And as a public figure, you should probably stop posting (think about it). Best of luck in your career.
| Started By | Comment | ||
|---|---|---|---|
WallyTroutmaster |
I hate to rain on your parade | ||
|
I think you rock, but you're going to be defending dbs like Ben.
And as a public figure, you should probably stop posting (think about it). Best of luck in your career. |
|||
EOrlins |
|||
Oowatanite wrote:LOVE IT! |
|||
JackSparrowBauer |
|||
EOrlins wrote: You'll have to let us know how it goes! =] |
|||
Oowatanite |
|||
|
Thanks Eliza !!
|
|||
TRAINROBBER |
|||
|
Best of Luck with the new Job...
|
|||
tomersde |
|||
panurge46 wrote: I'm not saying every person on trail is guilty, but most of them are. Eliza will eventually defend a guilty person and will get him a not guilty verdict. And don't give the party line of criminal lawyers that every person deserves the best defence, it's every person deserves the most adequate defence |
|||
craig |
|||
Eliza will eventually defend a guilty person and will get him a not guilty verdict.And prosecutors, given time, will eventually prosecute an innocent person and get a guilty verdict or a plea bargained guilty plea. Not to mention all the people charged with victimless crimes that really should be left alone by the state. The US has the highest incarceration rate in the free world, but still has more than its share of violent crime and drug use.
Last Edited By: craig
10/10/09 5:15 AM.
Edited 2 times.
|
|||
ghostbusted |
|||
|
This is probably off topic but worthy of comment. I think a case can be made that from a societal viewpoint there is more danger from the guilty going free
than from the innocent being incarcerated. The incarceration of an innocent, while regrettable, affects only the innocent person and his family and associates.
Given the tendency toward recidivism, a guilty person freed on a technicality is highly likely to victimize additional people. In addition, I think that most
criminal defendants are not innocent 'choirboys'. If they are wrongly convicted in this case, it probably just balances out some other crimes that they
were never caught for. I don't think that there should not be any defense or trial but I do think that this issue should be acknowledged. Perhaps a
modification to the exclusionary rule so that 'tainted' evidence can still be used to ensure justice and the tainters dealt with separately is in
order. What are your thoughts on this, Eliza?
Also, it is always risky to make comparisons between nations unless you attempt to account for cultural differences. For example, the majority of Americans are descended from people who demonstrated the initiative and determination to leave their homelands and come here. In contrast, the other countries are populated by the descendants of those who accepted their lives in those countries and stayed. Does this emphasis on individualism and not accepting the status quo manifest itself in an increase in criminal behavior? |
|||
TRAINROBBER |
|||
tomersde wrote: IS YOUR NAME BEN? |
|||
OzarkSurvivor |
|||
|
Wow. Sucksters are now placing moral judgment on Eliza's CAREER CHOICE. Way to be, guys. Get a life.
|
|||
EOrlins |
|||
OzarkSurvivor wrote:Haha. It's cool. Don't even worry about it. I open myself up to criticism/judgment by continuing to post here. I don't mind it and as someone who will have much more difficult people to deal with in my day to day career than sucksters, I can definitely take it. (By the way, I'm talking about the prosecutors, not my clients). ;) |
|||
tomersde |
|||
EOrlins wrote: You're underestimating sucksters. Most of us are the most annoying, petty and difficult people you'll ever have contact with. |
|||
Syoma |
|||
|
Eliza, My dad thought that I'm going to be a lawyer but i didnt end up on that career. I dont know if I will regret or not but I'm happy for what I
have and what I will have. Don't mind those people who will judge you for your career path. Who knows....In 20 years, You'll be the 1st Jewish
President.
|
|||
craig |
|||
|
Wouldn't surprise me if Eliza holds elected office within the next 20 years.
|
|||
mfrimley |
|||
|
Eliza, if you have any pull with Obama, you must demand that he sign an executive order legalizing the reefer at once.
|
|||
SPunKeeMonKee |
|||
|
Congrats, Eliza!! We're all really happy for you :') It feels like it was only yesterday when you were just a pre-law student, time really does fly..
|
|||
ncassaro |
|||
ghostbusted wrote: I really really disagree, just because corrections is becoming such a huge strain on state budgets. Look at California, where the corrections budget has been inching toward the education budget for a long time (i.e. big corrections increases every year, small education increases every year.) Eventually the corrections budget in California will surpass education. Is that right? I would definitely think that less incarceration is THE way to go. Especially because there are also abuses within the system where corrections officers, knowing somebody is up for parole or getting out soon, will go out of their way to make the prisoner act up so he will stay incarcerated. I would definitely rather have less crime than more crime, and there is undoubtedly less crime today than twenty years ago, but I cannot help but to think that the current corrections overcorrects for a past system that was perhaps too lenient. Now we are way way too strict and we are literally, as tax-payers, paying the price for it. |
|||
TAR Addict |
|||
Syoma wrote: THIS. I'd vote for you <3 (well, if I agreed with your policies and stances on important social issues) |
|||
Kubin |
|||
craig wrote:Nothings surprizing about that because its gonna happen. |
|||
juppiter |
|||
|
omg Eliza for Lieutenant Governor in 2010?
CUOMO/ORLINS FTW! |
|||