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‘Hillary Clinton Took Me Through Hell,’ Rape Victim Says

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Sundown

Banned
Never trust a politician that has a history in law. They tend to be disgusting, amoral individuals that will do anything to get ahead.
 

Metaphoreus

This is semantics, and nothing more
So uh you didn't do any research into either of these companies before you wrote out this dribble huh? centre for american freedom is openly conservative (based on their very own about me section! https://americanfreedom.com/about/), has Bill Kristol and Michael goldfarb as a board members (despite your ignorance on who goldfarb is, he is influential in conservative circles), and the Washington free presses about me section(in the very first paragraph!) talks about how their goal is to "uncovering the stories that the professional left hopes will never see the light of day". But I guess looking up actual information wouldn't have allowed you to write that hilarious paragraph!

BRB. Double-checking my post to make sure I didn't say CAF and the Washington Free Beacon are not conservative.





I'm back. I never said that.

Clinton's privates beliefs is the crux of the attack for her court appointed actions. You don't believe that? Is she not being held accountable for them directly, She's not an acting attorney anymore, I don't think at least. No one is asking her to be disbarred as an attorney or anything of the sort.

I don't see how any of that is relevant to our dispute. People are attacking her because they want to damage her political brand, clearly. That doesn't change how we should label her conduct.

1)She did not, individually, endorse those beliefs.

2)Using a defense as an attorney, does not mean you perpetuate or condone something as an individual.

She cited the beliefs as providing authority on which the court could base an order granting her motion. She wanted the court to accept the statement as true, and therefore grant her motion. She perpetuated the belief by putting it forward as true and supported by expert opinion. It doesn't matter whether she privately believed it was true. What matters is that she represented to the court that it was true--or, at least, true-according-to-experts (who know more about the subject than Clinton or the judge, since they're experts).

I'll be happy to review what you find regarding child psychology in the '70s.
 

Chumly

Member
God forbid a defense attorney defend their clients. I would be more concerned if she didn't do everything in her power to defend her client.
 

KingK

Member
Nothing wrong with her doing her job defending her client to the best of her ability, but making light of the situation and laughing about it is indeed pretty sick.

I really wish the Democrats would field a viable alternative to Clinton in case she doesn't work out as planned for any number of reasons. Seems like that might be Biden, but the dude is going to be 73 so I can't really see him carrying out two terms without his age becoming a serious issue. I'm also not a big fan of Clinton. I'll easily vote for her over any Republican, but I really want to have someone I actually like to vote for in the primary.
 

kehs

Banned
B
I don't see how any of that is relevant to our dispute. People are attacking her because they want to damage her political brand, clearly. That doesn't change how we should label her conduct.

Her political brand is currently her personal beliefs. People are shifting her decades old attorney actions into the future. She's not an attorney anymore.

Her actions were within the realms of legal conduct. The concept that was used as a legal measure were (in hindsight) obviously flawed.

She cited the beliefs as providing authority on which the court could base an order granting her motion. She wanted the court to accept the statement as true, and therefore grant her motion. She perpetuated the belief by putting it forward as true and supported by expert opinion.

I'll be happy to review what you find regarding child psychology in the '70s.

She cited testimony as an attorney.
 

poppabk

Cheeks Spread for Digital Only Future
Don't be obtuse. She's quoting someone as part of the defense.
She is quoting someone who apparently has relevant experience for the case. If the prosecution had an expert who stated that it was almost impossible for a 12 year old to lie about a rape with the details the victim gave, should the prosecution lawyer just never mention that if they don't personally believe it is true?
 
Using a then-thought-of-fact for a legal maneuver is not perpetuation.

That's not arguing semantics, that arguing against a misunderstanding of how reality works.

The implication of saying Clinton was perpetuating this defense point(as vermillion said), is that she believed it. As a court appointed attorney, personal beliefs can sometimes differ front legal actions.

I agree with Metaphoreus: the problem isn't whether or not she believed it herself.

But it is an adversarial system. The prosecutor just simply needed to do what you just did . . . counter the things the defense brings up. And the let the jury decide.

It is the job of an attorney to zealously represent their client. If defenders just feel their client might be guilty and doesn't put up a defense, then the system falls apart and people will get railroaded based on the subjective feeling of some defender.

As I said in my response to Gotchaye, defending your client is fine. But with an issue like that, you really have to consider how you're going to go about it.

If you do that, are you allowed to testify against your prior client?

Absolutely not. Everything they said to you is still privileged.
 
