They only bring that up to say "he knew" of the problem and tried to solve it, which denies him the easy escape of saying he never knew he did anything wrong.
Its basically the "you tried to cover up, so clearly you know right and wrong" clause that denies most insanity defenses, but used to give women more power.
They only bring that up to say "he knew" of the problem and tried to solve it, which denies him the easy escape of saying he never knew he did anything wrong.
Its basically the "you tried to cover up, so clearly you know right and wrong" clause that denies most insanity defenses, but used to give women more power.