I hear you wait for EVERYONE with your handcuffs on.i did 200 in a 80 zone once..
<---- waits for the cops with my hand cuffs already on
I hear you wait for EVERYONE with your handcuffs on.i did 200 in a 80 zone once..
<---- waits for the cops with my hand cuffs already on
used toI hear you wait for EVERYONE with your handcuffs on.
oh i read it. doesn't sound like much in the way of proof to me. a nosy neighbour says that guy always drives fast. too fast. and i saw him. any lawyer, not even a sharp one, would make him eat his words "did you see the driver clearly? what shirt was he wearing? did you see the car go by? what was the plate number?You wouldn't be wondering if you had bothered to read the article in the Star that the OP linked to at the beginning of this thread.
Touché.Or to out it more simply, some people are too stupid to know how stupid they are!
The thing about a guilty plea is that the prosecution is no longer required to present their case. I don't believe for a second that this kid had neither the money nor sense to speak to a lawyer. I have a feeling the prosecution had more than we've seen, and on seeing the full case this kid was likely advised by counsel to plead guilty.oh i read it. doesn't sound like much in the way of proof to me. a nosy neighbour says that guy always drives fast. too fast. and i saw him. any lawyer, not even a sharp one, would make him eat his words "did you see the driver clearly? what shirt was he wearing? did you see the car go by? what was the plate number?
Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, my client wasn't even there. a fast car was seen driven by an unknown person. there's no proof it was my client or even his car. there's a lot of fast bmws in woodbridge. and plenty of testosterone to go around.
no proof. young man walks..
That makes more sense. yeah.The thing about a guilty plea is that the prosecution is no longer required to present their case. I don't believe for a second that this kid had neither the money nor sense to speak to a lawyer. I have a feeling the prosecution had more than we've seen, and on seeing the full case this kid was likely advised by counsel to plead guilty.