I think it’s pretty hard to muster sympathy for a guy who we know assaulted two women. He’s been in prison 5 years. That doesn’t sound all that unfair to me.
I think it’s pretty hard to muster sympathy for a guy who we know assaulted two women. He’s been in prison 5 years. That doesn’t sound all that unfair to me.
But hen you have to live somewhere shitty.
The Abbey is still very much a thing. My gay BFF lives in Hollywood and we go a bunch. It’s fun. It often has a bunch of tourists. But only awesome tourists want to go to a gay bar on vacation. so it’s always great.
I'm in.
Complimenting a woman for modulating her voice is pretty much the equivalent of complimenting a black person for being articulate
When exactly did women have standard professional attire? There have been fashion trends in women's professional clothing, but nothing that lasted.
You call it a ‘limitation’ for men but all the woman I know who have to dress professionally every day would kill for the equivalent of a JosABank or Men’s Warehouse for women. I once went to South Coast Plaza to try and by suit for an upcoming trial and didn’t find one that was appropriate and fit me.
I agree with you that many women have made this an advantage. I wore a stretchy comfy dress to court today with a stretchy comfy jacket.
The fact that men have been dressing for precessional positions longer than women is pretty much the whole point....
Men have very standard professional attire and women don’t because of sexism.
Really? No sexism in this election? I’ve never known the cost of any male candidate’s suit, but I know Hillary wore a $12000 jacket.
What I want to know is whether a jury was present...or would be soon. It reminds me of a case where a Catholic lawyer came back from a break on Ash Wednesday with ashes on his forehead. The defense objected and the Catholic lawyer washed off the ashes before the jury came back.
I find Perry Mason to be pretty accurate and legally correct....up until the Perry Mason moment.
She did get the death penalty.
“if this weren’t a famous case she’d have been out by now”
No. The Patricia Hearst situation was completely different.
There’s an older documentary, I think it's called “Life After Death Row” about a bunch of guys that were on death row and paroled.
Seriously. I don’t care if she’s not a danger anymore or whether she's rehabilitated. I don't want her sitting next to me on a bus. I don't want to stand in line next to her at the grocery store.
The point of keeping her in prison is that I don’t want to run into her at the grocery store.
I've always thought the justice system is mostly abou rehabilitation, but sometimes about people who've done extremely terrible things away from the rest of us.