Charles C. W. Cooke
The presumption of innocence as a cultural—not legal—norm is at its most useful when the person to whom it’s being applied hasn’t said publicly, “yes, I did that, it was me, I liked doing it, I’d do it again, I’m not innocent, and the people who don’t do what I do are losers.”
Michael Tracey
Tate hasn’t been convicted of anything. You can object to him on various grounds, but the imputation of criminal guilt, when none has been proven in any court, is unseemly