by James Sullivan | Aug 13, 2011 | Felony, Law, Lawyer, Theft
When you are charged with the crime, the experience isn’t pleasant and theft charges can be very complicated to clutter through. After just about all, there are several various kinds of theft charges; some are misdemeanors...
by James Sullivan | Aug 13, 2011 | Credit score, Crime, Criminal record, Identity theft, Law, Lawyer, Prosecutor, Theft
Learning that you are a victim of the stolen identity is actually insulting enough. Understanding the incredible effort it may need to repair your own name and credit might be akin to kicking a guy while he’s lower. It can take 1000s of dollars and dozens...
by James Sullivan | Aug 11, 2011 | Bail, Constitution, Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution, Excessive bail, Law, Supreme Court of the United States, United States
There isn’t any right to bail developed by the Constitution. The Eighth Modification states that “Excessive bail shall not be expected… ” but it doesn’t create the to bail. In Bunch v. Boyle, 342 ALL OF US 1,...
by James Sullivan | Aug 11, 2011 | Crime, Crime and Justice, Criminal law, Criminal procedure, Falsifiability, Injustice, Law, Legal burden of proof, Prosecutor
The criminal justice program relies heavily upon evidence to prove an individual’s guilt or purity. The burden of proof happens to be the deciding factor on whether one is convicted of the crime or is placed free. If evidence shown in the criminal trial is...
by James Sullivan | Aug 11, 2011 | Courtroom, Defendant, District attorney, Judge, Jury, Jury trial, Law, Texas, Trial
Who’s the Judge and what’s his role? The Judge is the one who is elevated about the Bench in the leading of the court docket. While the Judge is needed by law to rule about the “admissibility” of evidence as it makes trial, the jury is...
by James Sullivan | Aug 11, 2011 | Crime, Criminal procedure, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, Jury, Law, Lawyer, Legal burden of proof, Prosecutor, Reasonable doubt
Inside a criminal trial, the federal government must prove the sun and rain of the criminal offense the defendant is actually accused of beyond an reasonable doubt. So, just what does this imply? Everyone has heard about proof beyond an reasonable doubt. We view it...