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“Your honor, I plead the Fifth. If I start talking, I might say something incredibly stupid that my lawyer won’t like.”

Many countries around the world grant suspects the “right to remain silent” when they’ve been accused of a crime. And sometimes, keeping your mouth shut is the smartest move you can make.

Lawyers on Reddit have recently been sharing stories of the wildest things their clients have done in courtrooms. From making facepalm-worthy mistakes that ruined cases to getting themselves convicted of entirely new crimes, we’ve gathered their juiciest stories below. So enjoy reading through, and be sure to upvote the tales you wish you could have witnessed from the jury box!

#1

“Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done Not my client but the petitioner attorney’s client. The man claimed Workers’ Compensation and threw the kitchen sink at us, meaning, he basically listed just over half of his body parts on the claim petition stating that he injured each one. He was full of s**t and my firm knew it. Anyways, we were going to trial and the day before we ran one more social media search. This absolute f*****g moron posted a video of him winning a break dance competition that was only a few months after the alleged work incident. Never saw a quicker dismissal in my life.

anon , Natalia Blauth Report

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    #2

    IANAL, but I used to review disability claims so I often worked with clients who had lawyers.

    A man whose attorney had instructed him to not speak with us directly (a very smart, very basic recommendation) called me up to rant, angrily, that his lawyer was wrong. He COULD shop for groceries and mow the lawn and do all sorts of house work JUST FINE, thank you.

    Now I had seen this man’s medical records. There’s no way he was doing all of this without difficulty. So I probed a little further. He could shop for groceries… as long as he used a mobility scooter and had his wife carry things in the house. He could mow the lawn… if he used a riding mower and took a lengthy break every 10 minutes or so. He could do house work… which was limited to wiping down counters and folding (but not carrying) laundry. I called his attorney and gave them a quick update as soon as he and I hung up.

    I approved his claim, but that man is so damn lucky he got someone who was willing to take an extra 15 minutes with him.

    gwart_ Report

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    Mecha_Phed
    Community Member
    2 days ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    That's how you easily spot someone with real disabilities, the ones who take pride in what they can do!

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    #3

    “Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done I had a case where a guy was charged for running a red light. The thing is, he had been sitting at the lights for five minutes, and it hadn’t changed. The wording of the specific section under which he was charged related to stop signs and traffic lights and referred to them as 'traffic regulation devices.' I successfully argued that as the traffic light wasn’t changing, it wasn’t regulating traffic, and he got off. I couldn’t believe it when the judge ruled in my favour, neither could the police prosecutor!

    tomthecamel , freepik Report

    #4

    “Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done With the utmost certainty in his voice, he yelled at the arresting officer that “It’s not domestic violence; I’m on public property!”

    You could tell from his face he really thought he had the cop over a barrel on this one but….

    dixiedemocrat , kues1 Report

    #5

    “Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done I was defending a client who was accused of trademark infringement. Thought he knew better than the IP Attorney assigned to his case (me) and so went on his company's website to "defend" himself by basically confessing to what he did and claiming it wasn't against the law and the trademark owner was a "woke baby" who needed to either "learn the law" or "get back in the kitchen and make her husband a sandwich" ( i wish i could say i was joking). I was one email away from negotiating a settlement that would have allowed the continued use of the complainants mark with limited restrictions and a very nominal fee. Little to say, she saw his website, told us to go f**k ourselves, and dragged it before a judge. My client lost...big. His lack of self-control cost him thousands of dollars.

    LovePeaceHope-ish , Christin Hume Report

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    Lyoness
    Community Member
    2 days ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Never screw with someone you've just told to go back to the kitchen. It's one of the only phrases 100% guaranteed to get us fighting mad.

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    #6

    “Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done A year out of law school, I once had a potential client who wanted me to sue Canada. Apparently, he could not get into the country due to his felony record. I tried to reason with him that it was up to the sovereign nation to set its own rules regarding entry to the country, but he insisted that we could make a lot of money suing Canada. I didn't take the case but I told him I might be able to get him a letter that said 'sorry' from Canada.

    Nichscott , TravelScape Report

    #7

    “Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done I’m in a Zoom mediation. The mediator gave a long speech, saying that no one else was supposed to be on the call other than the parties. My client is sitting in the passenger seat of his car. I knew his GF was in the car, on the driver's side, and I texted him and told him she couldn’t be there. He sends me a text that she’s not there. A good 90 minutes into the mediation his car starts driving on the freeway. The mediator tells him he can’t be driving [while] on the phone and to pull over. Mind you, he’s still in the passenger seat.
    Finally opposing counsel says, 'Is he in England or in the passenger seat?' The mediator asked my client if he was driving or [if] someone else [was]. He tells her he [is] driving and he’s in the driver's seat. The mediator tells him to move the camera to his left.

    The client proceeds to throw the phone on the ground. You hear nothing but people moving around and he says, 'Get down in the back.' He then picks up the phone and is clearly now in another seat, the driver's seat and he proves he’s in the driver's seat.

    Needless to say, mediation was canceled and he got charged attorney fees. In the same mediation, he thought he was in a breakout room with just me and called the mediator a 'fucking bitch

    Cpatty3 , Getty Images Report

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    zims
    Community Member
    2 days ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Told in advance not to do thing. Warned by the person defending him to definitely not do thing. Gets caught doing thing, keeps doing it. Gets called out for doing thing, obviously and badly lies about doing thing.

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    #8

    Around 1990 there was a guy on trial for armed robbery. He pled not guilty. A witness on the stand identified the defendant. The defendant jumped to his feet and roared, “I should have blown your head off when I had the chance…..” pause, thinks, adds, “if I had been the one who robbed you…”.

    Yugan-Dali Report

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    Bob Brooce
    Community Member
    2 days ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This is the most common stupid thing that defendants do. Apparently it happens over, and over, and over ...

