He is not a saint, but the question is: Are you ready to cheer someone whom you heard saying the following?
“I don’t give a feck what you want … I’m going to feck you, you twat … I don’t care if you want to have sex with me … Push me again one more time and watch what happens to you.”
In isolation it's an awful thing to say but then if everyone is honest with themselves, I doubt anyone can say with absolute certainty, they have not said something abhorrent at some time in their lives. I'd even suggest anyone who claims they haven't isn't being honest.
The truth is we all say things in anger, frustrating, disappoint etc. How many have told their parents or siblings they wished they were dead, or got caught up in a fued and threated to do someone harm? Those who have gone through difficult divorses almost certainly did and said things they won't be proud of, they probably received threats and actions equally unpleasant.
It doesn't necessarily mean you are capable of such things let alone that you will even do them. There is a huge leap from make a threat to that threat even being credible, let alone acting on it.
We can safely assume the police and CPS investigated the threat. We can make a reasonable guess that it was deemed not credible as if it had been, it would have been a vital element of their case against him. Tbh I would think it was one of the main reasons they continued their investigation for 10 months after the key witness withdrew. A recent example of just how seriously threats are taken these days can be seen over the pond with our friends, the gun people.
Now please, don't think I am saying we are all monsters going around making violent threats against people or that it's acceptable or that we've all said things equal to what Greenwood said. I am saying we are all human, we try to be rational and level headed but even the calmest, more balanced of us is still capable of an outburst which if the whole world heard it, would make us look like maniacs.
I think the importance of the investigation continuing for a significant period of time, after the key witness not only withdrew but requested it was dropped means every possiblity was explored and had they anything, anything at all then they would have proceeded to court. This is before we even account for the "new material" which clearly is some new evidence none of us are privy to. They did everything within their remit to build their case and in the end had to drop the charges.
If anything we should be asking, do they apply this level of investigation in all cases on this nature. We should even applaud the fact that they continued even after the key witness withdrew and why isn't this standard practice.
Obviously the public interest element played a part of this but that's another issue. We shouldn't have ever known about it. Because in the nicest possible way, as a collective the public are morons. I mean, you can rile Jane and Joe public up to the point they'll cheer a lion ripping you apart, or setting a person on fire because magic. Luckily the alternative to fire was to go for an enforced swim...
I asked yesterday without reply from the poster whether or not they would have changed their view of he had gone to court and been found not guilty. I can see today that the answer would probably have been no so I have to wonder what would make people view Greenwood as anything other than a horrible person who is guilty of what he was accused of? People are rightly calling out all the theories but are basing their own opinions on a theory. Oh, you saw a video, you heard some audio? So did the people who spent 13 months investigating. If they were as indefensible as claimed it would have gone to court. There is no denying that if the video and audio were as they appeared, that's damning. That gets to court and you're going to have a hard time as the defendant.
A reminder. The case was not dropped because the witness withdrew. This is incorrect. It continued for 10 months.
Also, I started replying to you and them kind of went off on a different path so apologies. I'm referring to a collective rather than you in this and I include myself in the collective. I'm just trying to be open-minded and fair and to some extent embrace the fact I am largely ignorant of the facts on this case, which I personally think is the best way to go.