Sunday, February 5, 2012

Awesome Breweries Us South

Awesome Breweries ---US: South--- TOP TEN And All the Almost Awesome Contenders



South: Alabama, Arkansas, District of Columbia, Delaware Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, West VirginiaWhat makes a craft brewery awesome? Is it the overall ambiance, the size of production, the quality of product, a brewery tour with samples from various stages of the brewing process, the breath of beer types brewed…an attached bar? All of these factors and several more have been taken into account to compute the top ten most awesome breweries in the region. The results are surprising and the research was inebriating. As a bonus the full list of over 400 breweries in the awesome competition follow the top ten ranking listed by alphabetically by state. Luckily, even a brewery that isn’t awesome is still amazing.


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Saturday, February 4, 2012

Attorney

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Attorney
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MARTA bus ad: Trial Attorneys of Georgia
Georgia Attorney

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"We go to trial to make you smile."


Other Sr Staff Attorney

Other: Sr Staff Attorney - Garden City, NY - Garden City, New York

Title: Sr Staff Attorney - Garden City, NYLocation: United States-New York-Garden CityOther Locations:TheHartfordcurrently has an in-house opportunity for a Senior Staff Attorney - Tort and General Liability in Garden City,New York. RESPONSIBILITIES:This position partners with our insureds and claim centers to deliver the best possible result in pending litigation against our insureds/the firm. The Senior Staff Attorney will:Analyze complex legal and factual issues, conduct extensive, well-reasoned legal research, independently develop and present defense strategies on behalf of clients.Prepare complex pleadings, written discovery, depositions, motions and briefs in support of defense strategies without supervision because of level of background and ability.Provide effective and timely communications, details, legal advice and other services to clients and claims on legal and factual issues.Communicate with the court, witnesses

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Location

Garden City, USA


Sr Staff Attorney - WC Oakland, CA

Title: Sr Staff Attorney - WC Oakland, CA
Location: United States-California-Oakland
Other Locations:

WHAT ARE THE RESPONSIBILITIES FOR THE POSITION?

The Hartfordhas an immediate in-house opening for aSenior Staff Attorney - Workers' Compensation.This position partners with our insureds and claim centers to deliver the best possible result in pending litigation against our insureds/the firm. The Senior Staff Attorney will:

Analyze complex legal and factual issues, conduct extensive, well-reasoned legal research, independently develop and present defense strategies on behalf of clients.

Prepare complex pleadings, written discovery, depositions, motions and briefs in support of defense strategies without supervision because of level of background and ability.

Provide effective and timely communications, details, legal advice and other services to clients and claims on legal and factual issues.

Price:

Location

Oakland, USA

Eight O'clock Ferry To

Eight O'Clock Ferry to the Windward Side: Seeking Justice in Guantanamo Bay



Lawyer Clive Stafford Smith's remarkable account of his descent into the darkly comic world of Guantanamo, a legal black hole in which the bleakness of the surroundings are punctuated by moments of humor and absurdity.


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Nj Municipal Court Made Easy


NJ Municipal Court Made Easy; A Guide to Assist a Motorist Defending a New Jersey Speeding Ticket or Other Nj Traffic Summons


At every Court session in every Municipal Court there are a handful of people who find themselves in a frustrating predicament that requires them to make an unnecessary extra Court appearance.�� If you look at your traffic summons you will see toward the bottom the words with a Court date written just underneath.� Understandably many look at that language, see the Court date and conclude that they should appear on that date and time.� Not so fast.� To the left of the Court date is a box that is either checked or not checked If it is checked then yes, you should appear for Court whether you want to or not.� However, if it is not checked, one of two things has happened.� Either A) the officer neglected to check Court Appearance Required, B) you don't have to appear.� A clue to what is going on is on the back of your ticket.� Turn the ticket over and two thirds of the way down in red writing it states:

What does that mean?� It means that if you had a that is not checked "Court Appearance Required" and showed up for Court without calling first, you have wasted a trip.� Court is aggravating enough without having to be told you have to come back another time.� The "Date to Appear" is the date to appear if that box isn't checked. In actuality, it is the date by which you should pay your ticket� if you plan to pay the fine.� If you want to go to Court and work out a deal with the Prosecutor, make sure you call the Court ahead of time.� (7 days, by the way, is a guideline more than any hard and fast rule).� That way the Court will schedule the matter when the officer is available.� Invariably� 5 or 6 people show up at Court having read what looks like the plain language on the ticket and they are turned away and told they will be receiving a new Court date in the mail.

