Serafine666 wrote:
It's moments like these that make me pity defense attorneys. Someone must defend the client; this is a constitutional requirement. The defense must also be competent or the verdict is nullified. How do you competently defend a person who is not mentally defective and quite clearly committed the crime of which they are accused... and still look yourself in the mirror in the morning? There are, of course, slimy defense attorneys who don't care what the client did or about the evidence but just want to win for their own personal prestige but those are not the types I feel some level of pity for.
If falls entirely on the definition of "vigorous defense" and how DA's do their jobs. Far too many go by the line "We're here for an innocent verdict" since every victory they pull off gets them more money. Thats all 99.99% of the people working as lawyers want, more green. Some extreme few are there to defend the law/system, but they're so few and far between that they may as well not exist.
By my view, the Defense isn't there to get a Not Guilty. They're there to represent their client, and make sure his trial is fair. They should be turning over every piece of evidence, talking to every witness, questioning every law enforcement officer, and doing everything in his power to make sure that every I is dotted, every T crossed, and that every step of the arrest and investigation has been absolutely immaculate. The defense is there to "what if" everything. If everything in the case has been done right, then the evidence will speak for itself one way or another, which is what the verdict really rests on.
Persecutors are to do the same thing, but they present the evidence to the court. Their job is to second guess everything, but then had it all off the the defense and jury to look over it. Again, if the case has been done right, then the evidence needs no other representation.
Far too may lawyers on both sides are actively
taking sides, and are in it only for the money. Which is sad, as a legal profession could be an honorable one, if it wasn't nothing more than a cash cow for people good at playing the jury and pressing emotional buttons. Too bad there isn't a way to enforce neutrality from the beat cop and lawyer all the way up to the Supreme Court. The Law is supposed to be a gray and equal arbiter for all, not a plaything for showmen.