a good friend of mine was arrested yesterday for assult on an officer. He did not assult the officer, he did not even have anytime to assult him because he was tackeled to the ground. Assult is a felony but they are syaing if they can get people to write letters to the judge they can drop it down to a misdaminor. What wording should i use when i write this letter? are there any templates that i can use to make me sound better???
He is a great guy, Nice, smart, sweet... He is doing his best to keep his life on track and provide for his family... That is basically his number one priority... Please someone help. I need to write an Amazing letter... but i have never been great at writing so i need some help.
2007-03-30
10:13:48
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7 answers
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asked by
Anonymous
in
Politics & Government
➔ Law & Ethics
The Attorney has asked his FRIENDS and FAMILY to write a letter explaining what a good person he is. not wether or not we saw what happened. I need to write a letter of what a good person he is so please stop with the jerk comments about worthless and guilty! If you are not going to help me with the letter i can care less about your opinion
2007-03-30
10:30:33 ·
update #1
Begin letter w/ To the honorable judge (name) and then in your own words explain the situation and that you witnessed same and that you are willing to swear out an affidavit to that effect !!Usually most judges look at more than just the initial charge,past criminal history, officers record etc. If the young man in question was arrested under false pretenses he has legal recourse.MAIN THING IS GET AN ATTORNEY !!If he is found not guilty I would advise you to ''leave it alone".You and I both know '''the Boyz In Blue'" stick together and can make life miserable for ya even tho ya were declared innocent !! Trust me I have been thru this and the hassle IS NOT worth it !!
2007-03-30 10:30:16
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answer #1
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answered by AZRAEL 5
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short of threats, you are able to write in spite of you want to a decide. be careful nonetheless - what you write isn't privileged, and the decide is loose to demonstrate it over to the prosecutor. You had more advantageous perfect be certain that your letter does no longer admit data which both a million) substantiate the prosecutor's account or 2) undermine a protection - this may properly be both direct (you admit a fact which bolsters the prosecutor's case) or oblique (you admit a fact which both contradicts or in the different case weakens a authentic declare you submit at trial; you may also harm your self in case you submit suggestion which neglects certain extremely mandatory data - raising those replaced information later on will lead on your being confronted with a previous inconsistent fact). the biggest aspect is this - the decide gained't settle on the data of the case consistent inclusive of your letter, through technique of trial. if you're being prosecuted, and until eventually the DA has the same opinion to drop the expenditures, the decide gained't accomplish that per a letter outdoors the trial procedure.
2016-12-03 01:10:11
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Assaulting an officer does not require your 'good friend' to physically touch the officer. If your 'good friend' told the officer he was 'going to beat him up' etc etc - any speech or action that would have made the officer feel threatened that your 'good friend' was going to inflict bodily harm - your friend is guilty of assaulting an officer.
Remember assault does not require physical contact, it just requires the reasonable threat thereof. Consult an attorney before writing a letter to any judge - unfortunately the probative value of any letter written by a good friend is minimal- unless it goes to trial and you are called as some kind of character witness. If possible, get in touch with his defense attorney.
2007-03-30 10:22:43
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answer #3
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answered by aristotle1776 4
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If you were not there or didn't actually see it, your letter is absolutely worthless. Keep in mind that whatever cops say is automatically true to most judges, and will always be backed up by other cops. So, if you're doing this to make your friend feel better, go ahead. If you think it will make a difference at the trial, it won't. You'll need to be sworn in as a witness.
What was your "nice, smart, sweet" friend doing that cops had to tackle him, anyway? Probably nothing, right?
2007-03-30 10:27:20
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answer #4
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answered by Yesugi 5
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Obviously you want the judge to read it, so keep it short and to the point. Stick with what you know, and support your conclusions. "He's a great guy" is fine, but only if you support that with how long you've known him and specific examples of why he's a great guy. If you can't do that, don't say he's a great guy.
I would say start with explaining what qualifies you as a character reference, as in how long and what capacity you know him. You first have to sell the judge on why your words have value, but keep this paragraph to the subject of selling your opinion, not what the opinion actually is.
In subsequent paragraphs, state your opinions separately (good family guy, good work ethic, good neighbor, etc) with specific examples of occassions you've seen that quality demonstrated.
Assuming you didn't see the incident, explain why you think that what he's charged with completely contradicts everything you know. I don't believe he'd do this because....
Good luck.
2007-03-30 10:25:43
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answer #5
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answered by open4one 7
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Ask the attorney.
Funny thing about judges...they are people too.
This means they have their likes and dislikes too.
First rule of courtroom procedure is to learn the judge and what he/she likes and dislikes.
The attorney will know what the judge wants to hear.
I find this unusual though...usually the prosecutor is the only one who can set the charges not the judge.
2007-03-30 11:13:13
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answer #6
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answered by Dr. Luv 5
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your letter will most likely be used as an admission of guilt or evidence to support the prosecutions case. consult a lawyer before writing the letter.
2007-03-30 10:18:23
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answer #7
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answered by agavemike 2
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