No I actually haven't yet. Although you are right, I was using an exaggerated example. What I meant was that if the evidence was obviously stacked against him and there was camera footage of him/her committing said crime, I would turn down this case.Sanglyon said:Which is a good thing for him, because a defense attorney that judge someone guilty from a mere sight without bothering to find what happened, aka on circumstancial evidences, is a bad attorney.
Ever seen "The Green Mile"?
Although someone else would take that case, I would not. But some lawyers simply don't take cases for far smaller reasons than circumstancial evidence.
Note: Weird, that "Circumstancial" shows up as spelled incorrectly