It's probably not necessary.� Municipal Court is very much described by the familiar adage "hurry up and wait."� Your notice indicates a specific start time but the Court will hardly ever start at the start time. Some Courts deviate from this general practice but most often You should get to Court by the start time but getting to Court half an hour early provides no distinct advantage.

You might think the Judge, being learned, is reading law books and brushing up on his Judge skills but what he is usually doing is simply waiting for the Prosecutor to get his act together.� Usually, the Court session is largely run by the Prosecutor who works out all of the matters he can� to present to the Judge.� He sets up the pins and the Judge knocks them down.� If the Judge were to come out earlier, he would say his opening remarks (discussed later) and then have no cases to move.� He would sit there scratching his head until the Prosecutor put something in front of him.� So, believe it or not, for expediency, it doesn't make a lot of sense for the Judge to take the bench right away.

Longer than you expect.� There are times in your life where you feel like a number, and this is one of those times. You may be surprised to find that you and up to a hundred or more other people are scheduled for Court .� If your notice says to be there on Tuesday at 9:00 am, so does everybody else's notice.�� So when is Court over?� To borrow a line from Yogi Berra, "Court ain't over till its over."� �Someone will be first, someone will be last and there may be three, four or even five hours in between.� You might want to tell the office/workplace you will need the day off.

Many Courts have a which means that you have to find the window where the Court Clerk, or nowadays, office is, and advise you have appeared.� Sometimes the way this works is you reach the person at the window and they tell you that there really is no check in procedure, or that you will be checked-in inside the Courtroom.� If that is the case, you should enter the Courtroom and find a seat and wait until your name is called.� The reason for this check-in procedure is that, surprisingly, many people don't appear for Court.� The Court wants to set aside the matters for people who have appeared and will deal with those who don't appear later.

Not a good idea.� If you are scheduled for Court and fail to appear or if the Court date on your ticket has passed without you contacting the Court Office, a warrant for your arrest can issue.

At some point the Judge finally emerges from some back room whereupon he will offer his .� You are asked to "rise" and it is announced that� Court is in session.� The Judge graciously allows you to sit back down and, in general, will advise you of the following:

(An appeal, by the way, is not a do-over.� The case isn't heard all over again in a higher Court. The hearing you have in Municipal Court is all you get and an appeal is a review of that Municipal Court proceeding.)

(This no talking stuff doesn't sound like it should be a big deal but it is.� Most Court's get very uppity about silence in the Courtroom.� Cell phones are a particular "no-no" and should yours� go off, you can get in more trouble than you would for the traffic charge you are facing.� No kidding.)

The Judge will offer some further instructions but the above is pretty much the gist of it. and they are made for the record in the event a defendant later claims he was never told about this right or that right.

Somewhere during this process either the Court Administrator or the Judge�may� This is where the list of names on the calendar is called, usually in alphabetical order, and you are asked to respond.� This can be one of those nervous moments where you aren't sure what to say, some people even start blurting out their defense,� but you should merely state something like The Judge will be very impressed and then move on to the next name on the list.�� The fact is that you are not pleading guilty yet as you are still facing the charge as written.� You will likely be pleading guilty later if and when the Prosecutor amends the charges to something else.

You are innocent until proven guilty, this is true.� Still, it ordinarily doesn't take much of an effort for an experienced Prosecutor� to make that leap from your innocence to your guilt.� If you think that your subjective belief that you didn't do anything wrong is going to sway the Judge you are probably mistaken.� Many people think that if the Judge simply "hears my story" he will toss out their case.� The Judge, however, wasn't there at the scene to see that you did nothing wrong.� He has to rely on the testimony that is presented to him.�� Most often in any traffic ticket trial there are two witnesses, the defendant and the officer.�� Certainly "beyond a reasonable doubt" sounds like a very lofty pursuit for a Prosecutor.� You will wonder if it is only your word against the officer's, how are you going to be found guilty "beyond a reasonable doubt"?� Why should the officer be believed and you be disbelieved?�� Couldn't the officer be mistaken?� Doesn't the officer have some stake in the outcome of the case?� What makes his testimony any more credible than yours?

