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My experience is that persons arrested or making voluntary statements to police almost always say much more than they should to the police and almost always later regret their cooperation. Police may indicate that if you cooperate, they will "put in a good word for you." Most defendants are much better off saying nothing, neither offending nor helping the police and thereby preserving the confidentiality of any information or evidence which has not come to light. Police do not arrest persons to be their friend. Also, if you are detained by police, ask if you are "under arrest". If the answer is "No", LEAVE. |
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Your Preliminary Hearing is your best (and typically only) pre-trial opportunity to cross-examine the witnesses against you and assess their credibility, how they hold up to questioning, what they know and whether their testimony is likely to hurt you at trial. Without that opportunity it is usually impossible to accurately predict the outcome of a trial. It would be like predicting the outcome of a football game where you haven't seen the opposing team play. Also, witnesses are not as rehearsed and well prepared at a Preliminary Hearing as they are likely to be at trial when they have discussed their testimony several times with law enforcement personnel. It is therefore typically very beneficial to transcribe the prosecution witnesses' testimony at the Preliminary Hearing before they polish it and coordinate it with other witnesses for trial. The prosecution's case at a Preliminary Hearing is often presented by the arresting officer and not by a prosecutor. The police officer's typical lack of trial sophistication often presents defense opportunities to obtain admissions which will not be available later. Most Defendants can not effectively cross-examine at a Preliminary Hearing. Between being nervous, inexperienced and unaware of rules of evidence and trial strategies, they have almost no opportunity to be effective. The art of cross-examination is as much that of stating a fact and challenging the witness to disagree as it is the art of asking appropriate questions. It is difficult to become effective at cross-examination without many, many practice opportunities. Since
Defendants are usually sentenced more harshly if convicted
at trial than if they had pled guilty, Defendants should
not stand trial without a well-founded belief that they
will be found not guilty developed after the preliminary
hearing. |
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Also,
in the event that the District Justice makes a bad decision
at the Preliminary Hearing by binding over specific criminal
charges which were not adequately supported at the Preliminary
Hearing, the defense would be unable to obtain review of
that decision (by filing a Motion for Habeus Corpus and
to Quash the Criminal Complaint) without a transcript of
the Preliminary Hearing as an exhibit to the Petition. |
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Defense testimony at a Preliminary Hearing can, however, haunt the defense later if it appears inconsistent with their testimony at trial. So a Defendant
can only hurt themselves by presenting testimony at a Preliminary
Hearing ... they can not help themselves. |
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ARD is entirely at the discretion of the County District Attorney. A District Attorney in one county can offer ARD for a category of crime where an adjacent county would not offer ARD. A Judge
can not sentence a Defendant to ARD without the District
Attorney's consent. The District Attorney can withhold their
consent for any reason or no reason such as the reason, "I'm
tough on crime so re-elect me to office." The Judge
can sentence to "Section 17" for certain drug
offenses without the District Attorney's consent. Section
17 is quite similar to ARD, being fines and probation without
conviction. It applies to only drug offenses. |
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However, a Judge will convict if one person, the Judge, thinks you are guilty. A Jury will only convict if all twelve jurors conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that you are guilty. Judges may become cynical as a result of their job. They may believe that they have been lied to so many times by so many people that they are unwilling to believe very much of anything. A Judge, in my opinion, will convict if they think that you are "probably guilty" while a Jury will only convict if they are satisfied that you are "guilty beyond a reasonable doubt." It is quite a substantial difference. Your chances of being acquitted (found not guilty) are much better with a Jury than with a Judge (subject to variations among Judges and, less predictably, variations among Juries). Usually,
a Defendant is better served by a Jury trial than by a waiver
trial. |
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In my opinion, if you get into trouble together with someone else, you should do your best to stay in communication with them so that you can get out of trouble with them. The worst strategy for a co-defendant is to worry about whether other co-defendants are blaming them for something in exchange for sentencing leniency and thereby wondering whether they should blame somebody else in return. This often leads to co-defendants blaming each other and providing the prosecution with evidence which the prosecution would not have if each Defendant relied upon their right under the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution to refrain from incriminating themselves. If you are arrested with one or more co-defendants, I recommend that all co-defendants meet jointly with one or more attorneys to determine whether it is in their best interests to present a common front or whether to have separate representation. Notwithstanding
the potential for a conflict of interest and the potential
that the first attorney might be disqualified, I recommend
that defendants who get into trouble together do their best
to get out of trouble together. |
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However,
you may be uncomfortable hiring an attorney who would be
just as willing to prosecute you as to defend you. |
Nothing on this site is intended as conveying legal advice nor as creating an attorney/client relationship.
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The Law Offices of Marvin H. Gold and Travis Gold · 237 S. York Road · Hatboro, PA 19040 · 215-672-2458 · Fax: 215-672-9460