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Showing posts with the label Pro Per

So you want to represent yourself in a felony trial?

Representing yourself in a criminal case is not bravery, it is suicide with paperwork. You are walking into a legal minefield armed with nothing but blind confidence and Google searches. I have watched these self taught courtroom warriors mumble their way through arguments they could have won if they only knew how. It is like watching someone set their own hair on fire in slow motion. Even the worst lawyer in town will keep you alive longer than trying to play attorney in your own felony trial which is the express lane to a prison cell complete with free orange wardrobe and a concrete mattress. As a criminal defense investigator I have recently been thrown into the circus ring with defendants who decided they were too smart for actual lawyers. They have traded seasoned legal counsel for the thrill of playing Perry Mason in their own courtroom disaster. My hands are tied by court rules that forbid me from giving legal advice which is a shame because watching these self appointed genius...

The Law, Artificial Intelligence, and Legal Self-Representation: A New Dawn

A few years ago, artificial intelligence (AI) was not particularly impressive. Mistakes in data processing made it somewhat unreliable.  Fast forward to today, and AI's accuracy has become shockingly high, with user interfaces that are remarkably simple. Lawyers are now leveraging AI for legal research, document preparation, discovery, and it generates an unlimited array of deposition and trial questions for witnesses. AI provides lawyers with courtroom arguments, arguably making them smarter than even Clarence Darrow. The legal community is on the brink of a massive AI overhaul. For medical professionals, AI evaluates medication dosages and diagnostic tests, reducing errors. In radiology, AI has shown to interpret x-ray images more accurately than the best practitioners alone. There's no doubt that many professions are about to undergo dramatic changes. Law school, for instance, might be condensed into a few months focusing on the Bill of Rights, court procedures, and cruciall...