These are all legitimate inquiries.� Unfortunately, they won't usually carry the day. Conceivably, in every case where it is the officer versus the defendant (which is nearly every case), the Court could say to itself, "Hmmm, maybe the police officer is lying or mistaken" and throw the ticket out.� Ponder that notion for a minute.�� Such a logical extreme could never be tolerated. Our system of justice, as it were, would be turned on its head.�� Instead, the Courts use reasoning that is probably correct 99% of the time. The officer has no axe to grind.� He is trained and experienced and would have no compulsion to single out an innocent driver like you over the numerous guilty drivers out on the road he could have pulled over instead.� He has nothing to gain by bringing the case against you.�� Conversely, you have everything to lose.� You have no training, your speedometer hasn't been calibrated and any witness you might have brought is related to you or is your friend and would obviously be biased in your favor.� This is the reasoning that results in a finding of guilt in the great majority of contested Municipal Court matters.�� No, its not a perfect system but, practically speaking, it is better than the alternative of permitting nearly everyone to beat their tickets for what are likely illegitimate grounds.

Unless your "good reason" is a legal defense it won't affect the outcome.� Feel free to plea but we're talking semantics.� Guilty is guilty with or without your explanation.The judge may consider your explanation with respect to sentencing as a but he won't throw the ticket out if that is your expectation.

Doubtful.� Short of failing to sign the ticket, there is virtually nothing the officer can do wrong on the ticket that will invalidate it.� While this tactic seems to work in other States (notably New York), New Jersey does not get overly concerned that a number or letter is off on your summons.� If there is enough on the summons to advise a reasonable person where and what they did wrong, that will usually be enough.� The Court on its own motion or the Prosecutor may simply amend the ticket to reflect the correct spelling or number.

Generally, no.� This is another misconception because theoretically it should be true.� In theory, if you appear and the Prosecution's witness (the officer) doesn't, there is no case to present and the case fails due to The problem is that the Court will not generally go so far as to throw out a case if this happens just once.� You can ask the Judge to dismiss the matter and then the Prosecutor, who is aligned with the officer, will stand and offer just about any excuse as to why the officer did not appear.� He may not even offer an excuse but he will do handstands if necessary to get an adjournment to ensure that the officer's appearance the next time.� In New Jersey, unlike some other jurisdictions, an officer can be reprimanded if his case is dismissed due to lack of prosecution so, as stated, the Prosecutor goes to great lengths not to let that happen.� The Judge is also aware of the officer's predicament so he may also have this in the back of his head.� It is possible that the case can be adjourned even more than once for these reasons and consequently, you are forced to return over and over.� By the time the officer does show up, he may be less than thrilled to meet you nor be very accommodating.� So, while in theory, the case can be dismissed due to Lack of Prosecution, it is a rarity.

It may not be justice but it is a fact of life.� The officer is not obligated to entertain your discussions or show you his radar reading.� He doesn't have to prove to you that you were speeding, he has to prove it to the Court.� And, unfortunately, while it would sure be nice, there is no requirement that the officer be pleasant while issuing you a ticket.� Motorists who ask this questions are probably already� behind the eight ball.� If you plan on contesting the ticket and saving points, the Prosecutor, who was not on the scene, may defer to the Officer's judgment.� If you had some choice words for the officer or otherwise gave him a hard time, he will likely remember you and may not be as eager to help you as he otherwise might.

This is a tough call.� If you answer "yes, because I was driving 99 miles a hour" then your admission could come back to haunt you at you in a trial.� Alternatively, if you say "Gee I have no idea, do I have a brake light out?" you run the risk of sounding less than� candid and ticking off the cop.� If the officer is considering letting you go, as is his prerogative,� he would likely prefer honesty on your part.� The answer lies somewhere in the middle.� Answer in terms of what you have done.� In that manner you are not committed.� "I may have been speeding" is short, it offers� candor and it doesn't outright prove your guilt.� Apologizing is effectively an admission of guilt so that should be avoided.�� Instead, use an apologetic tone.







By the way, do not be embarrassed to hand the officer that FOP card you have or to advise that your Uncle John is the Chief of police in a neighboring town.� The officer will be able to rip up your tickets if you bring these items to his attention after they've been written.

