually any 'evidence' used in the witch trials. Raving testimony of young girls.
They began when girls began having epilepsy-like fits, which were diagnosed as bewitchment. The trials ended when the governor outlawed spectral evidence, the insubstanial main evidence used in the trials, after his wife was accused.
To ways that people (mostly women) were tested was: 1. A lake would be blest, the the person who was accused would have there hands and ankles tied together then lowered into the lake, if the person floated and lived he/she would be a witch then killed, but if he/she drowned she would be dead then proved that he/she wasn't a witch. 2. The person accused would have to carry a peace of hot coal around the town two times, when finished if the persons hands were burnt then they would be let go, but if they where fine they would kill you. EDIT: During the Salem Trials, the accused were not given the benefit of a fair test. The Touch Test, the afflicted's testimony and the Witch's Teat were the only evidence or tests employed. The Touch Test, in which the accused would touch the bewitched while in a fit and if the fit ended the agent to cause it had returned to the accused witch by touch, could be rigged because the afflicted could choose to recover if they were faking, which is the most supported theory. The afflicted could have easily lied. And the Witch's Teat, a blemish that would not bleed or cause pain is pricked, was ALWAYS fake. The examiners used dull pins.
By the end of the Salem witch trials, 20 people were dead. 19 by hanging and one, Giles Corey, was pressed to death. Another 4 are known to have died in prison though there may have been as many as 13. Around 150 people were imprisoned. Many factors contributed to the ending of the trials. John Proctor, while in prison, wrote to the magistrates in Boston, asking them to move the trials there with different judges. This led to a meeting between 8 officials from surrounding areas including Increase Mather, in which spectral evidence was banned. By the time this decision was reached, John and many others were already dead. Spectral evidence was most of the evidence used against the accused "witches" and so without it, there was no real reason to convict them. Also, doubt spread among the people when good people such as Rebecca Nurse were hanged, and also when George Burroughs perfectly recited the Lord's Prayer before he was hanged. Considering witches were not supposed to be able to hear let alone say the Lord's name, this caused people to seriously question everything they believed in. Giles Corey being pressed to death for refusing to stand to trial also affected people greatly. Eventually it wasn't just the skeptics and rebels, but also the powerful and well-connected who were being accused. This made people change their minds pretty quickly too. Increase Mather pointed out that the devil could take the form of an innocent person, so how can you really tell who was guilty and who was not? He said, "It were better that 10 suspected witches should escape than one innocent person should be condemned."
DNA evidence can help convict criminals or show that an accused person is innocent.
CSI (the actual investigations, not the show) are used to investigate crime scenes. These investigations gather evidence such as fingerprints, DNA evidence, matching of witness to apparent events that people use in a courtroom to convict or prove innocent the accused persons.
They went on trial. And were probably found guilty. However, only 19 went on trial before the evidence that was used to justify arresting the accused, spectral evidence, was banned.
Torture was no utilized for getting confessions during the Salem Witch Trials.
Eyewitness accounts. Although most of those people were threatened or tortured into giving false testimony. There wasnt actually any 'evidence' used in the witch trials. Raving testimony of young girls.
A forensic psychiatrist can use evidence from a crime scene to put together a more complete picture of the perpetrator. Psychiatric evidence can be used to convict a criminal when other forms cannot.
The accused has the right to challenge the admissibility of any evidence used against them at trial. Whether an e-mail or any other evidence is "illegally obtained" is subject to the interpretation of the court, not the accused. If the court rules that evidence is obtained unlawfully, it can be suppressed at trial and not considered.
The main circumstantial evidence used to convict Tom Robinson in "To Kill a Mockingbird" is the testimony of Mayella Ewell, who accuses him of raping her. Additionally, the fact that Tom is a black man accused of a crime against a white woman in a racially charged society also plays a significant role in his conviction. Other factors include the physical injuries on Mayella's body and the biased perceptions and prejudices of the jury and community.
YesAnother View: No, not directly. "Word of mouth" may be enough to bring drug trafficking to the attention of law enforcement, or lead their investigtion in the right direction, but the evidence that is collected and used to convict the defendant(s) must be collected in accordance with the law and the rules of evidence.
Evidence refers to the material and testimony that is used to convict you of the crime. Procedure is the methodical process by which the arrest, investigation, and subseqeuent trial is conudcted.
They began when girls began having epilepsy-like fits, which were diagnosed as bewitchment. The trials ended when the governor outlawed spectral evidence, the insubstanial main evidence used in the trials, after his wife was accused.
To ways that people (mostly women) were tested was: 1. A lake would be blest, the the person who was accused would have there hands and ankles tied together then lowered into the lake, if the person floated and lived he/she would be a witch then killed, but if he/she drowned she would be dead then proved that he/she wasn't a witch. 2. The person accused would have to carry a peace of hot coal around the town two times, when finished if the persons hands were burnt then they would be let go, but if they where fine they would kill you. EDIT: During the Salem Trials, the accused were not given the benefit of a fair test. The Touch Test, the afflicted's testimony and the Witch's Teat were the only evidence or tests employed. The Touch Test, in which the accused would touch the bewitched while in a fit and if the fit ended the agent to cause it had returned to the accused witch by touch, could be rigged because the afflicted could choose to recover if they were faking, which is the most supported theory. The afflicted could have easily lied. And the Witch's Teat, a blemish that would not bleed or cause pain is pricked, was ALWAYS fake. The examiners used dull pins.