Redirected from Twinkie Defense
|
|
In 2002, the Arkansas State Fair[?] introduced the fried twinkie.
A "Twinkie defense" is a criminal defendant's claim that some unusual factor entered into the causes or motives of the crime. It is a derogatory label implying a defense theory is silly. The expression derives from the 1979 trial of Dan White[?], a San Francisco, California (U.S.), City Supervisor who shot to death Mayor George Moscone[?] and fellow City Supervisor Harvey Milk on 27 November 1978. A psychiatrist, Martin Blinder, testified for White at trial that White had been depressed, and eating Twinkies and drinking Coca-Cola had further depressed him, leading to the shootings. White was convicted of manslaughter instead of murder on 21 May 1979, and that set off the "White Night Riot."
|
Search Encyclopedia
|
Featured Article
|