Sunday, March 18, 2012

How Lawyers Work



The United States justice system has many people involved in keeping order, and one of the people who fills that role is lawyers -- but many truly don't keep order, in fact they do quiet the opposite, they get people who disrupt order out of punishment, but how?

The roles of lawyers is simple, protect your client. However, this is good and bad. Many times, we have guilty people whose lawyers will get them out of trouble. For lawyers, they can help someone who is guilty or murder, and turn it into something that will make it look like they did nothing -- or were medically insane (Because a sane person can't lie about seeing an angel who sounded like Berry White). Let's say for example they found tire tracks at the murder scene from Bob's car, they found his gloves, a shovel with DNA from the victim at his house, and the weapon used to kill the victim; it seems like enough evidence, right? No.

With this evidence, a lawyer will try to 'fog up' the minds of the jury, and make us think their client is guilty. "No! The tire tracks were found there because he worked for the victim." They will have answers for every question, even if they know their client is guilty. My personal prospective from this is, why do we allow this to happen? Why would we allow someone to murder someone, and get away with it? Is it because we don't care?

As people of the US, I think we shouldn't stand for certain issues -- when enough evidence is found suggesting someone committed a crime, there should be a law the lawyer cannot try to make up gibberish to change the jurors train of thought.