I'll be honest, this only makes me respect Hillary Clinton more: Being a public defender is a hard, thankless and misunderstood job that is absolutely crucial to a just society. Anyone who chooses to go into that profession, earns a little respect from me and it doesn't seem like she did anything unethical in this case.
.

Not exactly Hillary's biggest fan myself, but it sounds like she was doing her job. A good judicial system requires that DAs take the side of some of the most disgusting human beings on earth and give them a fair shake -- because sometimes those disgusting human beings turn out to be innocent of the crime.
 

Metaphoreus

This is semantics, and nothing more
If you do that, are you allowed to testify against your prior client?

The rules for confidentiality and attorney-client privilege wouldn't be affected. So, generally, no.

Her political brand is currently her personal beliefs. People are shifting her decades old attorney actions into the future. She's not an attorney anymore.

Her actions were within the realms of legal conduct. The concept that was used as a legal measure were (in hindsight) obviously flawed.

She cited testimony as an attorney.

But we're arguing about what label to give her conduct, not whether it's fair to criticize her conduct today or expect her past conduct to predict her future conduct. So your first two paragraphs just aren't relevant.

As for your last sentence, she didn't cite testimony. She cited what she said someone told her. But in any event, I don't see a difference in citing testimony or citing hearsay in whether the citation constitutes perpetuation. Either way, you're saying, "X is true, and you know X is true because such-and-such expert says so, and that supports my position." So, it's perpetuation either way.
 

Sundown

Banned
This is why I hate lawyers.

People justify every thing they do as them just doing their job and cite ethics as further justification for their callous actions. If soldiers following orders can be held accountable for war crimes than so can any amoral shitbag in a suit willing to sell their soul to make a buck off the back of victims.

The fact that someone is supposed to do something because its their job is not an excuse for vile behaviour or actions.

If this story is true, Clinton knowingly helped a child rapist get off easy and was even proud of herself for doing it.

There's nothing anyone can say that makes that acceptable or okay. It's not acceptable and it's not okay.
 
This is why I hate lawyers.

People justify every thing they do as them just doing their job and cite ethics as further justification for their callous actions. If soldiers following orders can be held accountable for war crimes than so can any amoral shitbag in a suit willing to sell their soul to make a buck off the back of victims.

The fact that someone is supposed to do something because its their job is not an excuse for vile behaviour or actions.

If this story is true, Clinton knowingly helped a child rapist get off easy and was even proud of herself for doing it.

There's nothing anyone can say that makes that acceptable or okay. It's not acceptable and it's not okay.

at no point did Hillary know for a fact that her client raped that girl.

Calm down.
 

Mxrz

Member
Reminded of all that junk they threw at Bill Clinton during his first term. Off the top of my head, killed some cops, sold some dope, was half black, had his Grandparents killed, molested every woman in Arkansas.
 

SmokeMaxX

Member
This is why I hate lawyers.

People justify every thing they do as them just doing their job and cite ethics as further justification for their callous actions. If soldiers following orders can be held accountable for war crimes than so can any amoral shitbag in a suit willing to sell their soul to make a buck off the back of victims.

The fact that someone is supposed to do something because its their job is not an excuse for vile behaviour or actions.

If this story is true, Clinton knowingly helped a child rapist get off easy and was even proud of herself for doing it.

There's nothing anyone can say that makes that acceptable or okay. It's not acceptable and it's not okay.
We have a fundamental right to a fair trial in this country. How do you expect a fair trial if the defendant can't even get a lawyer? Do you see what happens when you go down that road?
 

Sundown

Banned
at no point did Hillary know for a fact that her client raped that girl.

Calm down.

That's not what the story alleges and I don't appreciate you telling me to calm down when there is no indication that I'm not.

We have a fundamental right to a fair trial in this country. How do you expect a fair trial if the defendant can't even get a lawyer? Do you see what happens when you go down that road?

How is this relevant to my post? I haven't said any of this.
 

B-Dubs

No Scrubs
This is why I hate lawyers.

People justify every thing they do as them just doing their job and cite ethics as further justification for their callous actions. If soldiers following orders can be held accountable for war crimes than so can any amoral shitbag in a suit willing to sell their soul to make a buck off the back of victims.

The fact that someone is supposed to do something because its their job is not an excuse for vile behaviour or actions.

If this story is true, Clinton knowingly helped a child rapist get off easy and was even proud of herself for doing it.

There's nothing anyone can say that makes that acceptable or okay. It's not acceptable and it's not okay.

Except she never knew for a fact that he did it. Also, its pretty different from a soldier committing war crimes. Our justice system would cease to function without public defenders, EVERYONE has the right to a defense. Even if we don't like them or the crime they are accused of.
 

