FWIW, I did actually consider them. I didn't address them because a) they
were only briefly alluded to and did not change my opinion, and b) I was
typing this on my phone.

Is it necessary for a judge to address every argument in a case or only the
ones they consider pertinent to their judgement?

On Thu, Aug 29, 2013 at 5:53 PM, Charles Walker
<charles.w.wal...@gmail.com>wrote:

> On 29 Aug 2013, at 21:10, James Beirne <james.m.bei...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > I become active, make the following judgement, and then become inactive
> again.
> >
> > ---
> >
> > In ruling on the case originally I probably put too much weight on the
> opinions of a vocal few and misjudged Agoran tradition.
> >
> > I still feel Fool is guilty and deserving of a timeout, but I'll assign
> a much shorter sentence.
> >
> > GUILTY/TIMEOUT 6 days
>
> I intend to appeal this with two support, because the judge has failed to
> consider the arguments given by myself and various appellants regarding the
> question of guilt. (I don't really blame em, it was nice enough to become
> active to make the judgement.)

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