Doing the drywall at the new McDonalds
Gender: Male
Rank: Ace Attorney
Joined: Fri May 25, 2012 1:46 am
Posts: 1586
CatMuto wrote:
McCoy, I think you're looking at this a little too... rose-tinted glass-y.
No defense attorney has to believe their client. There are lawyers out there whose clients tell them that they did commit a crime, yet the lawyer still tries to get them acquitted. While it wasn't about law, Mr Hutz hit the nail pretty well in one of the Simpsons' Episodes.
"There is the truth *shakes his head* and then there is the truth *smiles and nods*"
Or even Edgeworth in 1-2, telling Redd White to "confess his crime" referring to the wiretape, rather than the actual murder. Granted, he was the prosecutor, but still, it's playing the system. Although technically, that would not work, seeing as how being convicted for putting a wiretape is possible, but would not help in the murder itself. While it's the same case, he can still be convicted for the murder, since it is a different felony.
But once again, this is demanding real, proper, logical law inside the AA-verse.
C-A
I never said that they had to believe them, but it is their best interest to go out of their way to not hear anything that would get them in legal trouble. Sure, there are attorneys who find out that their client is guilty and still have them lie on the stand, but those attorneys wouldn't admit it because they'd be guilty of perjury. And since most attorneys are generally law-fearing and/or don't want to get into a situation that makes them confront the bad part of their job and/or have a moral issue with claiming a guilty person is innocent, they have to go about it in a certain way so they never have to confront the possibility that their client is guilty. In a way, that is "believing in your client". Even if you think your client is an evil person who no doubt killed the guy, you're going to want to separate those feelings from the case and operate so that that hunch you have isn't confirmed, either in court or in private. That was my point. It's not really "believing in the client", but it might as well be called that since that's what the end result appears like to everyone else. In reality, it's more like "Not getting yourself into a situation in which you could be caught falsifying testimony".
I used to have Sam Waterston as my avatar but photobucket added a watermark and also Law & Order has been cancelled for 10 years so it's time for me to move on.