Derwind

Member
Sadly defending a POS human being is still the job of a lawyer, defense lawyer at that. And if her case won, its because she was better at her job.

Not going to lie though, this is rage inducing stuff.
 

robochimp

Member
This is why I hate lawyers.

People justify every thing they do as them just doing their job and cite ethics as further justification for their callous actions. If soldiers following orders can be held accountable for war crimes than so can any amoral shitbag in a suit willing to sell their soul to make a buck off the back of victims.

The fact that someone is supposed to do something because its their job is not an excuse for vile behaviour or actions.

If this story is true, Clinton knowingly helped a child rapist get off easy and was even proud of herself for doing it.

There's nothing anyone can say that makes that acceptable or okay. It's not a okay.

Do you often sit around stewing about how much you hate lawyers?

In your world defense lawyers wouldn't be able to do their jobs. Defendants have constitutional rights and when the justice system doesn't follow the letter of the law in bringing its case against a person, a lawyer should absolutely bring that up.
 
An attorney's job isn't to argue what's right--it's to argue his/her client's case. Rape is horrible and sorry for that woman, but Clinton was just doing her job. Lawyers be lawin.
 

Sundown

Banned
Except she never knew for a fact that he did it. Also, its pretty different from a soldier committing war crimes. Our justice system would cease to function without public defenders, EVERYONE has the right to a defense. Even if we don't like them or the crime they are accused of.

The victim claims Clinton did know about it. My post is in response to people trying to excuse that. Whether Clinton really knew isn't all that relevant, that people would still defend her is wrong.

My example serves as a point that "doing my job" shouldn't excuse "I'm a shitty person who does shitty things."

The American justice system is fucked and that's not news. I'm not arguing for the abolition of defence attorneys. I don't know how you gleaned that from my post.
 
The victim claims Clinton did know about it. My post is in response to people trying to excuse that. Whether Clinton really knew isn't all that relevant, that people would still defend her is wrong.

My example serves as a point that "doing my job" shouldn't excuse "I'm a shitty person who does shitty things."

The American justice system is fucked and that's not news. I'm not arguing for the abolition of defence attorneys. I don't know how you gleaned that from my post.

The victim claims it but how do we know?
 

Sundown

Banned
Do you often sit around stewing about how much you hate lawyers?

In your world defense lawyers wouldn't be able to do their jobs. Defendants have constitutional rights and when the justice system doesn't follow the letter of the law in bringing its case against a person, a lawyer should absolutely bring that up.

In my world we'd have a justice system that is as interested in convicting criminals as it is in proving their innocence and defence lawyers that didn't do this kind of shit.

You're the third person to put words in my mouth based off of one post that at no point stated any desire to abolish defence lawyers or the right to a fair trial.
 

Gotchaye

Member
This is why I hate lawyers.

People justify every thing they do as them just doing their job and cite ethics as further justification for their callous actions. If soldiers following orders can be held accountable for war crimes than so can any amoral shitbag in a suit willing to sell their soul to make a buck off the back of victims.

The fact that someone is supposed to do something because its their job is not an excuse for vile behaviour or actions.

If this story is true, Clinton knowingly helped a child rapist get off easy and was even proud of herself for doing it.

There's nothing anyone can say that makes that acceptable or okay. It's not a okay.

This is... not a very compelling criticism of the right to legal counsel. And let's be clear - that's what this purports to be. Your problem with Clinton is that you say she "knowingly helped" a very guilty person escape just punishment, and was proud of that. It badly misses the point to compare this sort of thing to soldiers committing war crimes. Sure, if a lawyer goes around murdering the opposition's witnesses, that's an ethics violation, and I suspect everyone here would agree with that, but the idea is that it's overall a good thing to have lawyers not let their own attitudes towards their clients influence their lawyering. The idea isn't "it's okay because that's their job". It's "it's okay because that's their job and that job, including that part of it, is valuable to society".

You're not just arguing against a fucked up US legal system. This is a huge part of every civilized system of justice. It's in the EU's Charter of Fundamental Rights, for example. It's not clear that you understand the position you're arguing against.
 

Metaphoreus

This is semantics, and nothing more
In my world we'd have a justice system that is as interesting in convicting criminals as it is in proving their innocence.

But this is exactly what we have. The prosecution is immensely interested in convicting criminals, and defense attorneys are immensely interested in preventing that (or reducing the consequences of a conviction).
 

SmokeMaxX

Member
How is this relevant to my post? I haven't said any of this.
Think about what you posted. You said lawyers should be held accountable for their actions when they defend someone that you presume to be guilty (comparing it to soldiers facing war crimes). Okay then how does anyone defend someone who's likely to be guilty? How do they determine guilt without a trial?

