You are viewing a single comment's thread. View all
1
BlackPillBot on scored.co
10 months ago1 point(+0/-0/+1Score on mirror)2 children
I’ve been around a shit ton of attorneys throughout my life, and almost all of the females seemed awkward and completely out of their element(they were). Juries don’t respect them either. If you’re ever forced to go to a jury trial, make sure whatever you do you find a way to have a man represent you. Even a black man is better than a white woman if it absolutely has to go to a jury. They can be good as backup while doing prep work/paperwork, and discovery in the background, but they should never be allowed to take the floor other than maybe an arraignment in a pinch. I wouldn’t even want them during a motion hearing because they can have the same effect on the judge presiding. With all that said, there are a few exceptions to the rule, and I’ve seen one in action, but of course she was super masculine. She may have even been a dyke.
10 months ago1 point(+0/-0/+1Score on mirror)1 child
> If you’re ever forced to go to a jury trial ...
If you’re ever forced to go to a jury trial, you look up which lawyer or law firm contributed the most to the judge's campaign. Then hire those fuckers. I've seen it happen. I did that for another business owner once. As soon as they signed the retainer the lawyer made a call in that same meeting. Turns out he knew the DA too, who actually decides what does and doesn't go to trial.
The charges were dropped in exchange for a plea deal that they stay out of trouble for five years. That's it. No questions asked. No discovery. No pre-trail meeting. *"You're good to go. Stay out of trouble."* One minute they're threatening to wipe you out, the next minute they've forgotten you completely. That was a $15k phone call. "The best justice money can buy."
If you’re ever forced to go to a jury trial, you look up which lawyer or law firm contributed the most to the judge's campaign. Then hire those fuckers. I've seen it happen. I did that for another business owner once. As soon as they signed the retainer the lawyer made a call in that same meeting. Turns out he knew the DA too, who actually decides what does and doesn't go to trial.
The charges were dropped in exchange for a plea deal that they stay out of trouble for five years. That's it. No questions asked. No discovery. No pre-trail meeting. *"You're good to go. Stay out of trouble."* One minute they're threatening to wipe you out, the next minute they've forgotten you completely. That was a $15k phone call. "The best justice money can buy."