Pickle's Cherry Picking
Posted: Fri Dec 12, 2008 6:01 am America/Denver
Definition:
Cherry-Picking is an expression used to describe the behavior of selecting only the data that confirm the preferred conclusion, ignoring data that contradict it. Cherry-Picking refers to the deliberate exclusion of contrary cases; unconscious exclusion is referred to as Confirmation Bias. Both are forms of Selection Bias.
One variant of Cherry-Picking is "Quote Mining", the habit of selecting quotes, usually out of context, to make it appear that the quote´s author holds an opinion that is different (often diametrically opposed) to the one that he actually holds.
Joy and Pickle cherry picking on Advent Talk... in the middle/end of a thread called Questions I would like to ask Danny Shelton..
Cherry-Picking is an expression used to describe the behavior of selecting only the data that confirm the preferred conclusion, ignoring data that contradict it. Cherry-Picking refers to the deliberate exclusion of contrary cases; unconscious exclusion is referred to as Confirmation Bias. Both are forms of Selection Bias.
One variant of Cherry-Picking is "Quote Mining", the habit of selecting quotes, usually out of context, to make it appear that the quote´s author holds an opinion that is different (often diametrically opposed) to the one that he actually holds.
Joy and Pickle cherry picking on Advent Talk... in the middle/end of a thread called Questions I would like to ask Danny Shelton..
Here's some more select quotes Pickle didn't choose to use...Bob Pickle wrote:Bob Pickle wrote:The Honorable Magistrate Judge Philip Frazier.Gailon Arthur Joy wrote: Hey, Bob, what judge was it that saw through them like the glass wall they were? He summed it up just beautifully, much to their chagrin, and they dismissed the very next day!!!And I don't know how much money you guys, Mr. Joy and Mr. Pickle -- my goodness, you know, somebody is helping you out with this financially because, you know, this is, I mean this is like David and Goliath only David doesn't even have a rock for his sling in terms of fighting this thing out.You know, I kind of think Three Angels probably should have thought this through a little bit. My guess is that Three Angels probably thought that these guys had probably backed down pretty quick when this defamation lawsuit was filed. And that I understand that organizations like Three Angels operate a lot of their fiscal viability -- not physical, Jane. It's fiscal, F-I-S-C-A-L -- depends upon regular contributions from people who are frequent listeners and watchers, and these kinds of little nasty bits such as of the revelation involving Mr. Shelton's brother tend to or any impropriety on behalf of Mr. Shelton himself would probably tend to erode some of those. And so a nice public way of refuting those statements is by filing a defamation action, and, you know, saying it ain't so, Joe.
But the problem is, is now Three Angels has opened up a very large can of worms here. And it's a very large can of worms. And there are a lot of different ways that financial impropriety could be disguised by clever bookkeeping. There are a lot of -- I'm not saying that that's happened here. Don't anybody get all flustered. I'm just saying that, you know, at this stage of the proceedings, we have to presume that anything is possible. Anything is provable. And there are a number of other transactions, changes in accounting methods, any number of these that might be relevant to prove that on a particular day that something happened.THE COURT: Let me ask you a question here. Would it be relevant or at least interesting to you if you were on the other side of this case, Mr. Simpson, if it turns out that the documents that the accountant has are different from the documents that actually exist or maintained by Three Angels Broadcasting, that perhaps if Three Angels Broadcasting was selective about the documents they turn over to their accountants?
MR. SIMPSON: If it related -- well, how is that -- I would certainly want the information for the reasons that you said. I'd be hoping that there was some discrepancies, in particular, that I didn't know about. I would like to find some more ammunition to justify the wholesale assault on 3ABN that we've seen. That would make it -- it doesn't make it relevant to the issues of -- that the defamatory statements that they have made, they have something in mind. They had some information about certain transactions, and he's told you about some of them. And they're entitled to discovery on those issues, but they're not entitled to get every scrap of paper to see if there's something else they are looking for.
THE COURT: Mr. Shelton, though -- here's the problem. Mr. Shelton is not some disgruntled clerk who is stealing out of the small, you know, cubby that may be relegated to a particular file clerk or something. You know, Mr. Shelton has access to the whole piggy bank. And I'm not saying, obviously, that he is or was doing anything, but what I'm saying is that if a person who has access to everything were to be using it for private gain, then it is not unreasonable to believe that perhaps other instances might exist where the corporate entity was used improperly for private gain, and that would tend to, even if it had nothing to do.
Let's just say for argument sake that further investigation into this were to disclose that on a different date in a different year that Mr. Shelton stole a hundred thousand dollars from Three Angels Broadcasting using a completely different means than -- that would be relevant to the defamation action now, wouldn't it?
MR. SIMPSON: Let me say first there's been no allegation that anything --
THE COURT: No. No. No. No. You don't need to go into. We don't need a spin on this. I'm just saying and I would have no idea. Hopefully, it doesn't exist, but if it did, wouldn't that be some relevant information to put out in front of a fact finder at a trial?
MR. SIMPSON: Let me go back to where you were
originally going. What's going to happen now is that these
defendants are going to get a subset of the financial
records, and what subset they get is going to be determined
based on how they craft these second set of document
requests, and which and how Judge Hillman narrows them if we
can't agree how they should be interpreted. And what they're
asking you to do is to, basically, circumvent that by giving
them everything, but in the guise of giving them the account
file.
THE COURT: Which is what I'm not going to do right
now for the simple reason I'm not going to undermine Judge
Hillman's efforts on this. We may turn out to be going
exactly the same direction. However, Judge Hillman already
has his hands on this. He has an idea where he wants this to
go, and I'm not going to start doing things on this end that
might be messing that up.
THE COURT: In that case here's what I'm going to
do then. I can see where this is going now because this is
just --
MR. PICKLE: Your Honor, can I speak to the issue
of complete production?
THE COURT: No. No, we don't need to get there
right now. All we're dealing with here, because the
production issue is clearly not before me.
MR. PICKLE: Could I --
THE COURT: No. No. No. We're done here. I have
one of two options here. And I could either go ahead and
quash this subpoena and with the understanding that the
defendants could reserve the subpoena on Gray Hunter Stenn at
a later date when this scope of discovery has been narrowed
by Judge Hillman in Massachusetts. That would --
MR. PICKLE: Your Honor --
THE COURT: No. No. No. You have had your time
to talk. Now is mine.
THE COURT: ...I'm going to then order right now that any further litigation
concerning the subpoena which has been issued to Gray Hunter
Stenn be transferred to the district of Massachusetts and
Judge Hillman because it is so closely and completely
intertwined with matters before him at this time. And I fear
that anything which might be done here might lead to
inconsistent rulings, and that will be that.
So the subpoena is open. Gray Hunter Stenn and
Three Angels are ordered to preserve any records of any kind,
electronic or otherwise, which might satisfy the subpoena.
The matter then will be transferred to Judge Hillman for any
further action. And waiting until the scope of discovery is
resolved is going to be a good way to do that...