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    #9

    “Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done Guy got a divorce in secret by telling the court his wife had left the country when she basically lived down the street. When she discovered this and appealed the divorce, the judge took his side for some reason and had no problem with his lying. I was in complete shock. When I pointed out to the judge that this was legally problematic, his exact words to me were 'I don't care what the law says.' Ugh, I just checked. He's still somehow a judge

    thereasonableman__ , freepik Report

    #10

    Anyone see the video of a guy doing an online court hearing for driving without a license, he answers the call while he's driving. Without a license.

    Okay-Parsley Report

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    #11

    “Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done It was a credit card fraud case in the early part of my career. He actually wore the stolen clothes to court and a clerk at the defrauded store identified them in front of the jury. I felt like the guy in the commercial that asks “want to be somewhere else?”.

    hankthetank2112 , freepik Report

    #12

    “Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done My wife’s lawyer bans all clients from using social media after he lost a big case.

    Wrongful death lawsuit where a man’s wife was killed. Easy money. They were about to settle until the other side found his pictures online from a club a week after his wife died getting a lap dance wearing a shirt that said ‘I love milfs’.

    Apparently they didn’t think he had much pain and suffering anymore.

    potatocross , EyeEm Report

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    zims
    Community Member
    2 days ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Imagine being so out of touch that you post that at all after your wife's death. Even without the court case, that seems like it would majorly damage your standing in the family and community. And a week? He must have HATED her.

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    #13

    Not me, but a colleague. A wealthy client's son got picked up for d**g dealing at a local music festival. The client bailed him out, and then had his whole fancy law firm defend his son.

    The son shambled into the courtroom stoned off his a*s, and loudly attempted to buy d***s off the bailiff.

    There wasn't a lot the lawyers could do after that.

    AliMcGraw Report

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    zims
    Community Member
    2 days ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    How embarrassing for the bailiff to have one of his side hustle clients recognize him at his day job.

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    #14

    NAL - my dad’s psychotic ex-girlfriend was trying to press bogus charges on my dad, in general trying to ruin his life and career. And his family - she attempted to make some things up about me, too. Had to go through interviews, detective’s office talks, APS visits. My dad and I filed protective orders. Her response to the POs, and I was afraid it would happen, was to vandalize a part of his property in a very gross and obscene way. She also went back to the detective to make another claim on me, saying I stole *her non-prescribed d***s*, so basically admitting she had illegal d***s. So she got a bit more than just protective orders against her; she had jail time, now, too. Good riddance!

    _alittlefrittata Report

    #15

    “Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done I was on a jury where the defendant showed up in court day 1 wearing the same exact outfit as the “unknown suspect” in the video of the crime. It took only a few seconds before the judge immediately called a stoppage. All lawyers went into the back with the judge and they came out like 7 minutes later as announced the defendant had taken the plea deal. Wild.

    bclinger , fabrikasimf Report

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    zims
    Community Member
    2 days ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Wait, it was only a few seconds into the first day and you'd already seen video evidence? Or had it been on the news and you didn't get weeded out for seeing it?

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    #16

    “Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done Client was being sued and didn’t like the opposing counsel or the judge so he left the court a bunch of voicemails so profane that he was subject to a criminal contempt of court hearing.

    The_Art_of_Dying , DC Studio Report

    #17

    Not a lawyer, but I am a former police officer and spent a lot of time in courtrooms.

    One guy was on trial for a DUI, and he wanted the judge to know that the cop who arrested him was "just some punk kid". He insisted that he'd only had two bottles of wine and his lawyer keeps trying to get him to stop his stream of verbal diarrhea and he just keeps going

    Eventually the judge says "I think you should take a moment to confer with your attorney" and the guy says "Don't interrupt me, I'm not a child!"

    Judge smiled and leaned back and said "by all means, please continue". dudes attorney just looked like he was deflating.

    BurnAfterEating420 Report

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    #18

    “Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done Law student working at law firm. We have a fax machine that gets tons of spam faxes.
    Our chief partner has a vendetta against spam, and he uses it to give us practice in researching and writing petitions. So we catalog each fax, send replies to take us off the list, document everything, and wait for them to fax us again. Then we follow up with a FCC complaint and demand letter. A couple of times, this has ended up with the person getting mad and sending us retaliatory faxes (black sheets of paper).

    If they stop sending we don’t do anything, but we’ve gone to small claims a couple of times, and gotten $500 per page a couple of times.

    We also got someone trying to sell drugs through fax, but we just turned that over to the police.

    milkshakakhan , freepik Report

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    Marie Clear
    Community Member
    1 day ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    A fax machine sends a transmission confirmation back to the sender when the fax goes through. So it's automatically legal proof of the recipient's receipt of the communication. I've had attorneys tell me they did not receive my response letter in a timely way, and while I always email my letters, I also fax them. Email is more convenient, but fax is hands-down the best way to prove you sent something on a given date.

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    #19

    “Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done Not a lawyer, heard this story from a guy I used to work with. His brother in law got injured at work and was suing for a hefty sum. Case was pretty much open and shut, all the evidence was in the BIL's favor... Until the BIL started talking. They ask him to tell them about the day of the accident. BIL started out fine until he gets to the where he approached the piece of equipment that injured him. He tell everyone that there was a note on it stating that it was out of order. BIL then says that he discarded the note and started up the piece of malfunctioning equipment as he had a job to get done...

    That easy win was discarded faster than that out of order sign.

    CylonsInAPolicebox , wirestock Report

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    Hoi-Polloi
    Community Member
    2 days ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    To be fair, this was never an easy win. The defense would certainly have mentioned that the machine was malfunctioning and that they put a big sign on it, right?

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    #20

    NAL, but my uncle used to be a prison manager at the local prison in the area of NZ where I grew up. They had 'court' hearings when the prisoners had done something against the rules etc, they'd go before a couple of the prison workers and explain, kinda like an internal hearing I guess. Uncle was the 'judge' for a lot of these.

