A courthouse did a mock trial for President Snow on 'take your child to work day.'
A chanting chorus of child jurors on Thursday found President Snow of
the nation of Panem guilty of kidnapping, child abuse and other heinous
crimes for forcing children into the deadly Hunger Games.
Snow's
Stand Your Nation law defense, mirrored after Florida's controversial
Stand Your Ground law, held no water with the nearly four dozen young
jurors packed into courtroom 418 at the Broward County Courthouse.
The
Broward State Attorney's Office on Thursday presented a mock trial with
a "Hunger Games" theme for kids who accompanied their parents on "Take
Your Child to Work" day. Prosecutor Tim Donnelly, head of the public
corruption unit, scripted the courtroom play.
"We just want to expose them
to [the system]," Donnelly said. "We're not going to debate philosophy
with them; we just want them to have fun and hopefully they retain
something."
After seeing the movie little more than a week ago,
Donnelly, a father of four, ages 9 to 16, had the idea to adapt the
popular young-adult novel and movie into a courtroom play.
The movie takes place in a post-apocalyptic world where, as a
harsh reminder of a previous rebellion and to keep the nation's 12
districts in line, 24 boys and girls are randomly selected to compete in
a yearly televised death battle called the Hunger Games.Donnelly
worked evenings developing The Nation of Panem v. President Coriolanus
Snow and recruited fellow prosecutors to play the roles.
"Wanna-Be
President Snow is the one who was behind the whole thing," Adriana
Alcalde, argued as nation of Panem prosecutor. "We want peace for the
districts. We don't want the Hunger Games."
Her star witness, head
gamekeeper Seneca Crane, played by Tony Loe, complete with a shiny
black, curlicue beard (applied with hair dye), testified in exchange for
a plea deal that would send him to prison for two to five years for his
part in the games.
"Everything I did was because he told me to do so," he said, referring to Snow as an "evil man."
And
Snow, aka Broward's head homicide prosecutor, Brian Cavanagh,
indignantly took the stand in his own defense: "I think I am the victim
of the ultimate political prosecution."
The Stand Your Nation law,
he said, allows the use of deadly force to prevent imminent death or
great bodily harm to defend the nation.
The Hunger Games maintain law and order, he bellowed. "We would have pandemonium in Panem, otherwise."
The
chants of "guilty, guilty, guilty" grew in volume and enthusiasm as
Cavanagh retreated from the witness stand to the defense table.
A guilty verdict, Snow's defense attorney, Donnelly, argued would not put an end to the Hunger Games.
"All
you're going to be doing is punishing an old man for following the
law," he said before falling to his knees and begging, "Please don't
find him guilty."
The guilty chant, accompanied by clapping, grew louder, louder, louder.
Snow's punishment: 5,000 hours of community service, wash the judge's car and drive her to her hair appointment.
Source:
OrlandoSentinental, HungerGamesDWTC
Posted on
Friday, April 27, 2012
by
Editor
Well, Often a witness cannot be judged until they are exposed to the stress of the mock trial reviewed by video deposition reporters Philadelphia. It is always best to learn the strengths and weaknesses of a witness early, not when it is too late to make a difference in their preparation or presentation style.
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