Toby
Member
Registered: Jul 2000
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Posts: 3034 |
quote: Originally posted by K. Cannon
You are mixing up issues.
No, I'm not.quote: Someone who plea bargains, by definition, says they committed the crime. I evidently am using a different connotation, but I think I already said that we were looking at it from different perspectives.quote: Sure, not everyone who is "guilty" is committed the crime, but some people who are "guilty" admitted that they were and some were found that way by the judge/jury. Yes, and is it beyond the bounds of reality to even say that there are probably some people who said that they were guilty to a lesser charge even though they may not have been and may not have believed themselves to have been in order to simply 'get on with their lives' and avoid a costly and potentially futile and more endangering criminal process? That's rhetorical by the way. I know for a fact it happens.quote: Yes, criminal law(litigation refers to civil law) has many nuances BUT your original comment was that "settling=plea bargaining." Yes, and you've still yet to convince me that in the real world the two aren't the same. They're only different within the 'legal' world.quote: Sure, there may be some similarities, but your initial assertion was an oversimplification which implies that everyone who settles a case admits liability. If they're making a payment to someone else for an alleged wrong, then regardless of what the documents say, they've functionally done just that.quote: I think pleading "Not Guilty" when you're Not Guilty is certainly a viable option. Further, in most states you have a no contest-type option. (Besides, I carry a purse! ) Ahh...but who said that the prosecutor always offered a nolo plea or that they didn't offer an irresistable guilty plea just to increase their conviction rating?quote: Not if their insurance company makes it for them. Or their public defender.  quote: The difference is someone "pleading to a lesser charge" says "I committed the crime of X." Someone who settles a wreck case says "I didn't do anything wrong, but my insurance company says it would be cheaper to pay this ambulance chaser $1000 bucks than pay for discovery, depositions, and trial--and then maybe draw a jury that likes the Plaintiff for whatever reason and awards a big verdict on top of defense costs." No, that's what they fool themselves into thinking. Functionally, they've admitted that the person making the suit had enough evidence to make a case more costly than it would take to just say, 'ok you win. here's some money'.quote: ? Civil and criminal are not in the same court of law. (Maybe I misunderstand your point.) I think you do. I'm referring to the court system in general, not a specific jurisdiction.quote: Civil and criminal cases are apples and oranges. Reality isn't, though.quote: Preponderance of the Evidence vs. Beyond a Reasonable Doubt. Liable vs. Guilty. Depositions and Discovery v. Rule 5 Disclosures. And those are all created out of whole cloth.quote: I would hazard a guess (although I may be wrong) that you have never been sued before. Yes, I have. My insurance company settled. I'm also gearing up for jury duty in a couple weeks. 
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