    One dude had been found with a cellphone. Denied up and down that it was his, didn't know where it came from, blah blah blah. Uncle asked him several times if he wanted to own up, guy absolutely INSISTED it wasn't his.

    Uncle "well, someone's wasted a hundred bucks on a phone then"

    Prisoner "F**k off, I paid $600 for that!"

    Uncle "............."


    hahahahhaa miss his work stories.

    wanderernz Report

    #21

    Not a lawyer, but I was in a courtroom watching injunctions (restraining orders) play out.

    One case the woman was there, but the man was in prison so he was calling in. After deciding on an agreement, the guy asked if he could make a statement. At the end of his statement, he said "and tell {the woman} to go f**k herself."

    He got an additional 6 months of prison. The guy asked to make another statement after getting a tongue lashing from the judge.

    And he did it again - telling her to go f**k herself. And got another 6 months.

    Imagine losing a year of your life because you couldn't shut up for 5 minutes.

    revolutionPanda Report

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    zims
    Community Member
    2 days ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It was the only time he had the power to make her pay attention to him.

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    #22

    I had an instructor who was a prosecutor. He called a witness who had seen the whole thing, and had an interest in seeing the defendent punished. Slam dunk case.

    She thought she was on TV. She overacted EVERY WORD. Completely embellished the retelling of the events. Didn't lie, but she was the center of her version of events.

    He said you could see the faces of the jury members sour minute on minute. He lost the case.

    shaidyn Report

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    Pencil
    Community Member
    1 day ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    A witness who has "an interest in seeing the defendant punished" is the opposite of what makes for a "slam dunk case."

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    #23

    “Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done Client added 9 years to a short sentence. He got like a year or 2 for being involved in a drag race that the other guy crashed and severely injured someone else. Then towards the end of his short prison term he tried to escape, got 9 more years for prison escape! He became friends with John Lennon's killer in NY prison, which was interesting.

    50yoWhiteGuy , avigatorphotographer Report

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    Java Addict
    Community Member
    2 days ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Had a guy here in jail for a minor d**g charge, was due to get out In a couple months. He escaped while on work release and murdered a woman to steal her car. He's now doing life.

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    #24

    Not an attorney, worked in a firm. Workers compensation claim, guy falls down at work and claims he injured many different body parts(Shoulder, Knees, Back). We tell him to stay off social media. No problem, he doesnt use social media. At trial, he tells the Judge he used to be a Spin Class Instructor, but since the accident, he cannot teach classes anymore. Welp..turns out, he continued to teach these classes after his injury. This was proved by the HOURS of surveillance the Insurance company did, showing him teaching and vigourously riding in Spin class. How did the Insurance company know he was still an active instructor? The guy posted his Full Teaching Schedule on his FB page. His potentially very lucrative claim, was quickly changed to a fraud claim against him.

    Youasking Report

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    #25

    The client called me to the hospital to write his will. (He called me himself – he knew he was terminal, but nobody got anything over on this guy. He was completely cognizant of absolutely everything until the very end).
    He left token amounts to the older sons and the bulk of his modest but comfortable estate to the youngest. The youngest son, of course, was positively gleeful to learn he was getting what he thought to be a lot of money, but at the same time was confused as to why Dad would leave things that way since he was actually closer to the older sons. The older sons, who had always been respectful of Dad and responsible, were hurt and confused, especially since they knew how angry their Dad had been at the youngest. They asked what they could do to make the division of things more fair.

    I recommended initially that they make a Family Settlement that could be presented to the probate court for approval. Dad's instructions to me and to the cousin he had named administrator were that if any of the older sons challenged his will, paternity tests were to be done on them. He did not believe that any of the sons but the youngest were actually his. I would lay money on the oldest being his just because they looked so much alike. The other three, though? I didn't think they had a prayer. The youngest was not subject to the paternity test.

    The whole family was devastated at the paternity test condition. The two sons who owned the garage sat in my conference room and cried. They had no idea. The eldest was angry but didn't hesitate. He knew that whatever his father's suspicions were, he was actually his natural son. The fourth son was rocked. He had a heart attack that night (but survived, fortunately.) The youngest was stunned, too. It never dawned on him that his older brothers might not actually be his brothers.

    I was very grateful when they decided to enter into a Family Settlement and divide the estate more equitably.

    aramink Report

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    #26

    Friend of mine used to be a latent print analyst. Going to get prints of a suspect arrested for breaking into a home to rob it. While she’s getting the ink and paper set up, suspect shouts, “whaddya need the prints for? She looked right at me when I kicked in the door!”.

    FjordReject Report

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    Libstak
    Community Member
    2 days ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Haha. Seriously though, I think he was worried where those prints were going place him in relation to other crimes he may not have yet been caught for.?

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    #27

    Legal videographer here...

    Video taped a deposition for a man claiming work injuries so severe he could not raise his right hand above his shoulder, and his shoulder was in pain whenever he even tried to raise it above the shoulder. Sued his employer claiming it was a work injury. Then came his very first deposition.

    Does anybody know the first thing the court reporter asks of the person testifying? The reporter swears them in by saying:

    "Would you please raise your right hand and repeat after me..."

    Then administers the oath to tell the truth...

    Man who claimed not be able to raise his hand above his shoulder... raised his hand way above his shoulder. That hand and arm went up like a rocket. The guy did not even realize what he had done and kept his arm up through the whole oath.

    Neither plaintiff or defense counsel caught it. The court reporter and I just looked at each other and let the depo play out. I was hired by defense counsel and showed him the first 20 seconds of the video, and took home a nice bonus because of it.

    Case was dropped shortly after that depo.

    THE_PHYS Report

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    #28

    “Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done The worst ones are the ones who think they’re smarter than they are. When it comes time for depositions, broad sweeping statements of how “I would never allow discrimination in my office” and how “I’m 100% sure I never said that” are a great way to destroy your own credibility, set yourself up to get eviscerated by opposing counsel, and ultimately turn a nuisance value b******t case into something worth six figures.    


