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Originally Posted by BailJumper
So, are you saying that every time you turn on the TV and some lawyer is proclaiming their client innocent - yet later they are found guilty - they are not lying?
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A lie involves knowingly making a false statement. If your client tells you he's innocent or doesn't admit to the crime, you can explore other potential scenarios in order to establish reasonable doubt.
And as far as TV lawyers are concerned, those are extremely atypical situations. There are very few defense attorneys in this state who would comment to the media on a case while it was still in progress.
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I agree the prankster should have just hung-up on the media or anyone else and got himself a lawyer. But don't act like page one out of a lawyer's play isn't to deny guilt at every turn.
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I don't know why you're stuck on this, but telling lies is not in most lawyers' playbooks at all. In fact, if a lawyer knows his client is making a misstatement of fact to the tribunal, he has an ethical duty to correct it. I'm sorry you're so cynical. There are a few out there who give everyone a bad name, but the bad ones are few and the good ones are many.