I watched every minute of the trial and not once did the plaintiff lawyer implied intention wrong doing. What's the reason behind this?
What these lawyer did would be like proving a person stole a car, kidnapped a woman, beat her, raped her, put the murder weapon in the killer's hand, put them at the time and place, having the pic of the killer stabbing the woman, then having the defendant admit all of that to be true, but only to say "its really odd" the lady was murder in closing, and all that when the only thing the judge cares about is if murder was intentional or not.
What was the reason behind this legal tactic? Did they simply try to introduce evidence because everyone knew it would go to appeal?
I have another question (and yes I agree that the word "intent" is not even in the Arizona law in question)...
Should not the plaintiff's attorney have immediately appealed the judge's decision to throw out 3 of the original 5 (8 out of 10?) causes of action? Does that lack of objection now make these issues moot on appeal? Because those causes of action were all very determinative.