     Moral of the story: if you’re going to ignore the entire day of deposition prep I did with you just so you can protect your own fragile ego on the record, at least do me the courtesy of telling me to f**k off ahead of time. .

    cwistofu , Anna Tolipova Report

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    lwolf1952
    Community Member
    1 day ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Discrimination will be mandatory in the next "administration" (sh*t show).

    W J O (himself/your worship)
    Community Member
    1 day ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Another pitiful soul injecting politics into a post. You must have a sad, barren, and lonely existence

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    Bill
    Community Member
    1 day ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Yes be kind of vague if you can. "I'm not sure I ever said that" or something. My faux paus was not telling my paid defense attorney about an arrest that was 20 years prior and seemed minor at the time, I was young, it was for theft, but it was a felony and I dint really grasp what that meant, for one it didnt just "fall off" my record, I was 18. Now Im at my bond reduction hearing at 45 years old (100 thousand dollars cash only) for cocaine possession and my attorney confidently says I deserve a reduction because I've never been in trouble. The prosecutor says well I see here that blah blah blah. My lawyer looked at me with a venomous loathing. Like, why didn't I tell him? I paid him to help me then made him look foolish. It wasn't that big a deal, he could have acknowledged it and moved forward. I was r******d then. The judge had known me by name since childhood. I delivered his newspaper then later his pizza. I knew his late brother very well. He was bemused but cut me no slack lol.

    Jay Cee
    Community Member
    1 day ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    The judge knew you? And didn't recuse himself? What kind of a fücked up legal system do you have over there?

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    #29

    NAL - I was a legal clerk for a couple years in college. Still baffles me how this one made it all the way to trial. Lady slipped & fell at a chain restaurant, “hurt” her back irreparably, wanted a huge payout. Said she slipped on butter that was on the floor. On cross exam she was asked what type of butter, answer “the little pats of butter they put out in the buffet.” Defense immediately re-called the store manager…. The store had never used that type of butter. Case ended pretty quickly. Lol.

    Relevant_Meringue102 Report

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    Bob Brooce
    Community Member
    2 days ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Her belief about the type of butter is completely irrelevant to the actual facts. She must have had a very bad lawyer, if this story is true and reported accurately, without leaving out a lot of the details.

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    #30

    “Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done Client charged with DUI. Forced by police to give a urine sample on the side of a very busy interstate highway. Any sympathy the jury may have had for the defendant was lost however, when he fell asleep during the playing of the video of the traffic stop. He had been out all night partying the night before trial. He was found guilty. Then he lied to the judge about what would be in his system during a d**g test and his sentence was doubled.

    kaufmawr , Getty Images Report

    #31

    My mother was in court as a witness, in a case of criminal harassment between two of our neighbours. We basically knew that the case was ridiculous and a sham - the accused neighbour was totally innocent and was being falsely accused by the local trouble makers, who kept on provoking him and who then wanted to be able to sue him for easy money.

    Anyway, by pure coincidence, the defendant was secular Jewish, just like my parents. It's literally just a coincidence.

    The two trouble maker neighbours, who were also there, were very angry to see my mother in the court. One of them then stood up in the middle of everything and yelled some c**p about how my mother is a Jew and only there because the defendant is a Jew and Jews apparently always stick to help eachother.

    The judge immediately ripped him to shreds and threw the case out.

    anon Report

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    zims
    Community Member
    2 days ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    How DARE two people in the same neighborhood be the same religion! And how dare two people in the same religion side with each other! Dude's a dumbass, if he really felt that way he should have gotten his lawyer to argue that OP's mother was lying to protect a member of her community. But even then, depending on how it was worded, that might not go down so well with the court.

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    #32

    Criminal prosecutor here. A patrol officer pulled over a driver for some traffic violation, I think failure to signal. After a heated roadside exchange where the driver initially refused to turn over her license, she ultimately relented and 'thrust the license with undue force' into the officer's outstretched hand. The cop charged her with aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer.
    When asked to justify his actions, he stated that 'people need to learn to respect the police.' We dismissed the charge, apologized to the defendant, and told the cop to never bring us something like that again. I can't recall if internal affairs was notified.

    I work with the police every day, and the majority of them are good people. This guy was a sh*t.

    nepils Report

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    Michael Largey
    Community Member
    2 days ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Quite mild compared to what some cops do. Ask Rodney King or George Floyd. (Well, we can't ask Floyd, and that's the point.)

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    #33

    “Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done I was working on a $15 million M&A deal and my client called the buyer’s attorney “Barney Fife, country hillbilly.” That attorney was the brother of the CEO of the buyer. They got so pissed they dropped the deal.

    moekay , freepik Report

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    #34

    Im not a lawyer, this isnt my story. But, the lawyer who handled my business stuff and a legal dispute is a federal judge. Before he became a judge, he was a lawyer for divorces and civil stuff.

    A wealthy male client filed for divorce. Theres a prenup. Its pretty iron clad. It discuses the distribution of wealth, the alimony (if any) is laid out at x amount, increasing yearly based on inflation. Theres 1 major “exception” and that is “if you are caught cheating, cheating here is defined by any sexual contact with a person before the divorce is final, you automatically get the worst terms of the prenup.” In the womans case, (if she cheats) she gets zero alimony, and a 1 time payment of 100k. In the mans case, (if he cheats) he loses the main family home, all cars that are not his daily driver, and 1/4 of his business. (A buy out option is available, but doesn’t matter to this story)

    Lawyer gets to court and meets with his client in a conference room. And client is beaming. He shakes the lawyers hand. And says “hey! Mike!! I want you to meet jasmine. I met her 2 months ago. Shes amazing. We got engaged over the weekend in france!”

    And mike shook her hand and slumped in the chair and said “so, we got a major problem. You are cheating on ur wife with her. And legally, this is discovery im required to hand over to the other side” hes all “how the f**k am i cheating? We’re separated?!?!” Mike is all “cheating is any sexual contact before divorce is final. Its in ur prenup. That you wrote on ur own.”

