Edit: Still think Andy was one coy mothafucka

Could maybe be a little more persuasive, but yours isn't objective, so I would say it's fine. They can't be looking for writing of the caliber you would actually file with the court. Keep in mind I base this on absolutely nothing other than my gut feeling.calbarexamftw wrote:Forgot to use the word because in headings. Headings were more like, "The Admission of Mr and Mrs X's Statements Would Violate the Sixth Amendment." Otherwise dominated PT-B. How much does the headings cost me? Is that persuasive enough?
Fucking Andy and his close corporation.esq wrote:Still think Andy was one coy mothafucka
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What happened to you on the PTs? And hey man I missed a few remedies on Q4 and I'm pretty ruined on Q6. I didn't exactly remember the rules but I made some shit up and continued the best I could. Q5 apparently was a huge thing that there was a corporation in there. I kind of mentioned it but I didn't think it was too important. That's where I messed up obviously.TheLegalOne wrote:I don't know what the hell happened to me on both PTs and Q4 (missed a remedy) and Q6 (I tried to force the answer I wanted bcz I couldn't figure it out)...FUCK!!!! I'll be repeating it in July. Arrgh!!! For now, hello Glenlivet, I knew I should have skipped the last three days!
Judge Philip Banks wrote:Fucking Andy and his close corporation.esq wrote:Still think Andy was one coy mothafucka
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Even if the corporation WAS the partner the court would pierce that veil in a heartbeat since it was an alter-ego AND Andy committed an intentional tort as well as breached his duty of care to his other partners trying to use the corporation to shield him.Biotech wrote:The partnership was in the business of publishing the newsletter. The only way he's shielded personally is if the corp was the partner instead and it wasn't. Personally I don't think Andy knew much about partnership or defamation law but he's about to find out.
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arizzle wrote:Can someone explain to me the relevance of the Melendez-Diaz case in PT-B? That was the cocaine affidavits one.
It seemed the only relevant affidavit was the one from the doctor.
I basically just said it reiterated the holding in Crawford about the confrontation clause, etc, but otherwise I struggled in finding a way to use it.
I can't really say without violating board rules BUT it took me forever to figure out the 1st part of PTA and by the time I did, I abbreviated what I wanted to say on the second part to ensure I finished. On PTB, I got my outline switched around and started talking about the wrong cases for the wrong parts (I hope this makes sense), then I said screw it, and just kept going because I type slow and was running out of time, so I starting mixing everything under the second part of the call. Just a total F-cluster!Astronaut Teemo wrote:What happened to you on the PTs? And hey man I missed a few remedies on Q4 and I'm pretty ruined on Q6. I didn't exactly remember the rules but I made some shit up and continued the best I could. Q5 apparently was a huge thing that there was a corporation in there. I kind of mentioned it but I didn't think it was too important. That's where I messed up obviously.TheLegalOne wrote:I don't know what the hell happened to me on both PTs and Q4 (missed a remedy) and Q6 (I tried to force the answer I wanted bcz I couldn't figure it out)...FUCK!!!! I'll be repeating it in July. Arrgh!!! For now, hello Glenlivet, I knew I should have skipped the last three days!
Joie wrote:arizzle wrote:Can someone explain to me the relevance of the Melendez-Diaz case in PT-B? That was the cocaine affidavits one.
It seemed the only relevant affidavit was the one from the doctor.
I basically just said it reiterated the holding in Crawford about the confrontation clause, etc, but otherwise I struggled in finding a way to use it.
The business records and official records hearsay exception
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This one, if you ask me was a little tricky and I think they set it up as a trap. The affidavit from the doctor itself wasn't in issue. The motion itself concerned 1. The nonverbal statements of the mom and 2. The verbal statements of the dad.arizzle wrote:Can someone explain to me the relevance of the Melendez-Diaz case in PT-B? That was the cocaine affidavits one.
It seemed the only relevant affidavit was the one from the doctor.
I basically just said it reiterated the holding in Crawford about the confrontation clause, etc, but otherwise I struggled in finding a way to use it.
Me too. They were three works of creative non-fiction.Elms wrote:My essays today were loltastic.
Interesting. I do remember thinking about that, but then decided the Melendez affidavits were in fact prepared specifically for the criminal proceeding, whereas the 911 recording/transcript was kept/created as a matter of regular routine.Astronaut Teemo wrote:This one, if you ask me was a little tricky and I think they set it up as a trap. The affidavit from the doctor itself wasn't in issue. The motion itself concerned 1. The nonverbal statements of the mom and 2. The verbal statements of the dad.arizzle wrote:Can someone explain to me the relevance of the Melendez-Diaz case in PT-B? That was the cocaine affidavits one.
It seemed the only relevant affidavit was the one from the doctor.
I basically just said it reiterated the holding in Crawford about the confrontation clause, etc, but otherwise I struggled in finding a way to use it.
When considering the verbal statements of the dad, they were made to a 911 operator which may become admissible as either a public record or a business record. Public Record is pretty easy to beat because the rule 803(8) stated that it doesn't apply to criminal cases where the public record is made by law enforcement. CRAWFORD considered 911 operators LEs but "only for the purposes of this case". So it might not apply here and it might get in.. Well shit..
The prosecution will then try to claim it's hearsay subject to the business record exception. MELENDEZ now comes in and claims that you can't do that because it's testimonial. even if it's a business record, "If you're whole business to gathering evidence for later use at a criminal proceeding, its all testimonial regardless of if it's a business record and its still subject to 6ACC.
Now there's a charge.
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