Social media and pundits exploded this week upon the news that Joel Nuezca pleaded “not guilty” to double murder charges against him. To recall, Nuezca, while off duty by his Tarlac residence, shot dead mother and son Sonya and Frank Gregorio point blank for a minor altercation, in front of his daughter, neighbors. It was captured on video and posted on social media, in all its shocking glory.
News of Nuezca’ s guilty plea before the court sent a flurry of Facebook posts, Tweets and what have you freaking out over the development. The question raised was how could this man claim innocence and get away with his heinous act when the video “evidence” was so clear.
People have to remember: evidence is not evidence until the court of law – in a criminal trial – accepts it as evidence, and the court of law has more stringent rules than the court of public opinion.
I repeat here excerpts of an article I wrote on this topic way back in 2013, when the Janette Napoles case was made public and many politicians became fodder in a media and socmed frenzy. Uncanny is the hypothetical I posed on this Nuezca case, that it bears an “evidence redux.”