    The guy flipped his s**t. Ended up being so mad, he ditched court. Which gave him a default judgement. Meaning she gets everything she asked for. + because of the cheating + not showing up, the judge ordered that the transfer of money happen with in 30 days. As part of the initial agreement between both parties. Hes not there to contest it. So, blam.

    The guy ended up trying to sneak the company to the new woman via a trust. But, its an illegal move. He also tried to hide the money with her by giving her 1.1 million dollars in cash (a bank transfer) but, the judge stopped that once ge found out and required the woman to repay the money since she was given notice also.

    He fought for years. And ended up losing money, time, energy, his business, house, 6-7 cars, and his new wife. Now, (cuz i know his daughter from work) hes a retired angry man living in rural new mexico. He cant afford to golf more than once a month. And he posts about how women are scum.

    Next morning edit: i certainly didnt expect this to blow up. Ty for the positive dm’s and replies. Ill try to reply if i see any questions in the thread to clarify stuff.

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    Full of Giggles
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    1 day ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My first husband and I had a prenup. We had an infidelity clause that basically states that if he cheated, I was entitled to alimony and half of his inheritance from his maternal grandmother. Our marriage ended when he knocked up his mistress of 2 years. The jerk decided he wasn’t going to pay because I violated the terms of the clause first. He told the judge I cheated on him with d***s and alcohol. He went on to claim he took a mistress because he had needs and I was taking care of them WHILE I WAS IN REHAB! Our divorce dragged out for three years. It came to an end when his maternal grandmother died and made me the sole heir to her estate. Gran changed her will because she hated her grandson for the way he treated me. So, my ex lost everything because he couldn’t keep it in his pants.

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    #35

    I'm pretty sure losing a 5 million dollar defamation case and then immediately then immediately making MORE statements and having it raised to 90 million is pretty far up the list.

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    Sue User
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    1 day ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    If you never had to pay before, and the likelihood of having to pay now is slim, you dont care if they charge you 5 million or 5 billion.

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    #36

    NAL but watched as a girl in her early 20's giggled her way through sentencing on a petty theft charge.

    Instead of the same 30-day suspended sentence her remorseful looking co-defendant received, she got 90 days in county jail.

    She wasn't giggling after that.

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    FoxEcoLimaIndiaCharlieIndiAlfa
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    1 day ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I'm wondering if that was typically how the girl in her early 20s, reacted to stressful or serious situations? Kinda like those who laugh at a funeral.

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    #37

    “Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done Not an attorney, but one client of ours baffles me to this day. He had multiple cases, including aggravated battery and d**g possession, At the insistence of dude’s family, we moved heaven and earth getting him a bond, so that he could get out of jail and live with said family until the case was over. The whole process took weeks.

    Less than a day after getting out, he was caught stealing $16 worth of batteries from Target. Bond revoked. To be fair, the line between stupidity and compulsion is blurred with this one.

    EDIT: For anyone who’s curious, we immediately ordered a psych eval for him. He was found competent, but it also confirmed what he had mental health issues. The Agg. Batt. charge ended up being dropped, and he took a plea for time served.

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    Con O Cuinn
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    1 day ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    "To be fair, the line between stupidity and compulsion is blurred with this one." That is simply a fantastic quote.

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    #38

    Client accused of punching another man & knocking a tooth out. He said numerous times on the stand that he had arthritis and was not capable of closing his fist to form the punch as described by the victim.

    Part way through his cross examination, the magistrate stopped him to state on the record that he had watched my client clench his fist numerous times since he made that statement.

    He was found guilty.

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    #39

    I was called for jury duty and was sitting in the courtroom watching the other potential jurors get questioned by the attorneys, just waiting for my possible turn to be questioned. One of the charges was aggravated assault.

    The defense asked one juror (who was a professional videographer) if her career made her more or less likely to put stock in video footage. To me, this was a hint (but not admission) that video footage would be a big part of the case.

    Before the juror could even answer, the defendant yelled from his table "I had a mask on! You can't even see my face!"

    The entire room went silent for about five seconds before the defense attorney regained his composure and asked the judge to dismiss the jury pool. The judge dismissed us back to the holding room. Five minutes later, one of the clerks of the court came in and told us (even the already selected jurors) that the trial was being rescheduled and we were all dismissed.

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    #40

    “Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done Commit robbery in order to hire an expensive attorney with minimal experience in criminal law rather than accept a seasoned public defender.

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    Bowtechie
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    2 days ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Now I want to know what undoubtedly stupid thing he did to necessitate the public defender in the first place

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    #41

    Not my client, but defendant posted a Facebook status along the lines of that he had "taken care of business and the world is a better place because of it".  He was charged with battery after putting someone in the hospital that had attacked his 14 year old daughter.  The person didn't have a clear memory of the incident and other testimony later revealed the person beat up had an alibi for the attack in question.  Most likely the girl had made up the story to avoid trouble from being out drinking underage, though we never got the full story.  Anyways the dad was sentenced to 4 years in federal prison.

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    #42

    Paralegal. Once had a convicted criminal explain to me how their murder charge should be overturned because the victim didn't die at the scene of the crime. The victim died at the hospital, therefore the defendant couldn't be charged with anything more than attempted murder.

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    Tenay Douglas
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    1 day ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    What the defendant is forgetting is that the charge of murder extends beyond completion of the crime. If your actions directly lead to the death of someone then that's murder. Only if it's indirect can the argument of manslaughter be made. Assuming of course that there was no intent to harm the victim

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    #43

    IANAL. I handle work comp claims. This one always cracks me up. Guy claims bilateral wrist injuries from repetitive motion cutting meat. We get "word" aka he posts on his Facebook about him competing in an MMA style event. Send surveillance there which gets this dude fighting with no issues.