A) no; B) no; C) no; D) no; and E) no.�� I know that sounds negative.� If you don't have an attorney and� often� even if you do, these defenses rarely get anywhere.�� Police officers have been issuing speeding tickets for a long time, long before you and I ever received our drivers licenses.� All of these defenses have been litigated over and over.� Through the years of jurisprudence and case law these defenses have generally gotten no where and about the only defense to a speeding ticket that has a legitimate chances is if there is something� clearly wrong with the officers radar unit or if he doesn't have the requisite training.� Unless you know how to read calibration tests and have some wherewithal when it comes to tuning forks, you will likely be shot down in your tracks.�� Come to think of it, even knowledge in these areas you are probably sunk.� There has even been case law concluding that the officer's subjective opinion that a car was speeding can be enough to prove a defendant guilty of an offense.� Without belaboring the point, the gimmicks you may have come across online or the claims made by friends that the Prosecutor won't be able to produce the proper "Discovery" (proofs) are 95% unfounded, at least as far as they would to apply to New Jersey.

He canand he often will at these speeds.� and many do when your speed is excessive.� "Excessive" is in the eye of the beholder but is a red flag and is practically a done deal.� Depending on the circumstances and depending on your driving history, a Judge may suspend your driving privileges for 30, 60 or sometimes even 90 days or more.� This is often a real reality check for unsuspecting defendants, particularly the motorist who has a payable ticket of 90 mph in a 65 mph zone and pleads not guilty hoping to catch a break in Court.� Conceivably the motorist could have paid their ticket but by going to Court they get to meet the Judge, who may be less than accommodating, and then they have their licenses suspended.� By and large, tickets of 90+ are not payable and you have no choice but to appear.� There may be little you can do to avoid license suspension because many Judges simply draw the line at 90 mph or 100 mph and they do not budge from this position.� Often, .� Thus, 50+ in a 25 mph zone could be a real problem.� You really should have representation under all such circumstances because having an attorney may be the difference between saving or losing your license.� Whatever you do, when you go before the Judge and he inevitably asks you why you were driving so fast, do not attempt to offer any justification.� Claiming you were going downhill, or you were lost, or you were moving with the traffic will not be well received.� Unless you were bleeding to death or in a similar predicament, the best response is to say that you have no good excuse and it was a foolish course of action on your part.� It would also be a good idea to have signed up for a defensive driving course (offered by AAA) and have the confirmation of the upcoming course in your hand to show the Judge or Prosecutor.� The Court loves when a defendant has taken steps, on his/her own volition, to address what the Court will conclude is a problem he/she has.� It is somewhat analogous to the alcoholic defendant who, when they appear in Court, has begun taking AA courses to treat the underlying reason for the offense they are facing.

As for the extra ticket of careless driving (2 points) or reckless driving (5 points) these are often thrown in for good measure because, presumably, you were either careless or reckless when you drove at this excessive speed.� Usually, a Prosecutor will be willing to this additional ticket.

New Jersey has a statute, namely Unsafe Operation, NJSA 39:4-97.2, which carries zero points.� This statute was designed with plea bargaining in mind and has terrific catch-all language such that� nearly any moving violation (other than DWI) can be amended to it by a willing Prosecutor.� Until July of 2004, this was a wonderful way to resolve a moving violation in New Jersey.� Short of an outright dismissal, it was as good as it gets.� This is still largely true, but in July of 2004 the NJ legislature, looking for ways to raise revenue without raising taxes, noted that we attorneys were getting this result for our clients entirely too often.� They concluded that if they could collect money every time this statute comes to pass in a Municipal Court, the State could really cash in and address its deficit.� The result?� A hefty 0.00 one time surcharge assessed by the Court.� This charge is your normal fines and costs. Whereas before July 2004 Unsafe Operation might cost a defendant 0.00 to 5.00, it now costs in the neighborhood of 0.00 for a first offense.

Given the sizeable fine amount, you might consider why you are in Court trying to get this result at all.� As it happens, ., in which case you are given a clean slate and you can once again obtain zero points.

There are different schools of thought respecting whether to attempt to retrieve Unsafe Operation and under what circumstances.�� .� Some attorneys, however, think that you should attempt to retrieve Unsafe Operation no matter how few points� you are facing.� The theory is that it is simply a bad idea to accumulate any points if you can avoid it.� This writer's belief is that it is not worth attempting to retrieve an Unsafe Operation if you are facing a simple two point ticket, unless, of course, you are already in point trouble.�� The most common two point tickets are speeding� 1-14 mph over the speed limit, careless driving and running a red light.� While circumstances vary, 0.00 is a fair sum of money to pay and there may or may not be a comparative increase in your auto insurance costs if you are assessed the points.� Many insurance companies will even forgive your first two point summons so there will be no adverse consequence.� If you are a careful driver, haven't had a ticket in years and are now facing a two point ticket, it might make sense to simply pay the fine.� The course is affordable, often less than 0.00.� In effect, you have received the two point reduction that would have cost 0.00� in Court for significantly less.� It could well happen that a year from now, or even six weeks from now, you could get a 4 point ticket that you would better served to go to Court and attempt to retrieve one of the two Unsafe Operations you have available.

