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by kbutler
3003 days ago
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Which lawyers in what context do you see providing that nuanced human perspective? Corporate law? Their job is keep us from getting sued. Family law? If you're advocating that human perspective for the opposing party, are you failing your duty to your client? Prosecutors? Not sure they have that discretion. General legal services, probate, etc. Doesn't seem that applicable. Intellectual Property? Human perspective? Unlikely, except maybe the "hard-working inventor" angle. Defense attorneys? Sure. That could be a good angle - along with any possible opening to exploit. |
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They shouldn't be advocating the opposing party's human perspective in court, but they certainly should be doing it privately to the client. Things will usually work out better for them if they can reach an amicable compromise out of court rather than having to engage in protracted legal battles with their own family.
> Prosecutors? Not sure they have that discretion.
Prosecutors absolutely have that discretion. They don't have to take every case to court and they don't have to seek the harshest allowable punishment for every case they do take to court. They are supposed to be serving the public interest, not seeking to imprison as many people as possible.