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So....could that picture get posted or would I be roasted for posting it?
Does this answer your question? :flame:
So....could that picture get posted or would I be roasted for posting it?
That happens I am sure, and under the normal events in a court it is not all that bad. But what I was discussing, is not the 'normal" plea stuff...I suppose it's all two sides of the same coin. Some people see plea bargains as dropping charges in return for cooperation. I used to. My perspective changed slightly, and now I see those very same negotiable charges as punishment for opting for the right to a trial by one's peers. I started seeing the glass as half empty, I guess.
Thank you, I always desire to stay within the rules...so I felt it best to ask. No flames for me, thanks! But the picture was god awfully funny!Does this answer your question? :flame:
That device may be useful when cooking for one but not when you have a whole crew to feed.....Yes I have a picture of a certain device used to cook hot dogs, it is well, sort of a metal wire man figure that is made from steel, and the hot dogs are cooked while attached to the front of this device in a "colorful" way, if you will.....(yipes)! hahahah!
I know...but it was (is) a funny picture, to say the least.Not a good idea Michigan :nono:
That device may be useful when cooking for one but not when you have a whole crew to feed.....
How true and thanks! hahah!That device may be useful when cooking for one but not when you have a whole crew to feed.....
You as a "client" have no say so when the Judge on your case decides to NOT allow you to enter into evidence something that could prove your not guilty. When your attorney has already explained that out front to the judge and virtually sold you down the river, you had no clue it was done, you were not there to know it. Now your key bit of evidence is not going to be submitted to the court, you have no leg to stand on. You could plea...or go to trial, you will lose that case. It was all worked out long before you went to court for even the very first time. Illegal? Yep. It happens. Too much.
I agree, it is sad that it happens that way, but does.That's true in theory, but in practice what it comes down to is the undesirable choice between shooting for complete acquittal and risking the harshest punishment, or guaranteeing a median punishment. The choice isn't made on the basis of guilt or innocence. It's made based on whether or not you think you could "win". There was a news article recently that sparked my opinion on the matter, that feared that prosecutors have been given way too much power as judge, jury and executioner through the ability to plea. I believe charges are either warranted or not, and shouldn't be used as leverage to coerce confessions. In one case, an accused was offered a plea of 5 years, turned it down, then turned down 10 years some time later, and now risks life. If justice is the goal, that's too great a variance. Justice is the goal, not verdicts. After all, landing a guilty plea to get to use your "case closed" stamp and smile to reporters does little good if the actual offender is still on the loose. The guy sitting in jail might be relieved he was only falsely sentenced to 5 years instead of 30, but it's still false.
I strongly advise anyone falsely accused of any crime or civil action to BEG for a polygraph as most of the time if you do pass it, the Detectives involved with not elect to bring charges and the same goes to prosecutors.
I can agree with that C-Dot, but for me, I have to say when even one person has had a life destroyed because of what I have personally seen, I just cannot stand to be around it, I value others too much, and I just had to walk from that entire life of what is called, "Justice System". I left that to the sharks that want to feed off it. No offense to anyone that works in that system or is an advocate of it.Oh yes, personal greed and oneupmanship throw a wrench into what is a beautiful design all too often. Even still, it isn't fair for people to paint the whole judicial system with that brush - I've met many more honest defense counsel, impartial Crowns, and fair (but sleepy) judges, and I'm sure anyone who has worked in those fields of law can say the same.
That's true in theory, but in practice what it comes down to is the undesirable choice between shooting for complete acquittal and risking the harshest punishment, or guaranteeing a median punishment. The choice isn't made on the basis of guilt or innocence. It's made based on whether or not you think you could "win".
Those James, were being cooked for Lindsey Lohan, and we will not give any further details for the hot dogs' demise!Ah yes, BBQ at Charlie Sheen's house.
To be fair to your viewpoint what you state is the norm, and how it is to work for everyone. My comments are based, upon personal observation and nothing more. I am very sure if you did happen to be in witness to what I observed, you would have felt as I did and do. Very disgusted and thinking that it is not how it should be, and that it goes against the very premise of what the court systems are designed to do. I am sure it does not happen in each court, with each judge nor with each DA, but in fact, I personally witnessed this take place for over a five year time period, in the two jurisdictions I made mention.Please remember that defendants aren't required to make this decision alone and ill-informed. They have retained or appointed (or both) counsel and complete discovery. They know the evidence the State has against them before any plea offers are made. Indeed, evidence that isn't provided in discovery, isn't usually admissible at trial. They're not ambushed. Every effort is made to insure that the defendant's plea is informed and voluntary...if they choose to plea. Otherwise, they are afforded as fair a trial as humanly possible.
But, yes, it is about winning at trial. We have no time machines to go back and view the crime being committed. Instead, we try to assertain the truth (and thereby justice) through the trial process. And the truth, as established by the fact finders at trial, determines the winner.
AF
Instead, we try to assertain the truth (and thereby justice) through the trial process. And the truth, as established by the fact finders at trial, determines the winner.
No they are not "bound" but there are a few cases that MAY allow them to be admitted, but, the norm is, if you pass the "poly" they go into a new direction and will leave you alone.Do American courts accept polygraph tests as evidence? They don't here or in the UK.
That reminds me of a statement my evidence law professor made in college that instantly changed how I thought about it: "It's not the truth that matters, its the truth you can prove."
(It requires some explanation - He wasn't inferring that an advocate should push his or her fabricated version of the events, he was saying that only the truth makes sense, and any part of that truth that cannot be proved doesn't mean anything to the Court. If you watch Judge Judy, you've heard her say "If it isn't here, it doesn't exist." This is the same principle.)
And yet there are cases like the People of the State of California v. Orenthal James Simpson.That reminds me of a statement my evidence law professor made in college that instantly changed how I thought about it: "It's not the truth that matters, its the truth you can prove."
(It requires some explanation - He wasn't inferring that an advocate should push his or her fabricated version of the events, he was saying that only the truth makes sense, and any part of that truth that cannot be proved doesn't mean anything to the Court.
And yet there are cases like the People of the State of California v. Orenthal James Simpson.
True the same is if you know the "law" in a case, you argue the law, if not, and you know the facts, you argue that as best you can.That reminds me of a statement my evidence law professor made in college that instantly changed how I thought about it: "It's not the truth that matters, its the truth you can prove."
(It requires some explanation - He wasn't inferring that an advocate should push his or her fabricated version of the events, he was saying that only the truth makes sense, and any part of that truth that cannot be proved doesn't mean anything to the Court. If you watch Judge Judy, you've heard her say "If it isn't here, it doesn't exist." This is the same principle.)