Opinion ID: 1427690
Heading Depth: 2
Heading Rank: 1

Heading: issues of the case

Text: The issues of this case must be accommodated to the facts presented, including recognition that the charged offenses were committed within twenty or, at the most, thirty feet from the physical presence of both Gene and Linda Rounsaville. None of the victims raised any verbal objection. Thereafter, testimony is provided about a meeting the following morning that could not have actually happened. [3] These issues are all directed to the development within the facts presented to review whether a fair trial occurred which include question or denial:

The search for truth which is intrinsic to due process, equal protection and justice cannot be extinguished by discretional denial. If justice is only exercised discretion, then the process is only the rule of man and not of law. To the extent that justification is not provided by the majority in denial to Dr. Gale of the tools to seek the truth, it cannot be accommodated in discretion unless that discretion is related to the facts presented. The movement of this majority away from discretion as seen in Martinez v. State, 611 P.2d 831 (Wyo. 1980) to the understanding as defined in Martin v. State, 720 P.2d 894 (Wyo. 1986) postulates this recognition. Discretion does not exist in a vacuum. It should be a rational application of facts to a reasoned decision within a real world of conflicting forces and factors. Truth, except where the actuality is presumed by arbitrary definition, can, to the observer, only be a reasoned probability.