So says the left. They are actually right. You have the right to one, you can not be denied it. But that doesn't mean we are going to give you one.
:dunce:
So you like it when a criminal that has employed a tax payer attorney can drop him because he doesn't like him? I don't know how the several states set up their systems. I am sure TH would have some insight.
So you like it when a criminal that has employed a tax payer attorney can drop him because he doesn't like him? I don't know how the several states set up their systems. I am sure TH would have some insight.
So you like it when a criminal that has employed a tax payer attorney can drop him because he doesn't like him? I don't know how the several states set up their systems. I am sure TH would have some insight.
When the court assigns a public defender, you pretty much get whoever they choose. And treating the defendant as a criminal (as opposed to a criminal defendant) prior to conviction would pretty much obviate the trial, don't you think?
So you like it when a criminal that has employed a tax payer attorney can drop him because he doesn't like him? I don't know how the several states set up their systems. I am sure TH would have some insight.
Are you in charge of handing out attorneys, now?So says the left. They are actually right. You have the right to one, you can not be denied it. But that doesn't mean we are going to give you one.
Should a criminal be able to drop his appointed attorney and get a different one? What if the violent giant didn't grab Wilson's fire arm, discharge it in the car and beat Wilson, but instead surrendered after being told? And Missouri appoints Mark Furman for his counsel. Should he have been able to ask for a new attorney?
Of course that situation is fiction, it is just an example of replacement.
Should a criminal be able to drop his appointed attorney and get a different one? What if the violent giant didn't grab Wilson's fire arm, discharge it in the car and beat Wilson, but instead surrendered after being told? And Missouri appoints Mark Furman for his counsel. Should he have been able to ask for a new attorney?
Of course that situation is fiction, it is just an example of replacement.
You have no right to a tax payer funded attorney
Should a criminal be able to drop his appointed attorney and get a different one?
Should a criminal be able to drop his appointed attorney and get a different one? What if the violent giant didn't grab Wilson's fire arm, discharge it in the car and beat Wilson, but instead surrendered after being told? And Missouri appoints Mark Furman for his counsel. Should he have been able to ask for a new attorney?
Of course that situation is fiction, it is just an example of replacement.
what if you were accused of something you didn't do?
many people are. And... amazing but true, most of them are poor...
hard to believe, i know..
I know of a man who has been locked up in a county jail for over three years waiting for a trial. He's been through several public defenders, who, judging from the court papers I've read, were doing a terrible job. The accusations against him are false, made by known liars with a history of fabricating stories in order to falsely accuse others. It shocks and saddens me that in the United States a person can spend over three years in jail without a trial, without having been convicted of anything.
I know of a man who has been locked up in a county jail for over three years waiting for a trial. He's been through several public defenders, who, judging from the court papers I've read, were doing a terrible job. The accusations against him are false, made by known liars with a history of fabricating stories in order to falsely accuse others. It shocks and saddens me that in the United States a person can spend over three years in jail without a trial, without having been convicted of anything.
I agree. This is a big deal. We have the right to a "speedy" trial, Not to sit in jail till the bureaucrats get around to it.