You offer no way for any lawyer to defend people you consider vile. Well now guess what? You have a defendant with no lawyer. I think you can figure it out from there.
 

Sundown

Banned
This is... not a very compelling criticism of the right to legal counsel. And let's be clear - that's what this purports to be. Your problem with Clinton is that you say she "knowingly helped" a very guilty person escape just punishment, and was proud of that. It badly misses the point to compare this sort of thing to soldiers committing war crimes. Sure, if a lawyer goes around murdering the opposition's witnesses, that's an ethics violation, and I suspect everyone here would agree with that, but the idea is that it's overall a good thing to have lawyers not let their own attitudes towards their clients influence their lawyering. The idea isn't "it's okay because that's their job". It's "it's okay because that's their job and that job, including that part of it, is valuable to society".

You're not just arguing against a fucked up US legal system. This is a huge part of every civilized system of justice. It's in the EU's Charter of Fundamental Rights, for example. It's not clear that you understand the position you're arguing against.

I might not have made my position as clear as I could or should have, but I wasn't arguing against any fundamental right to a fair trial. If that's how people here want to take my post, that's up to them, but that's not how I feel about it.

A soldier has their mandate to follow orders of their superiors. A lawyer has their mandate to serve their client. My point was that I disagree with the notion that someone's job makes it okay for them to do something shitty. In this case, if this story is true, then Clinton did something shitty and I don't think people should be defending her for doing that shitty thing because it was her job.

That's all I'm saying. I'm not discussing the justice system at large or people's fundamental rights, hence my confusion when people reply with posts inferring I don't understand the justice system or the importance of the right to a fair trial.
 
BRB. Double-checking my post to make sure I didn't say CAF and the Washington Free Beacon are not conservative.





I'm back. I never said that.

So what at all was the point of your post then? That you aren't good at jokes? That you think conservative press doesn't equal GOP press?
 

antigoon

Member
So much misunderstanding in this thread. I'm no Hillary fan, but the fact that she took on public defense makes me think more highly of her. I echo Gotchaye's comments about directing criticism toward the states regarding rape litigation and not the individual attorneys.

Public defenders have some of the hardest, most misunderstood, and underpaid jobs in the entire legal system.
 

Gotchaye

Member
I might not have made my position as clear as I could or should have, but I wasn't arguing against any fundamental right to a fair trial. If that's how people here want to take my post, that's up to them, but that's not how I feel about it.

A soldier has their mandate to follow orders of their superiors. A lawyer has their mandate to serve their client. My point was that I disagree with the notion that someone's job makes it okay for them to do something shitty. In this case, if this story is true, then Clinton did something shitty and I don't think people should be defending her for doing that shitty thing because it was her job.

That's all I'm saying. I'm not discussing the justice system at large or people's fundamental rights, hence my confusion when people reply with posts inferring I don't understand the justice system or the importance of the right to a fair trial.

So, to be clear, what's the "something shitty" she did?

What you said earlier was:
If this story is true, Clinton knowingly helped a child rapist get off easy and was even proud of herself for doing it.

There's nothing anyone can say that makes that acceptable or okay. It's not acceptable and it's not okay.
Where the "something shitty" seems to be the act of knowingly helping a child rapist get off easy.

What people are saying is that this is essentially an attack on the very idea of a right to legal counsel.

If what you're trying to say is just that the particular method Clinton used to (let's assume) knowingly help a child rapist get off easy was a problem, even though it would in general not be an ethical problem for a lawyer to knowingly help child rapists get off easy, then okay. I disagree with that, as I explained in a previous post, but this is basically in line with what a lot of people in the thread are saying.
 

meow

Member
I might not have made my position as clear as I could or should have, but I wasn't arguing against any fundamental right to a fair trial. If that's how people here want to take my post, that's up to them, but that's not how I feel about it.

A soldier has their mandate to follow orders of their superiors. A lawyer has their mandate to serve their client. My point was that I disagree with the notion that someone's job makes it okay for them to do something shitty. In this case, if this story is true, then Clinton did something shitty and I don't think people should be defending her for doing that shitty thing because it was her job.

That's all I'm saying. I'm not discussing the justice system at large or people's fundamental rights, hence my confusion when people reply with posts inferring I don't understand the justice system or the importance of the right to a fair trial.
If you want to win a criminal case, you need to prove with sufficient evidence so that the jury is convinced beyond a reasonable doubt. There's nothing wrong with Clinton forcing the prosecution to do so, and they failed.