For these reasons, I generally do not recommend going to Court and attempting to amend two point tickets to Unsafe Operation unless you already have point trouble.�

Yes there are, but the Prosecutor does not readily hand them out.� Prior to 1999 and the advent of 39:4-97.2, Unsafe Operation, we attorneys would appear in Court and attempt to persuade the Prosecutor to amend moving violations to 39:4-67, Obstruction Traffic, or 39:4-56, Delaying Traffic.� These statutes are still on the books.� Since they are effectively not moving violations, no points are associated with them.� Prior to 1999 an attorney and his client would stand before the Judge and enter a that really had no basis in fact.� Even though he/she committed an entirely different offense (eg. speeding), the defendant claims that he either obstructed or delayed traffic.�� If you think about it, it� is impossible to speed,� blow a red light or improperly pass and thereby obstruct or delay traffic.� With the introduction of Unsafe Operation, there was no longer the need to put this fiction before the Court.� Defense attorneys rejoiced until July, 2004 when the State stuck their hands in the till, extracting 0.00 from every Unsafe Operation.� Attempting now to revert back to Obstructing Traffic or Delaying Traffic is met with tremendous resistance due to� the very realistic fact that you neither obstructed traffic or delayed traffic and, moreover,� Unsafe Operation better addresses your bad driving.� Meanwhile,� Municipal Court Judges� have received directives from higher up not to accept pleas without proper factual bases and such attempts will rarely pass their judicial scrutiny.� So, only in rare instances will you be able to get zero points which isn't Unsafe Operation, and hardly ever if you don't have an attorney.

Depending on the Court, one of two ways.� The first might be prior to the Judge taking the bench.� The other would be after the Judge's opening remarks.�� In half of the Courts the Prosecutor will be sitting at his desk up close to the Judge's bench and he or she will entertain conferences with defendants.� You should take this opportunity if it is available.� In the other half of the Courts the Prosecutor has his own office in a nearby or adjoining room.� You will find that there may be a line at his office that you should get in ASAP.� Check the Court Room first and if he's not there, look for his office.

You might think that once you reach the Prosecutor this is your opportunity to tell your entire sad tale.� Certainly, the Prosecutor, if he is going to understand who you are and get to know you and find out how you ended up in front of him, he will want to know your whole life story.� He will want to know all the details as to how you got your ticket, where you were coming from, where you were going and how you were pulled over for really no good reason.� This may come as a big surprise butin general, He doesn't have the time to engage you, and the facts of your case that he cares about are right there on your tickets.� Being a Prosecutor, he assumes that you are guilty of the offense as charged. He is not interested in hearing what he will inevitably conclude are your bad defenses.� He does not want to hear how you had to speed in order to get to work on time or that you had to speed in order to pass a slow moving vehicle or that you had to speed in order to get to a rest stop.� He does not want to hear that you were "going with the flow of traffic" and /or it was impossible for the officer to have singled you out. �He does not want to hear that your radar detector didn't� go off or that the officer was rude to you.� He will be unmoved by your argument that there was "no way" your� four cylinder car could have reached the speed that the officer claimed.�� He doesn't care if it was a speed-trap or that you were going downhill.� He doesn't want to see the schematics you've drawn of the scene or the pictures you have taken of the traffic light depicting that it was green at the time you passed through. If it appears that he is showing the slightest bit of interest in your claims he is merely being polite.

Why doesn't the Prosecutor want to hear any of this?� The reason is that he has likely been at this job for a long time, has heard it all before and knows that your defense is probably not a defense.� The fact that you were traveling along with the traffic is to speeding.� The fact that your photograph depicts a green light doesn't prove that it was green when you went through it.� It is not a defense that you drove on the shoulder in order to make your eventual turn.� Believe it or not, you're not the first person who has approached the Prosecutor with the claim that you had a sick child in the back of your car who was about to throw up.�� There is really nothing you can offer the Prosecutor that he hasn't heard dozens, if not hundreds of times previously.� There will usually be nothing novel about an unrepresented defendant's so-called "defense."� Having gone down this road too often,� the Prosecutor has concluded that if he listens to you explain your life away, it does nothing to expedite the proceedings, which is his main objective.

