Putting a hole in the prosecution's case is not proving the opposite to be true.
No, but it helped make the case for Joe's defense by possibly incriminating the "real" killer who in his lawyers eyes was Mark, seeing as he was near the crime scene around the time of his son's death. They were just providing a possible motive to a known fact (Mark's whereabouts).
What Bishop did was prove Ellie couldn't vouch either way for Joe's whereabouts because she'd taken a sleeping pill.
Sorry, I can't remember all the details now but why would Bishop defending Joe prove that Ellie couldn't vouch for Joe because that would incriminate her client, wouldn't it? Hmm...the details all are a bit foggy now for me, Jalola.
Yes, Bishop did hold tight what the prosecution couldn't prove regarding Joe's whereabouts that night. What was known however, was Mark's whereabouts that night, which was near the crime scene, which was the point I thought was coming across clearly on the screen (and the subject of my post).
In a similar way, Joe was found "not guilty" because there was no third choice but that doesn't mean he was innocent.
No it does mean he's innocent, of course. But since the prosecution failed to make a case and the defense made theirs by pointing out all the facts that made the case, he wasn't found guilty of the murder.
In fact, what happened was the case against Joe was "not proven" --
Yes, exactly.
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