Well that is how you feel about Lin Wood, but he is a practicing atty. Not disbarred and works within the law.
If what he does is within the law, then the law is crazy!
As for not being disbarred, that's something I'll have to change.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Well that is how you feel about Lin Wood, but he is a practicing atty. Not disbarred and works within the law.
SuperDave said:
Depositions brought on by subpoena when a law suit opens the gates ... nice tactic SuperDave.
And this means what??
Really?
Lin Wood is good at what he does.
He stays within the law and if he is your atty you have a pit bull working for you.
So he may not be a likable guy. He is not getting paid to be liked.
All this is is stuff posted to incite anger and hatred toward the R's and their legal team but it means nothing. Really.
Since the criticism comes from a person who is himself was CONVICTED of witness tampering, Maybe not the best source.
Other forensic pathologists, most notably former New York City Coroner Michael Baden and Pittsburgh Coroner Cyril Wecht, have made similar observations about Meyer's report of the Ramsey autopsy.
I have to tell you Cyril wechts opinion carries weight with me.
I'll tell you what it means: it means he's just the kind of person you CLAIM to be disgusted by--a person who makes money off this little girl's dead body. He likes to portray himself as the lawyer to the damned, dedicated to defending the people who have been condemned by society, sort of a legal version of Saint Jude, the patron saint of lost causes. But his only cause is how much money he can get. He's a cheap-shot artist who grabs what he can as quickly as he can.
Well, Scarlett, the use of litigation to increase a lawyer's personal wealth is called barratry, and it IS a disbarring offense. And this joker was brazen enough to brag about it in open court.
Which means he's good at being bad. He's a litigation lawyer on top of it, which means that he's not bound by even the flimsy regulations that reign in defense lawyers.
Whatever it does for you, even Hal Haddon and his crew, who could write a book about dirty tricks, hate Lin Wood.
That's an insult to pit bulls everywhere.
That's a damn good thing! Because he'd starve to death!
"Nothing," my *advertiser censored*.
Has anyone seen the TNT show Cold Justice? They go to small towns, revisit cold cases. Tonight they had a case where it turned out the GJ indicted who they suspected 30 years ago when the murder first happened. Has any one thought about submitting JB's case? You have to have some connection to the case...(I tried to start a new bread but it said I didn't have the privileges to do so)
I'll tell you what it means: it means he's just the kind of person you CLAIM to be disgusted by--a person who makes money off this little girl's dead body. He likes to portray himself as the lawyer to the damned, dedicated to defending the people who have been condemned by society, sort of a legal version of Saint Jude, the patron saint of lost causes. But his only cause is how much money he can get. He's a cheap-shot artist who grabs what he can as quickly as he can.
Well, Scarlett, the use of litigation to increase a lawyer's personal wealth is called barratry, and it IS a disbarring offense. And this joker was brazen enough to brag about it in open court.
Which means he's good at being bad. He's a litigation lawyer on top of it, which means that he's not bound by even the flimsy regulations that reign in defense lawyers.
Whatever it does for you, even Hal Haddon and his crew, who could write a book about dirty tricks, hate Lin Wood.
That's an insult to pit bulls everywhere.
That's a damn good thing! Because he'd starve to death!
"Nothing," my *advertiser censored*.
It wouldn't hurt to send it in as a suggestion, but looking at their website, it seems like the focus is on very obscure murder cases. I think they want to do cases where there is a better chance they will have actually have an impact.
Has anyone seen the TNT show Cold Justice? They go to small towns, revisit cold cases. Tonight they had a case where it turned out the GJ indicted who they suspected 30 years ago when the murder first happened. Has any one thought about submitting JB's case? You have to have some connection to the case...(I tried to start a new bread but it said I didn't have the privileges to do so)
Here is a link regarding the JonBenet Ramsey Grand Jury that may answer some questions:
http://jfjbr.tripod.com/truth/summary.html
Alex Hunter threatened to prosecute anyone who "broke" their Grand Jury secrecy oath.
However, he didn't utter a pip when one grand juror actually spoke on camera to none other than PMPT's Schiller. Schiller then edited her remarks to make it appear the grand jury didn't indict the Ramseys...ha. (Schiller would sell his mother's soul to the Devil if it got him a deal.) That "documentary" in fact was aired the night of Patsy Ramsey's "proper burial" rites.
Darnay Hoffman actually won a decision on behalf of Linda Hoffman-Pugh (no relation) in a Colorado court allowing witnesses to speak about grand jury proceedings in which they were involved. Hunter appealed, of course.
Media analysts were quite excited about this and thought Darnay would have continued to win the appeals, changing a grievous error of law practiced in the state which denies citizens their Constitutional rights.
Alas, Darnay had "issues" and didn't bother to show up in court on the appeal, so he lost and Hunter won by default. It was a colossal blunder by Darnay, but we know he continued to score great victories in peripheral legal cases related to the murder and then fail miserably in the final judgments for lack of resources and/or competency and abilities.
Yes, this case has proven beyond any doubt that in America money and connections can twist the law any way those who have it want it to go.
JMO.
Alex Hunter threatened to prosecute anyone who "broke" their Grand Jury secrecy oath.
However, he didn't utter a pip when one grand juror actually spoke on camera to none other than PMPT's Schiller. Schiller then edited her remarks to make it appear the grand jury didn't indict the Ramseys...ha. (Schiller would sell his mother's soul to the Devil if it got him a deal.) That "documentary" in fact was aired the night of Patsy Ramsey's "proper burial" rites.
Darnay Hoffman actually won a decision on behalf of Linda Hoffman-Pugh (no relation) in a Colorado court allowing witnesses to speak about grand jury proceedings in which they were involved. Hunter appealed, of course.
Media analysts were quite excited about this and thought Darnay would have continued to win the appeals, changing a grievous error of law practiced in the state which denies citizens their Constitutional rights.
Alas, Darnay had "issues" and didn't bother to show up in court on the appeal, so he lost and Hunter won by default. It was a colossal blunder by Darnay, but we know he continued to score great victories in peripheral legal cases related to the murder and then fail miserably in the final judgments for lack of resources and/or competency and abilities.
Yes, this case has proven beyond any doubt that in America money and connections can twist the law any way those who have it want it to go.
JMO.
Or just that when there is not enough evidence we don't drag people into court and try to convict them of something that they did not do.
There's a third choice here. Hunter could have (should have) honored the Grand Jury indictment and dismissed when the case was brought to court. What he did is illegal in other states. I'm not familiar enough with Colorado law to know if he violated the law but at the very least there should be an investigation into Hunter's actions.
Why would he do that if he knew that it was not a valid case. He is obligated to be ethical when doing his job. He did not charge because he knew it was a bogus indictment.
Hunter and ethical do not belong in the same sentence. For reference look up the Michael Manning case. That should give anyone a glimpse into the situation.
JMO