I see people turn their heads and quickly look away
Like a new born baby it just happens every day
Fuck it. Like I was told many times in my youth, "It don't mean nothing."
Like a new born baby it just happens every day
Fuck it. Like I was told many times in my youth, "It don't mean nothing."
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I would love to have your more experienced PD input on a scenario, if you don't mind...
There is a defendant, held in custody, in court on drug distribution charges. He is clearly in custody as a defendant and is known by the prosecution to be represented by counsel on the charges. But on the same day, he is also the named victim in an assault and battery case. His counsel isn't even aware that this case exists. Is it proper and/or ethical for a prosecutor (different than the one assigned to the drug cases) to ask the court officers to bring him from the general lock-up to an individual cell and proceed to talk to him about his status as a victim and about what he wants to see happen with that case, all without ever notifying his counsel that this is taking place?