Observation: if you are part of a crew of prostitutes, perhaps it would be not a very fine idea to show up (with friends) dressed as prostitutes in support of your friend who is charged with prostitution - let alone it not being a fine idea to attempt to keep the friend's spirits up by giggling and waving from the gallery towards the box.
For if you were to do so, you just might run the risk of being recognized by a detective there to be a witness on that case, and, if you (and all your friends) have *open* bench warrants, you might then be arrested by armed officers, even though one of you tries to hide under the court pews themselves. And then there's the possible contempt charges. It's a long hypothetical, but my days are filled with them.
Yep. Just sayin is all.
Yep.
And in the vein of just sayin, trying to hide under a bench. . .
**
Dialog of the Day:
I was interviewing a client in jail when Corrections trooped a bunch of clients from earlier in the day past the cell the client and I were in. I get a chorus of "Hey - he's great! Do whatever he tells you to! You're in good hands!"
Client being interviewed: That's pretty cool, but if you were all that good they'd be out of jail right now, right?
Scoplaw: You're a smart man. I can see we're going to work well together on your case.
**
Tues/Wed is generally our busiest stretch of the week. Especially if we're in trial on Tues. from a case that rolled over from Mon. The long and short of it is that the week looks like this: Sunday - 4hrs; Monday - 12hrs (15 if trial); Tues - 15hrs (same if trial); Wed - 12hrs (15 if trial); Thurs - 9hrs (15 if trial); Fri 8hrs.
Thurs (without trial) and Friday are more leisurely, even in court - we take breaks, get to eat lunch. When we leave on those days, we can even sort of generally goof off for some of the remaining hours if we finish court super early (like at noon). It's almost like being on vacation, and we, of course, do not hesitate to go out to lunch if the opportunity arises, given that we've usually logged 40 hours on the week already.
However, we always crunch from Mon 6am to at least Wed 5pm, even if the state kills all the trial cases by making offers our clients can't refuse or nolle prossing cases.
I write this because we picked up a new trial partner on Monday, and I am just flat out impressed. The Lioness got flung into that thick schedule and didn't blink; she was there, was engaged, and really got some gold nuggets for us throughout her first days, which I certainly just spent learning the ropes.
Now I've worked with some really good people, and I certainly don't want to seem to take anything away from them by comparison. Since I've started, 3 of my full-time and more Sr. trial partners have moved on, either laterally or through promotions. The most Sr. trial partner (when I just started) is now doing felony cases with my old felony "mentor." Another is in Juvie, while another will be in a different county court non-jail division. All of them were great to work with, and I learned from each of them.
I've also gone to trial with 3 other attorneys who jumped on cases, and almost went (heavy prep) with two more. Mostly though, I've been to trial with The Mayor - I honestly don't know how many times, largely do to a string of sicknesses/vacations with the other trial partners of the moment. The Mayor and I work so very well together, there's no need for in-depth discussion about *how* we do things - we just talk about the case/motions and do them. And we've had a lot of successes, in no small part due to our complimentary styles.
One of the patterns that seems to work is that I'll do pre-trial motions then Voir Dire, The Mayor will open and cross the major witness/victim, I'll cross the minor witnesses and do MJOAs/Jury Instructions, and the Mayor will close. Though if we do it the opposite way, it also works well enough. (Basically it seems to make sense to have the major witness cross paired up with the close - otherwise we kind of flip-flop the pieces to keep us fresh, the jury interested, and the work spread out. And, depending on the case, if we do our jobs very well, there is no close - we win at MJOA1 or 2.)
So, given that I'm used to only going to trial with the same people since last November, it was kind of weird prepping with a new partner at 8pm, after a day which featured us calling cases at 8am. "I do things this way - how do you like to do them?" isn't something I'm real used to saying, let alone as I'm trying to crunch through 30 odd cases set for trial. Let alone to someone who is absorbing a massive amount of information on the fly and should have by any right been absolutely overwhelmed.
But she did absolutely fantastic both with the prep, learning the ropes on all our "regular" cases, and handling anything we just threw at her.
The irony of course, is that she's due for vacation, so it will be The Mayor and I going yet again to trial tomorrow. Not that I mind as I love the man dearly and completely trust him. Still, I admit I got pretty excited over our new partner - and it would have been particularly good to go with her on a few of our new cases, given the facts, her interests and experience, and the ideas she came up with on the fly. Soon enough though I think.
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