You should probably learn more about what you speak of, before you speak of it.
Your attempt at a logical interpretation of my post in order to prove your claim is a failure, because you use false presumptions to reach your conclusion.
A court decision is not necessarily a conviction, even when the decision is that someone is guilty of something.
A judge can be referred to as the court, because the judge is a direct representative of the authority of the judicial system.
The judge is the ultimate decision-maker, and can add to a decision of a jury, take away from the decision of a jury, nullify their decision altogether.
Try again.
Show me where I said that Trump was convicted of ****.
You said it was a court decision that Trump is a ******.
Apparently, you are not very intelligent. So, to help you out, I Googled what the definition of "Court Decision," and this is what is says:
A court decision is the official ruling or resolution from a judge or court, determining the rights, obligations, or outcome of a legal case after analyzing facts and applying laws, often resulting in a binding judgment, order, or decree that tells parties what to do. It's the final say on a dispute, encompassing the reasoning (
opinion) and the specific command (
order) to resolve the matter, and can be called a judgment, ruling, or sentence.
Key aspects of a court decision:
- Resolution:
It resolves the issues in a case, deciding who wins or loses, what must happen next, or if a case is dismissed.
- Components:
Includes facts, legal analysis, the court's reasoning, and a final order or judgment.
- Terminology:
Often used interchangeably with judgment, ruling, decree, order, sentence, or opinion (though opinions explain the reasoning, while decisions are the final directive).
- Types:
Can be a final judgment (like a conviction or acquittal), a dismissal, or an interim order (like scheduling).
- Impact:
Legally binding, meaning parties must comply, though appeals are possible.
So, by definition, saying it was a "court decision" is the same thing as saying he was convicted. There's your proof.