Michael0808
On Time Out
- Joined
- Jun 10, 2020
- Messages
- 535
- Reaction score
- 4,525
I’m not attorney, and I will add that by “defending” defense attorneys I’m not defending the defendants. Obvious guilt is obvious guilt. But we need defense attorneys don’t we? They believe in the law and the constitution. They protect all of our rights. Even those of the guilty. Anyway, it’s an interesting profession. We need them. And it’s my understanding that they don’t ask. Because if the defendant confessed, they would be lying in court while defending them. JmoCurious question that I've often wondered but never really dug into... does a defense attorney generally know whether their client is actually guilty of the crime they are charged of? Or how does that work? I cannot imagine having motivation to build a defense case on someone I knew was guilty. But I also can't imagine the not knowing and trying to build a case. Any attorneys here to shed light?