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3 answers

Depends to whom and in what way (taped?, witnessed?) and under what conditions (impaired?, under duress?) the confession took place. I was in a lawsuit recently which went all the way to a jury, and the other driver's admissions WERE allowed, but it wasn't so simple. There were a lot of legal wranglings to have the testimony stricken, to prove its relevance, etc. It would seem logical that an admission is cut-and-dried proof, but, circumstances like the witness of the confession's motives will be questioned. Good luck!

2006-07-01 05:57:02 · answer #1 · answered by bigheadbride 6 · 1 0

Usually the Truth is self evident.
The one time a fire hydrant jumped behind me as I was backing up. I apologized to the fire crew , the police and the water department guy that showed up. offered the right a check and they sent me a bill. once again i offered my apologies and sent the check. I did not received a ticket, nor insurance ding or any record of the accident. Hey be honest and pay for your mistakes, it may cost you but your Conscience will let you sleep well at night.

2006-06-24 15:35:40 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

it depends on who was right in the situation

2006-06-23 06:27:40 · answer #3 · answered by latoia 2 · 0 0

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