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    Con O Cuinn
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    1 day ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I dunno about this one. An RSI like carpal tunnel wouldn't necessarily affect your ability to fight but could still cause you pain doing a task like slicing meat or typing.

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    #44

    I have two stories that come to mind. One, a colleague of mine, was representing an arsonist mny years ago that had allegedly set quite a large fire that burned some public land. Due to the $$ cost of the damage, it was a felony. During the State's case in chief, he began touching himself. Recess had to be called. Funnily enough, that helped him in punishment phase, since there was clearly a mental component there, but still...big oof, and I don't know if what had been shown up to that point would have gotten a guilty.

    Second was one of mine, again, many years ago. I had gotten a guy a pretty great deal on a serious theft charge. Prior to it being entered, he ended up picked up by the sheriff's office for violating conditions of bond. How did he violate? The Sheriff alleged that he used the banking information OF THE SHERIFF'S OFFICE to pass fake checks. This meant that in the new charge, the sheriff's office was the victim.

    Needless to say, the deal vanished.

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    #45

    Am criminal defense lawyer. Client arrested on DUI. Client lived in small town. He and his wife would drive to the one bar in town, drink, then walk to their houseboat after a night at the bar (1/4 mile away). He and wife know everyone in the bar, another patron they know gets blasted, bar owner says she can’t stay, client and wife walk her to his car to stay there until ride comes.

    Client gets her in backseat of the suv. Client is drunk, drops keys on the way to front seat, opens now unlocked front door, turns on car lights to see (he walked around the front from rear passenger), cops are waiting to see if people leave bar drunk, sees lights, says he saw driving, immediately rolled up arrests client.

    Client has prior dui from 12ish years before. Judge agreed that it wouldn’t come in, jury wouldn’t hear it unless he “opened the door.” Can’t win the case unless dude testifies. I prep him, continue to prep him, keep prepping him, but tell him under NO CIRCUMSTANCES can he say he would never drive drunk, never do anything like that. Basically anything about the past = no.

    Direct is going well, gave him a beautiful, easy, last question where he could explain the night, explain why he was upset he got arrested (because he wasn’t driving and was doing everything right).

    “I would never do something like that.” Door open, judge lets da in rebuttal bring in old dui. Jury took about 25 minutes to convict.

    And that’s about one of a hundred stories. Life is never dull in the criminal defense world.

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    #46

    She was doing “magnet therapy” with a “therapist” five hours away by phone. The “therapist” had the magnets. My client would hold the phone up to various parts of her body that needed the magnetic energy to help it heal.

    For $2000/ month.

    She never told me about this in the dozens of hours we prepared by talking everything through. I learned during the other side’s cross of her.

    I’ve never been tempted to head desk in court before.

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    jonesnori
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    1 day ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Stupid, but why was this relevant to the case? We don't even know why she was in court.

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    #47

    One of my BIL lawyers (there were three at one point) was described as incompetent and failing to provide adequate counsel by his former client, on death row, for failing to get an innocent verdict. The problem was that the client (since executed) went to his local bar immediately after committing the murder at a local grocery store in broad daylight, and proceeded to brag for hours how he'd killed the victim, in very specific detail. Also there were something more than a dozen eyewitnesses...

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    #48

    “Added 9 Years To A Short Sentence”: 50 Lawyers Recall The Stupidest Things Clients Have Done Not in the US, but the judge asked if the defendant was remorseful (if you show regrets, you can have some leniency).

    "No".

    The guy didn't understand the question, and when he doesn't, he just usually says "no".

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    #49

    I tried a sexual harassment case in a conservative county. Young female victim, gross old male perpetrator. We had really good evidence, including admissions. The jury voted defense. After the verdict, my client and I were sitting out in front of the courthouse. She was crying. The jury foreman, who had just voted for the defense, came up to me and said, 'If that son of a bitch had done that to my daughter, I would’ve gone down to that store and kicked his ass.

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    #50

    Client returns to court drunk after luncheon adjournment. Falls asleep, and his head drops right into the side of the witness box, whereupon he proceeds to snore. Loudly.

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    Pencil
    Community Member
    1 day ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I'm trying to picture a courtroom where defendants are seated within grabbing distance of witnesses.

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    #51

    What a question! How much time do you have? I have hundreds of stories of clients making dumb decisions!

    One particular client that comes to mind is a guy who committed a spree of burglaries... while on electronic monitoring for another case. The State brought a list of his coordinates to his bond hearing. I actually made the argument that he is clearly not a flight risk, since he actually kept his monitor on, and that the Court should release him on the same terms as his other case. The Judge looked at me like a crazy person and held my client without bond.

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    #52

    NAL but my ex totally f****d his custody case. In a nutshell, the mother took off with the kid and refused to return him in a state where that kind of action would get even supervised visitation taken from her. When she finally sent the child for visitation, the child had visible injuries caused by her boyfriend, and the child told his teacher at school, completely unprompted, that the boyfriend had hurt him. My ex's parents hired an attorney for him and they got an ex parte order to keep the child. At the first hearing after the ex parte order, both the mother and father were ordered to take d**g tests before the next hearing. My ex had a history of d**g use (weed.) His attorney told him he could get the next hearing pushed back by more than a month so that he could be sure he would test clean and my ex told him not to worry about it. Then did some cocaine and failed the d**g test. 🙄 Then didn't show for court and refused to contact his attorney for months, until the attorney had himself removed as the attorney on record (the child was actually at the mothers for visitation when the results came back so she was able to get an ex parte order to keep him.)

    The reality was he didn't actually want full responsibility for the child but refused to admit that to his parents. So he deliberately blew the test and then claimed that since he worked in construction he must have been exposed to something that caused a failed d**g test. I don't know if his parents really believed that but I was with him for several years before I found out the whole story (he had previously told me he didn't have money for an attorney to fight it so he just gave her custody) and I left him immediately after finding out the truth. It was bad enough that he just didn't want to be a full-time parent. But to do that in a situation when you know your child is being abused? Needless to say, it was one of the things that helped me figure out he was a sociopath.