In general, Prosecutors have a rule of thumb when it comes to point reductions for unrepresented defendants.�� If you are charged with a 5 point ticket, you will likely be offered 4 points, if you are charged with a 4 point ticket, you will be offered 2 points and if you are charged with a 2 point ticket you will be offered zero points and the hefty fines.� Prosecutors may deviate from this general rule and you can benefit as a result.

How do you persuade him to do it?� What the Prosecutor wants to hear from you is simple: As stated, he has assumed you're guilty so now his concern, if he is going to help you, are these mitigating factors.� If you were, in fact, disruptive or rude to the officer, you could be done for, assuming the Prosecutor defers to the officer.� It is at this point where you say how foolish you were.� Acknowledge that the officer was correct to stop you, you were having a really bad day and if need be,� you would like to apologize to the officer.� Hopefully, you did not give the officer a hard time and don't have to stoop to this.� It can be a bitter pill to swallow.

As for your driving record, if it is good then point that out immediately.� A prosecutor can justify to the Court or the officer offering someone with a good driving record a good plea agreement.� Don't say its good if it isn't because it is altogether possible that the Prosecutor has your driving history in his hand. While you maybe have gotten nowhere trying to obtain your driving history from DMV, your abstract is easily attainable in the Court and can be retrieved if necessary.

If your records isn't so good and you have point issues, you may have to come at the Prosecutor from another angle.� If he doesn't bring it up, don't bring it to his attention.� If it surfaces, here you might point out the obvious fact that you really can't afford to get more points on your license. (After all, a person in point trouble could use the help more than someone with a good driving record).� Perhaps, previously you had gotten tickets and simply paid them because you were guilty.� You didn't see the point in bothering the Court and fighting them (though you likely see the point now).� Perhaps you had a bad streak and you've been doing a whole lot better lately.� You have to work with what you got.

Egregiousness, like everything, is relative.� Were you one of those obnoxious drivers driving on the shoulder to avoid traffic?� Were you going 90+ mph and weaving in and out of cars?� Or were you committing an offense that everyone does, a rolling stop through a stop sign or caught between the yellow and the red light?� The latter scenarios are clearly less egregious than the former and will be greeted with a more receptive Prosecutor.� In all likelihood, the Prosecutor can relate.� He may even have driven in the same manner on his way to Court!

Consider the following.� The fact is that there are scores of matters before the Court during your session.� The defendant, particularly the unrepresented defendant, is at a significant disadvantage.� Clearly though, if the Prosecutor were to prosecute the entire Courtroom, the Court session would go on for hours on end.� No one wants this to happen.� The Prosecutor, the Judge, the Court Staff all want to get home eventually, just like everyone else.� Moreover, most Prosecutors are not terrible guys and they recognize that defendants in a Municipal Court, by in large, are not criminals.� They were unlucky enough to have been pulled over and issued a summons or two and they have appeared in Court to do some damage control.� They are hopeful that there can be a reduction in the number of points they are facing and thereby minimize the consequences they may face from DMV and their insurance company.

While the Judge may tell you in his opening remarks that the Court does not hand out points, which it doesn't (DMV does), he and the Prosecutor and everyone else knows that points are really the name of the game.� There is of course the occasional defendant who insists he did nothing wrong and when push comes to shove the Prosecutor will give him a trial.� But,

Sometimes you have the misfortune of having two or more movable violations with points coming at you in large quantities.� In these cases it is advisable to get what could be called a "package deal" where you can perhaps plea to one of the tickets and� the other ticket or tickets.� You can even ask for the remaining ticket's points to be reduced.� As an example, a four-point speeding ticket could be reduced to two points and the other two-point Careless Driving ticket could be dismissed.�� Rest assured you will likely not convince a Prosecutor to go from 7 points to zero or from 9 to 2 but there are some� palatable combinations that can work.� Some consolation in this situation, if there is any, is that there are fewer fines to pay since a ticket or tickets are being dismissed.� If you are facing a two point ticket and a four point ticket, the Prosecutor may suggest you plead to the four point ticket and he'll�dismiss the 2 pointer.� Test the water and ask if you can plea to the 2 point ticket and�dismiss the 4 pointer.� Use the same strategy� if you are facing two tickets with higher point quantities.�� For those of you facing three or more moving violations, not good, you really should have hired an attorney.

