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Advice for Legal Pleas
If
you have been charged with a crime, there is something you should know
about the most commonly asked legal question by people who have been
accused of committing a crime: “Should I plead guilty or not guilty?”
While many people debate the pros and cons of pleading guilty or innocent,
through my experience in Criminal Justice, I have learned that if you
have committed a crime, it is always wise to plea innocent, regardless of
the case.
In a courtroom,
evidence is required; and this evidence must show beyond a shadow of a
doubt that you committed the crime. While it depends on the
crime–and there are some exceptions—pleading innocent to the
crime can stall the procedures, as well as force the legal
representatives to show proof of the crime for which you are accused.
In previous
courtrooms, thousands of persons have accepted plea bargains or else
committed guilty of crimes. Few of these people felt that they had no
choice but to plea guilty or else accept a plea. The fact is, many of
these people were accused of a crime; and the courtrooms convicted these people
on circumstantial evidence that was inconclusive. Thus, after the penalty
was set, and the person was fined or put in jail, the courts later found
that the prosecuted was in fact innocent.
Thus, no matter what
your case happens to be, the best legal advice
you can get is to plea not guilty and force the courts to prove beyond a
shadow of doubt that you are in fact guilty under law.
If you have been
convicted of a lesser crime, you should still adhere to this advice. It
may help you to avoid paying hefty fines for parking and traffic
violations by forcing the prosecution to procure evidence.
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