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    #53

    Used to work at a workman's comp firm, and... hurting themselves again.


    Oftentimes doing stuff around the house. Falling off a ladder, using tools, going horseback riding, etc. Then they get hurt again and insurance company is off the hook.


    And many get their doctors to write notes saying they're fine, so they can work (because they're bored at home with a huge injury), then are baffled that they don't get workman's comp anymore. Then they overexert themselves because of the injury that isn't better... sigh.

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    Matthew Savestheworld
    Community Member
    1 day ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Too many people injured on teh job, cant survive on worker's comp pay and get side hustles that are not as strenuous...so they can pay their bills. Then lose the worker's comp and are in worse shape than before

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    #54

    I’m not a lawyer but the local news ran a clip over and over from a murder trial where the defendant took the stand against their lawyers advice, the defense was claiming self defense. As the prosecution read transcripts from damning jail phone calls the guy on trial (not his lawyer) called for an objection. It through everyone for a loop, the judge asked him why he called for an objection dude was honest and said I didn’t know they’d actually listen to my calls. A recess was granted and dude took a plea deal when court resumed .

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    #55

    I am a lawyer. I was cross examining a slip and fall plaintiff on the stand in trial after like two years of litigation. We were going over some pictures he took when he let slip that the “picture of the two signs” was missing. I grilled him on what he meant until the judge chastised me for trying to conduct discovery during trial, which is supposedly not allowed (he had clearly concealed evidence though). 

    We took a break for the day, and the next day he came back with the photo in question, which showed that he had walked squarely between two wet floor signs to go down the Kroger aisle that he immediately slipped and fell in. 

    He did not recover any money in that one, despite the horrific defense venue. The judge who jumped all over me for exploring obvious evidence tampering was later appointed to the federal bench here in Atlanta. .

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    #56

    I was representing a woman in an eviction where her husband had signed the house over to his girlfriend, and his girlfriend was trying to evict the wife (husband was in jail, and wife had a restraining order against him). Girlfriend shows up to court drunk. The judge stops the hearing, orders a breathalyzer and when she fails, throws her in jail for contempt of court. Opposing counsel tried to tell me she was self-medicating after falling in a hole in the backyard

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    Geoffrey Scott
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    2 days ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Puts me in mind of Guliani's co-hort during a depo. She was as drunk as he was, but didn't hide it as well.

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    #57

    Client in the interview with police:

    Police officer: “I don’t care how angry you are- you can’t go around threatening to kill a 5 year old!”
    Client: “I didn’t threaten to kill her!!! I threatened her mother!!!”


    He thought there was some sort of distinction there. We took a plea deal.

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    LaserBrain
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    2 days ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    There is no such thing as a police "interview." It's always an interrogation, whether you think it looks like one or not.

    #58

    I was at court once fighting a traffic ticket and a guys lawyer was pleading no contest to a charge he got for having a fire arm on probation. It sounded like he was getting more probation and it would be done with that, then the judge says “do you have anything to say before we move forward” and the guy says “I didn’t know having a gun was against the rules. And I had a gun so I guess that makes me GUILTY”. Smiled like he just stuck it to the man, the look on the lawyer and judges face were of so much disappointment.

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    #59

    Not an attorney, but I was in the jury for a three defendant murder trial.

    We sat through weeks of testimony and from the sheer amount of direct evidence the state had, it was extraordinarily obvious very early on that defendant 1 had committed the crime.

    Defendant 2 (D1’s brother) and Defendant 3 (D1’s girlfriend) were much less obvious and we were being asked by the state to consider circumstantial evidence that left most of us feeling like we had to make some leaps to draw the conclusion they wanted us to.

    That is, until Defendant 3 decided to take the stand.

    Defendant 3’s attorney did a very good job of painting her as the victim of abuse. Her attorney had us feeling sorry for this poor, unintelligent, woman that had been groomed since she was 16 by a man 20 years her senior.

    From the attorney’s narrative, D3 was basically D1’s slave. He controlled what she wore, what she did, and even who she talked to. He even made her get a tattoo saying [D1’s name]’s property. We saw text about D1 killing D3’s puppy because D3 had made him mad about something small. We saw texts from D3 to D1 cheering him on after he had sent her pictures of a bloody knife (the murder weapon) but D3’s attorney had us questioning if those words were just her playing the role of supportive partner so D1 didn’t come after her next.

    We were starting to believe she was terrified for her own safety and that is why she did not report her boyfriend. I mean, clearly this man was a maniac and it seemed reasonable that she just didn’t know how to escape him.

    Then other defendant’s attorneys and the DA tore her apart on cross. They made her look argumentative, tripped her up in multiple lies, and by the time they were done, based on her own testimony it was pretty clear that she did in fact know the victim and had been the one to plan the entire murder.

    Shoot, we even started to feel like she probably manipulated D1 more than he manipulated her!

    The the other defendants did not take the stand.

    When we went to deliberations, we all discussed how bad of an idea it was for her to testify. We had decided defendant 1 was guilty on all counts within the first 5 minutes. Defendant 3 was almost as quick. We decided that while she did not physically commit the murder, she had conspired and was just as culpable. (Whatever formal charge that was.)

    Defendant 2 took the longest. We all felt pretty strongly that he was somehow involved, but that the DA had not meet their burden of proof of beyond a reasonable doubt. So we had to return a not guilty verdict on all counts.

    Edit for clarification: D1 and D3 were both found guilty on multiple counts. D2 was found not guilty.

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    #60

    Had a domestic violence case. For months we went to preparatory hearings and gathering evidence, and got restraining orders. By the time the trial was finaly happening, on the same morning of the hearing, the person I represented let me know she had gone on holidays with the defendant for a couple of weeks, and had grand old time. At that point, the opposing counsel approached me and told me he had lots of evidence of both the parites having a great time together.

