Hi all,
I've been following a few posts on this for quite some time now and felt great comfort in seeing I've somewhere to look for support. My trial begins in a few weeks and I would just like some advice from you guys if that's OK?
1) Should I believe my solicitor when they tell me my barrister is one of the best, has never lost a case (i.e.: excellent track record)? I've met this barrister twice and have got a quite professional impression and was happy with the defence statement that was drafted. I'm just scared to trust in the nasty world that is lawyers. However upon googling the name, I have been positively impressed by some of the cases my barrister has won (prosecuting) in the past.
2) Should I believe my solicitor and barrister when they tell me that the prosecution have a weak case and that I would be very unlucky to be convicted? They have kept re-iterating that they hope the prosecution will drop the case coming up to the trial and have said recently over the telephone they are very surprised it has come as far as it has.
3) I found the girl that is making this accusation (it was a one night stand) on Facebook and surprisingly she made her profile very public to people she isn't friends with. She uploaded pictures of the party on the night she claims she was "raped", pictures of her partying (only days after the arrest, interrogation, etc.) and just general pictures of her drinking, partying and photographs & comments with sexual innuendos in the weeks and months after the alleged crime took place. I took screenshots of these and burned them onto discs for my solicitor. Do you believe these will be useful? (If she claims she was traumatised for example, and just to prove in general that this allegation is rubbish and has affected nobody but me and my family)
4) At both hearings I have had so far (incl. Plea and case management) both judges respectively told the prosecution to carefully weigh up the evidence that they are gathering for this case. My solicitor confirmed this is good news. i.e.: it's a major uphill struggle for the prosecution. How serious should I take these judge's comments or are they standard?
5) Based on the above and from your own experiences and knowledge, is it possible for judges to still throw a case out on the day of trial (due to lack of evidence for example)? I asked my solicitor this and they said that it has happened in the past but obviously anything can happen. Is it just up to the judge? Do the jury just get sent home in that case before anything even begins? Or am I wasting my time and should just face facts that when the trial date arrives there will be a full trial?
6) My trial has been set as a three day trial? Should I take this for granted as I need to book trains and accommodation etc. soon? Or do these cases tend to prolong?
7) Are the prosecution witnesses required to turn up? Or could they chicken out on the day and decide they don't want to put themselves through it? Again I'm basing this on the Facebook evidence I've seen - it looks like she doesn't give a s***. My solicitor wasn't clear over the phone on this the last time I asked. They said they are requested to, but don't have to if they don't want to.
Sorry for the big essay, just a lot of question marks and a lot of worrying. Thanks in advance and good luck to every single one of you
I've been following a few posts on this for quite some time now and felt great comfort in seeing I've somewhere to look for support. My trial begins in a few weeks and I would just like some advice from you guys if that's OK?
1) Should I believe my solicitor when they tell me my barrister is one of the best, has never lost a case (i.e.: excellent track record)? I've met this barrister twice and have got a quite professional impression and was happy with the defence statement that was drafted. I'm just scared to trust in the nasty world that is lawyers. However upon googling the name, I have been positively impressed by some of the cases my barrister has won (prosecuting) in the past.
2) Should I believe my solicitor and barrister when they tell me that the prosecution have a weak case and that I would be very unlucky to be convicted? They have kept re-iterating that they hope the prosecution will drop the case coming up to the trial and have said recently over the telephone they are very surprised it has come as far as it has.
3) I found the girl that is making this accusation (it was a one night stand) on Facebook and surprisingly she made her profile very public to people she isn't friends with. She uploaded pictures of the party on the night she claims she was "raped", pictures of her partying (only days after the arrest, interrogation, etc.) and just general pictures of her drinking, partying and photographs & comments with sexual innuendos in the weeks and months after the alleged crime took place. I took screenshots of these and burned them onto discs for my solicitor. Do you believe these will be useful? (If she claims she was traumatised for example, and just to prove in general that this allegation is rubbish and has affected nobody but me and my family)
4) At both hearings I have had so far (incl. Plea and case management) both judges respectively told the prosecution to carefully weigh up the evidence that they are gathering for this case. My solicitor confirmed this is good news. i.e.: it's a major uphill struggle for the prosecution. How serious should I take these judge's comments or are they standard?
5) Based on the above and from your own experiences and knowledge, is it possible for judges to still throw a case out on the day of trial (due to lack of evidence for example)? I asked my solicitor this and they said that it has happened in the past but obviously anything can happen. Is it just up to the judge? Do the jury just get sent home in that case before anything even begins? Or am I wasting my time and should just face facts that when the trial date arrives there will be a full trial?
6) My trial has been set as a three day trial? Should I take this for granted as I need to book trains and accommodation etc. soon? Or do these cases tend to prolong?
7) Are the prosecution witnesses required to turn up? Or could they chicken out on the day and decide they don't want to put themselves through it? Again I'm basing this on the Facebook evidence I've seen - it looks like she doesn't give a s***. My solicitor wasn't clear over the phone on this the last time I asked. They said they are requested to, but don't have to if they don't want to.
Sorry for the big essay, just a lot of question marks and a lot of worrying. Thanks in advance and good luck to every single one of you
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