Criminal Defense Lawyer
Lawyers are perhaps one of the highly respected
professionals and probably the most despised too. Depending
on which side of the scale of justice you are standing, your lawyer
can make or break your reputation at the expense of their
credibility. A criminal defense lawyer is not exempt to this
seemingly inevitable experience.
A criminal defense lawyer
represents a person who is accused of any criminal acts. These acts
vary according to the nature and magnitude of its commission. A
person facing charges of drug crime may have been suspiciously or
red-handedly involved in custody, and trade of illegal drugs among
other things. A defendant who is accused of violent crimes that
resulted to the injury or even death of another person may have
wrongly or purportedly done any of these—aggression among women and
children in the homes, hostile behavior against a minority or other
ethnic groups, and killing of a person regardless if its hot
bloodedly or cold-bloodedly done. Other criminal acts that a
criminal defense lawyer would have to counsel in the court of law
are sexual abuse and assault, acts of lasciviousness, and
heist.
A criminal
defense lawyer may have mustered all the tricks in presenting
evidence, jostling with reason for reason, and delivering
oratorical pieces just to convince the members of the jury and the
audience present at the time of the trial. Regardless if the one
accused is the culprit or just mistakenly named in the crime,
criminal defense lawyer will do in all his or her power to make the
client appear innocent of the crime. If the accused is proven
guilty beyond reasonable doubt the criminal defense lawyer will
find all the measures to lessen the sentence.
A criminal defense lawyer does not only
represent the client in court and make him or her acquitted of the
crime, the criminal defense lawyer also provides counseling
services. The criminal defense lawyer will inform the client of his
or her rights and the possible financial, emotional and physical
effects of the case. For those who have been convicted already, a
criminal defense lawyer can still find possible ways to make the
client be freed from any legal obligations up to the extent of
making his or her slate clean. The latter is a case to case to case
to case base and varies from state to state. Some of the ways the
criminal defense lawyer can help the client is to petition to the
court for a retrial, review of the decision, and petition for
habeas procedures from the higher court.
The National Association of Criminal
Defense Lawyers (NACDL) is the organization that took the
responsibility of pressing forward the goals and objectives of
criminal defense lawyers in the United
States. It envisions a fair and just trial of anyone who is
accused of a crime.
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