    This of course doesn't mean abuse didn't happen in the past, but it really undermined our case, where we had little evidence other than some testimonials. At that point I had to explain to her how even beyond strict legal rules, the judge would potentially change her mind once she saw the claimant was out partying with the defendant, for whom a restraining order was requested.

    We settled and avoided the trial.

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    Mike F
    Community Member
    2 days ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    A domestic violence case with no "no contact" provision was not a domestic violence case.

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    #61

    “Is my client a perfect man? No.”
    -“I mean, I killed him, yeah”.

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    zims
    Community Member
    2 days ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    From the game show Make Some Noise, or possibly Game Changer? Both on Dropout.

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    #62

    A friend was doing the workman's comp as well as suing the company for a few million. Could not bend over, raise his arms, plus everything he could think of.

    Taking the stand, using a cane. Lawyer ask him to read the highlighted parts from the local paper. A week before he had won a Marshall arts tournament.

    Can you explain that? Next fifteen minutes he explained each kick, punch etc with a big smile. I rest my case. Jury Forman ask the judge if they had to leave the room or could they just announce the verdict.

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    #63

    Recently was in court and apparently part of the requirements of this guy was that he not talk to his family. He called his mother on Mother's Day. The judge said "your mother seems to care about your freedom as little as you do- put the cuffs on him."

    Edit- I don't know the perimeters of this case, I was just a by stander in court. The lawyer, in sweats mind you, said "Oh Judge, I told him. I told her. Can't fix stupid." It was wild to watch.

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    #64

    Company wanted to save money on a federal patent infringement case and hired a family lawyer from the yellow pages. Lawyer was sanctioned by the court after missing multiple deadlines, screwing up discovery, basically failing. why? because he didn't know how to take a such a case. client lost the case.

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    zims
    Community Member
    1 day ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Lawyer's fault for taking a case they weren't qualified to handle. Is legal malpractice a thing?

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    #65

    Briefly: he had to testify that doing X thing would not cost him a lot of money

    The judge asked him how much money would it cost for him and he said an amount which was not too much for him (because he was rich) but it was a lot compared to what everybody in the courtroom was making!

    Other case:

    The day before the court I tell him exactly what he is going to answer to certain questions. I specifically tell him to answer X when asked. Time comes, judge asks, he completely loses it, he gets a panic attack...he can't even speak a single word! He just looks at the judge with the 1000 yard stare. Disaster.

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    #66

    Not a lawyer but I had jury duty once.

    Prosecutor: "Defendant, why did you and your friend video record yourselves [committing the crime]?"

    Defendant: "Well, I gotta answer to-- I mean, uh... uh... there's a good answer, which... uh..."

    Organized sex trafficking carries a sentence of 20 years, kids. Don't do it! And if you do, don't video it on your phone!

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    #67

    Family Law (child custody and visitation): Mother was married to Father, and they had three children. Father died. Mother married Father's cousin. The new husband did not get along well with his teenage step-son.
    Here is the kicker. Mother, playing peace-maker, told new husband '[Teenage stepson] is your cousin, and now he is your son, so y'all need to learn to get along.' TL;DR — I am from the South.

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    Pheebs
    Community Member
    2 days ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    It’s not like she married HER first cousin. Not sure why lawyer found it so dumb, especially as people have married their ex-spouses siblings.

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    #68

    I’m not a trial lawyer but a real estate one: I had clients spend $15k on new lounge furniture and 4 TVs WITH THEIR CLOSING MONEY 48 hours before I was due to close for them.

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    zims
    Community Member
    2 days ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Housing is always priority #1 in budgets. Fancy new furniture is like, #372.

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    #69

    YAY I CAN ANSWER THIS!

    Not a lawyer, but was raised by one. He did criminal defense for 30+ years in Texas before taking a position with the DA.

    Here’s some good ones:

    - “Capital murder case where I persuaded [DA] to waive the death penalty. Turns out that the jury acquits on the murder rap but bags him on aggravated robbery and sentenced him to 45 years. [Defendant’s] family was all mobbed up in the Mexican Mafia; they all (mother, grandmother, etc.) wore Micky Mouse shirts -- get it? MM. Mexican Mafia. [DA] was plenty pissed about the outcome of that trial. I got the better of him on that one.”

    - “[Defendant’s Name] was an interesting case because halfway through the trial, the defendant's brother takes the stand and confesses to the murder! I didn't see that coming. Turns out that the defendant and the brother cooked this all up before trial without my knowledge, of course.”

    “Anyway, nobody but the defendant's mother believed him. The jury convicted and the brother was indicted for aggravated perjury.”

    - My personal favorite: client goes on trial for a robbery charge. He shows up for the first day of court. Does not show up for the second day of court. Judge says “well…the show must go on”.

    So my dad has to continue with trial, does the very best he can with an empty table behind him. The jury very clearly pitied him.

    Client was picked up a few days later in Oklahoma. He had robbed a bank and went to the airport to purchase plane tickets to Hawaii or something. That’s where they arrested him. He later told officers that he had planned to steal a boat once he landed.

    - **But the absolute worst thing a client did to ruin a case?…..chose to represent himself on a murder charge.** It was horrible. I won’t go into detail but my dad ended up standing in the back of the courtroom per the judge’s order (literally ‘stand by counsel’). Client was absolutely batshit insane but still…it was bad. Jury gave him life.

    Appellate court overturned and remanded for a new trial. Client wisely opted for representation for entire trial…got 40 years that time.

    leviolentfemme Report

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    #70

    Pro bono VAWA case. Should have been a straightforward petition. Ran a FOIA search on the client before the final submission just in case. Turns out she had been deported from Guam and then while her immigration ban was still in place she entered the mainland US without status (= permanently ineligible for adjustment). When I asked why she had not disclosed this during intake, her response was: "Oh, I thought Guam was its own country and not part of the US, so it wouldn't matter." .

    bureaucranaut Report