English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

ok...so im arguing with my friend....he says you cant sue the president...and i said " yes you can, you got the rigth to sue anyone aslong as it is a valid reason" and he said" no you cant, hes incharge of everything,you cant sue him!"......so whos right??

fake record:

if he wants to win teh case, and he knows the judge....and he tells the judge to mess with my criminal record and put crimes under my name, of which none never happen.......if this were to happen, can i ask for proof (my signuture in the ticket or jail whatever contract) even if thats not what im being sued on?

and isnt rigth that even i can sue this judge ? if i believe he messed up my criminal record? even though he himself is a judge.

2007-07-07 20:37:01 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

5 answers

As for the first question ... yes, technically you can sue the president, however suing a sitting president is not possible. There is a thing called executive privilege ... it prevents anyone other than congress from taking legal proceedings against a sitting president, because he required to perform his duties while in office without delay. Once he his out of office, then legal proceedings can pursue, but just be warned ... you cannot sue him for anything he does in his official capacity as president (like the War in Iraq, or 'No Child Left Behind'). Official actions of a president are exempt from legal action (except by Congress). Private citizens cannot sue the president because they don't like what he's doing in office. Now, if the president as a private citizen were to do something to you, then yes ... you could sue him. Say, a company he owns is responsible for devaluing your property with malice aforethought, or he stiffs you out on a business payment. Then you most definitely can sue a president.

As for the second question ... what you are describing is beyond illegal. A judge cannot fabricate a criminal record to influence the outcome of a trail. You would need proof to show that the criminal charges are false, and to implicate the judge you would need to prove he had knowledge or was responsible for those actions. If your criminal record has been falsified there will be proof. And a judge found guilty of doing such a thing would be sent to jail as well ... that is a severe violation of judicial ethics (under the color of authority). Judges are not invincible ... there is always a system of judicial review over other judges (except for the US Supreme Court). The sole purpose of this judicial oversight system is to ensure judges don't do things like this ... and if they do that they are punished accordingly.

2007-07-07 23:47:52 · answer #1 · answered by blursd2 5 · 1 0

it may look that each and every physique answering so a ways has neglected some mandatory information: What she truly sent. as an occasion, did she deliver purely the hyperlink, or did she say a collection of issues with the hyperlink that say you probably did in reality dedicate [X crime] or are an [X form of criminal] in case you haven't any longer been tried yet? this could truly capture her in a lie, on account which you're purely accused of the crime so a ways. If she is asserting you as some thing that has no longer yet been shown, that would count quantity as defamation. If she purely suggested which you're accused of X, then she technically isn't mendacity. Maryland has no criminal regulation on defamation with the exceptions of particular situations with married couples and a "women human beings's distinctive function." So no rely what, this could contain a lawsuit. you are able to sue for something, this is purely a rely of no rely if the decide or discover on your choose (or perhaps hear the case to start with). To that, i won't say. Your litigation criminal expert could inspite of the incontrovertible fact that.

2016-10-01 03:12:56 · answer #2 · answered by dickirson 4 · 0 0

Criminal Records Search Database : http://InfoSearchDetective.com/Support

2015-09-22 17:06:14 · answer #3 · answered by Nancy 1 · 0 0

You might have a problem finding a lawyer who will work the case. If you do, it's going to cost you a bundle.

Oh yeah, then there's that Executive privilege thing to deal with.

Good luck

2007-07-07 20:43:44 · answer #4 · answered by Jack 6 · 0 1

You can sue , or at least attempt to sue the President. People already have.

2007-07-07 20:41:42 · answer #5 · answered by sociald 7 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers