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At Damon Williams trial for an alleged 2014 robbery, the prosecutor showed a frame from the axe scene in her closing argument. A summary from the Supreme Court s clerk explains the prosecutor was arguing actions speak louder than words and that Williams put a Bank of America teller in fear of harm when he handed her a note demanding cash. That was key to the case: if the jury found the teller was at risk of harm, they could find Williams guilty of second-degree robbery by threat of force, instead of a lower charge of third-degree theft. According to the evidence summarized by the court, Williams note to the teller read: “Please, all the money, 100, 50, 20, 10. Thank you.” ....
Williams was convicted of robbing $4,600 from a Bank of America branch in Merchantville during the summer of 2014, according to NJ Advance Media. Please, all the money, 100, 50, 20, 10, Williams allegedly wrote in a note to the bank teller. Thank you. The central debate of the trial was whether Williams was guilty of robbery or theft. Being convicted of robbery requires one to use or threaten violence to take property, while theft does not. In order to make the case that Williams deserved the harsher penalty, prosecutors used a photo of Nicholson saying his iconic Here s Johnny! line in The Shining. In the 1980 horror film, Nicholson s character says the line as he breaks through a door and threatens his terrified family with an ax. ....
The New Jersey Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that a prosecutor erred by including a photo of Jack Nicholson from the 1980 classic “The Shining,” in the. ....