Just a few months ago, I heard two lawyers give a lecture on a guy they were defending who had been sentenced to death row. He was basically on his last appeal and they believed he was guilty. All of the evidence made him look guilty. But they still pulled every strategy they could find in the book. Guess what they found in the course of doing their job? Someone eventually discovered that the prosecution had concealed a piece of evidence proving his innocence.

You can't always know. If you could, you wouldn't even need the system. You can't have a double standard. You want a lawyer to always advocate for their client to the best of their ability because the alternative is worse.
 

SmokeMaxX

Member
I might not have made my position as clear as I could or should have, but I wasn't arguing against any fundamental right to a fair trial. If that's how people here want to take my post, that's up to them, but that's not how I feel about it.

A soldier has their mandate to follow orders of their superiors. A lawyer has their mandate to serve their client. My point was that I disagree with the notion that someone's job makes it okay for them to do something shitty. In this case, if this story is true, then Clinton did something shitty and I don't think people should be defending her for doing that shitty thing because it was her job.

That's all I'm saying. I'm not discussing the justice system at large or people's fundamental rights, hence my confusion when people reply with posts inferring I don't understand the justice system or the importance of the right to a fair trial.
Okay so who will defend bad guys then if doing it is shitty? Or are you saying that it's a fundamental law of nature that there has to be inherently shitty people out there that are fated to defend bad guys?

You're saying ANYBODY who is this guy's lawyer is shitty. Who would possibly want to be his lawyer then? Okay now noone wants to be his lawyer, well guess what? He doesn't have a lawyer. No lawyer? No fair trial.
 
I had no idea she actually handled appointed cases, I have a lot of respect for attorneys who take those cases. I myself was a public defender for about 4 years in a major city, so I know what goes into that. I also know what its like to win jury trials for folks who you think are probably guilty, including some bad dudes.

Our system is adversarial and requires a competent defense to insure that the police and prosecutors and judges follow the constitution. Gideon v Wainright etc. Prosecutors should welcome a vigorous hard fought defense, as their role is not to convict but to seek justice and sometimes justice is an ng, sometimes it is a hung jury sometimes it is a plea to a lesser included as is what occurred in this case. Besides being a public defender, I was also a prosecutor for over five years and I much preferred defense counsel to actually put my evidence through the paces rather than those who would just plead their clients out without really even taking much of a look at the record. The system to function needs to be continually tested.
 

Metaphoreus

This is semantics, and nothing more
A soldier has their mandate to follow orders of their superiors. A lawyer has their mandate to serve their client. My point was that I disagree with the notion that someone's job makes it okay for them to do something shitty. In this case, if this story is true, then Clinton did something shitty and I don't think people should be defending her for doing that shitty thing because it was her job.

I think Gotchaye has explained well why this analogy fails. The confusion here seems to arise from how a person's duty is related to the morality of the thing done. Zealously defending a criminal defendant is not an evil act that is justified by the defense attorney's ethical duty--contrary to how you appear to be interpreting the discussion so far. Instead, zealously defending a criminal defendant is a morally praiseworthy act which defense attorney's have an ethical duty to perform. In other words, nobody's saying that because Clinton was "just following orders," she was justified in doing something wrong; we're saying that she did the right thing in zealously defending a criminal defendant, regardless of her beliefs as to his innocence. And we say that that is "the right thing" with reference to the overall justice system, not just her ethical obligations.
 
Sounds more like the prosecutor botched the case, they had no evidence. I think she was laughing more out of disgust, I dunno. Pretty sketchy stuff, but defense lawyers are, well, defense lawyers. It's their job to defend scum so I guess they have to be able to disconnect on some level.
 
Gaffers will eviscerate a comedian who makes a rape joke, but vigorously defend someone who helps an actual, real life rapist go free because she's a democrat. smh.
 

Armaros

Member
Gaffers will eviscerate a comedian who makes a rape joke, but vigorously defend someone who helps an actual, real life rapist go free because she's a democrat. smh.

More like because she was a court appointed defense attorney.

You know the right to counsel? One of the fundamental parts of the US legal system.

But don't let that stop you with your false equivalence, and your worthless driveby post without reading or watching any of the material.
 
i'm assuming this is a joke, because one can't be this dumb to be said seriously

Barf. Are you being serious?

Yeah, I'm sure everyone in here who's defending Clinton would also be defending Mitt Romney if he had done the same thing. Yes, certainly.


More like because she was a court appointed defense attorney.

You know the right to counsel? One of the fundamental parts of the US legal system.

But don't let that stop you with your false equivalence, and your worthless driveby post without reading or watching any of the material.

What false equivalence?
 
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