SMOGZINN
Lifer
- Jun 17, 2005
- 14,359
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"because they're rich"...
does that mean they are given special privileges because of status?
or does it mean they are actually paying people off?
or high priced lawyers?
If it's the latter (and I don't see how anyone can skirt the law regardless of representation), I think the rich thing is being blown out of proportion.
Yes to all of these things. It is not so much that they simply bribe people, although some of that does go on, it is that they have high powered connections that they are friends with, or at least has business connections with. So, when your son gets in trouble you call your friend, the mayor, and ask him to have a talk with the DA. That is if you don't already have a golf game this Friday with the DA. Or failing that the judge's wife, or son, or brother-in-law, might be starting a new company and you might just happen to be an important investor in that company. Even if you don't know any of those people, you probably know someone that does that that sort of connection with them. It might be against the law to bribe a judge, but there is nothing illegal about investing in a local business leader's company, and if he just happens to be so impressed with you that he has a talk with the DA about how nice your family is, well who will complain about that?
How does it being due to high priced lawyers change anything? There was once a time where if you were poor and couldn't afford a lawyer period, you were shit out of luck. If the legal system is so complicated and full of loopholes that only a small minority of well-paid lawyers go through the effort of exploiting, it means it's biased in favor of the rich.
It is not so much that the law has a lot of loopholes, it is just there is a big difference between a public defender that got his degree online at The University of Phoenix and has on average 30 minutes to dedicate to your case, and perhaps another hour of a legal aid's time, and a team of 14 top of their class Harvard educated layers with a full battalion of legal aids that will put in a total of 10,000 hours on your case.
