So, this isn't really even about lawyers for you. It's about your desire to do away with our entire legal system as we know it.
:think:
I am curious. What should the law look like? Just simpler or Mosaic Law? What is your ideal?
Four laws, two pages long.
Something like this:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1T2fh8RuGxX2k6Hujh44xpae0dmUODalo3j69doJ0BCM/edit?usp=drivesdk
Which is why a lawyer is offered to those accused of crimes at no cost if they cannot afford one.
Lawyers are not needed in a system where everyone knows and is familiar with the law.
It's a part of Miranda Rights, recited upon every arrest.
The Miranda Rights exist as a result of a corrupt and swollen legal system.
If everyone knows the law, the "Miranda Rights" are not needed.
It just so happens that like everything else, you get what you pay for.
Which is inequality from one case to another...
Which is counterproductive in a system where all are (or should be, as it currently stands) equal under the law.
Or have you never heard of the right to a fair and speedy trial?
I certainly feel for anyone framed in your system. It would probably be pretty easy to frame someone for a crime,
No one would want to "frame" anyone for a crime, because that is called perjury. See the punishment for perjury above in the document I linked to.
especially those of a limit mental capacity.
:AMR:
Is it two or three by the way?
A judge should weigh the evidence presented.
Because you say so?
There are plenty of children and individuals with mental handicaps that do not. Why presume they would? And, if they don't, and are accused of a crime, they probably need a lawyer to defend them. Don't you think?
Plenty of children and mentally retarded people who don't have parents or legal guardians?
What uncivilised society are you from? :mock:
Didn't bother to read it, because just looking at the link url, it looks like a list of people who were wrongly convicted and were later exonerated.
Is that correct?
My answer, if so, remains the same as it has always been:
Those people would not have been put on trial in the first place, they wouldn't have been falsely accused, let alone wrongfully convicted and unjustly punished, in a proper justice system.
Two or three witnesses you say?
Yes.
Only the second year in which DNA was used as evidence in a trial...
in Lake Elsinore, a female clerk was working at a shoe store when, sometime between 11:30 AM and 12:00 PM, she was raped and robbed at gunpoint. During the rape, the assailant ejaculated and wiped semen onto her sweater.
Investigation and Trial
Following the rape, the victim was taken to the hospital where vaginal swabs were collected. Her clothing, including the sweater with the semen stains, was collected and marked for identification.
Witness #1, semen in her vagina. strong evidence
She then went to the police station and was shown yearbooks from a nearby high school but was unable to find her assailant. In fact, she did not identify Atkins until she saw a wanted poster for him on unrelated charges, and was then shown a photo lineup where she identified Atkins as her assailant witness #1.
Witness #2, positive identification of her rapist. weak evidence
A witness who worked at the store next to where the rape occurred was shown the wanted poster with Atkins’ picture and identified him as a man who had been in her store earlier that day witness #2.
Witness #3, an eyewitness who positively identified the same man in the woman's store. weak evidence
This is enough evidence to convict, and to sentence to death Atkins.
At trial, in addition to the eyewitness identifications, the prosecution proffered testimony from a criminalist with a state laboratory, who testified that the semen found on swabs was deposited by someone with blood type A
Witness #4, blood type. weak-strong evidence
Not sure what this is, but from a cursory Google search for "PGM 2+1+", it has something to do with genetics.
Witness #5, genetic markers (?), weak-strong evidence
which are consistent with Atkins’ typing witness #3.
Atkins was charged with robbery and rape and sentenced to forty-five years in prison.
He should have been executed, not put in prison.
Penalty for rape should be death, so that the criminal will never commit such a crime again.
Post-Conviction Investigation
Atkins’ case was accepted by the Innocence Project in 1993. After locating the sweater and vaginal swabs in 1995, the Innocence Project began trying to gain access to the evidence for DNA testing, which was granted in 1999.
After receiving the specimens, Forensic Science Associates performed DNA testing on the evidence collected at the crime scene. Testing was conducted on three separate areas of the sweater. In all three areas, the results were consistent and excluded Atkins.
Based on the test results, Herman Atkins was released from prison in February 2000, after spending twelve years in prison for a crime he did not commit.
So, as I'm unaware of the level of technology (though, with the introduction of genetic testing being in the late 70s/early 80s, there's no guarantee that the DNA would have been viable after so many years of preservation, but it is a possibility) or processes dealing with genetic information evidence preservation from the late 70s to today, and considering that appeals would not be allowed in a just system (except by the judges), AND since Atkins would have been executed (justly, as there were more than enough witnesses to convict), the rest of the article is moot.
Atkins's execution would be a deterrent to the next would-be rapist that if he is caught, he would be executed, and so innocent people would be spared.
If evidence later came to light that Atkins was wrongfully convicted, then the judge would be held responsible for the wrongful conviction.