But it is a reasonable question. However, he's already answered it:
"McAfee, 68, was named by police in Belize as a person of interest in the Nov. 11, 2012, shooting of Gregory Faull, but he fled the small Central American country before he could be questioned.
McAfee denies involvement in the death of Faull, an Orlando contractor and restaurant owner. But he told Reuters in a telephone interview he would not fight a subpoena for deposition in the lawsuit.
'Of course not, because the deposition will be here in America. I've told the police in Belize that I will sit for questioning in any neutral country in the world... I just will not go to Belize," McAfee said.'... The estate is seeking a jury trial and damages in excess of $75,000 on behalf of Faull's 26-year-old daughter." http://www.telegraph.co.uk/new... [telegraph.co.uk]
A question I would have is, would he agree to a jury trial if he's charged either by Belize or the US.
No it isn't. It's leading. Like asking 'have you top beating your wife?"
That's not a leading question. That's a trick question. A leading question is one where the questioner is suggesting the desired answer ("Were you at KC's bar on the night of July 15?").
Also, it is a fair question. Whether McAfee is guilty or not, he is a fugitive from law. There's no reason to assume there's bad faith on the part of Belize officials, as McAfee has claimed - they can't all have installed McAfee, so would they care abou
Syntactic sugar causes cancer of the semicolon.
-- Epigrams in Programming, ACM SIGPLAN Sept. 1982
Belize (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:0, Troll)
Wow! Talk about a leading question. Why is this rated so high?
Re:Belize (Score:5, Informative)
But it is a reasonable question. However, he's already answered it:
"McAfee, 68, was named by police in Belize as a person of interest in the Nov. 11, 2012, shooting of Gregory Faull, but he fled the small Central American country before he could be questioned.
McAfee denies involvement in the death of Faull, an Orlando contractor and restaurant owner. But he told Reuters in a telephone interview he would not fight a subpoena for deposition in the lawsuit.
'Of course not, because the deposition will be here in America. I've told the police in Belize that I will sit for questioning in any neutral country in the world ... I just will not go to Belize," McAfee said.' ...
The estate is seeking a jury trial and damages in excess of $75,000 on behalf of Faull's 26-year-old daughter."
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/new... [telegraph.co.uk]
A question I would have is, would he agree to a jury trial if he's charged either by Belize or the US.
Re: (Score:2)
No it isn't. It's leading. Like asking 'have you top beating your wife?"
"Or do you enjoy being a fugitive from justice?"
that's the problem.
Re: (Score:3)
That's not a leading question. That's a trick question. A leading question is one where the questioner is suggesting the desired answer ("Were you at KC's bar on the night of July 15?").
Also, it is a fair question. Whether McAfee is guilty or not, he is a fugitive from law. There's no reason to assume there's bad faith on the part of Belize officials, as McAfee has claimed - they can't all have installed McAfee, so would they care abou