While these tickets, such as 39:3-29, not having a certain document in your possession, or 39:3-76.2, seatbelt tickets, seem as though the officer was rubbing salt in your wounds, such tickets can often be used as leverage.� There is no point consequence to nonmoving violations in New Jersey so a combination of pleas where you plea to such tickets in exchange for a greater reduction in points is altogether realistic.� The Prosecutor may offer to dismiss the 39:3-29 or the seatbelt ticket but you can suggest that you would be willing to pay it in exchange for a greater reduction in points.� If the Prosecutor doesn't bite, make sure you ask him to� dismiss such summonses as they translate into money out of your pocket for no real good reason.

Thanks to your brief, direct and humble approach, you've worked out an agreement with the Prosecutor. Find a seat in the Courtroom close to the front or near the aisle and wait for your name to be called to appear before the Judge.� At this point it is fairly random when you will be called and whether your name begins with A or Z is of no consequence.� When you hear your name called, approach either the defense table (that's the second table up front where the Prosecutor is not sitting) or the microphone that may be in the middle between the Prosecution and Defense tables.� The Judge will look at you and say something very judicious such as "Are you so-and-so (insert your name)?"� Either he or the Prosecutor will then go over the plea agreement you have reached.

Most Judges will then go into a brief colloquy with you.� He may ask if you entered this plea bargain voluntarily.� Did anyone force you to enter this plea arrangement.� Are you aware that by entering a guilty plea you are giving up your right to trial and your right to cross-examine the State's witnesses?� Knowing that are you still willing to plea guilty?� Next is the "kicker."� The Judge will ask if you are acknowledging that on such-and-such date in the town of such-and-such� you drove in the manner to which you are pleading guilty.� This can make some people feel a little uneasy.� You are being asked to admit you did something wrong and maybe you aren't so convinced.� Nonetheless, you're faced with this yes or no question.� For the Court to accept your plea it has to hear from your lips an admission of wrongdoing.� It is called "entering a ."�� If you say either "No" or "No, but I figure I better say I'm guilty to get the benefit of a plea bargain" or anything that sounds remotely like you're not sure you want to go through with this, the Judge slams on the brakes and says, "Oh well, I guess we're going to have a trial, sit back down."� If you didn't do anything wrong and want to have a trial, by all means, say "No", or alternatively, don't bother discussing your matter with the Prosecutor in the first place.� However, if you want to get out of Court and to the payment window in the next three minutes you will acknowledge that "yes" you made an error in driving.� Once said, it is smooth sailing and the Judge assesses fines and costs and sends you on your way.� Note: Some Judges surprisingly skip the whole "factual basis" exercise and save you any trepidation.

Go to the window where you first checked in many hours earlier and provide your name so you can make payment.� The Court expects, and the Judge may address it in his opening remarks, that you have come with money in your pockets prepared to pay the fines.� Most Courts do not want to become your creditor.� The Courts have drawers full of time payment arrangements and they don't want to add you to the list.� If funds are an issue, bring at least 0.00 with you for payment as a good faith effort and explain that you are simply unable to make the payment at this time. Very few Courts will let you leave without paying anything.� Once again, being humble is a good idea.� The Court does not have to accept a time payment arrangement, they do it entirely as an accommodation� and they can even put you in jail, should they choose, if you can't make full payment.�� You might have to break out that cell phone you turned off earlier to call a friend or spouse for funds.�� If you can, offer to pay the balance of what you owe quickly.� Extending payments too far is not met with receptiveness.� As far as payment goes, .� Lastly, if you enter a payment arrangement, make sure you pay the Court as agreed and if you can't, call them and advise as such.� They will hopefully extend you additional time.� If you ignore your obligation, the Court can and will issue a warrant for your arrest and/or suspend your driving privileges.

Yes.� While most Municipal Courts function very similarly, there are Courts/Prosecutors/Judges that are simply less amenable to plea bargaining than others.� Just like every person has a different personality, so too does each Court.� It would be an exhaustive exercise to rank or critique each individual Court and even if attempted, Judges and Prosecutors can come and go which would change the landscape altogether.��� I will say, however,� that I have appeared in Municipal Courts in every County of New Jersey and for whatever reason, the northwest part of the State (Warren County) can be very unforgiving. �Maybe it's the colder weather?

No.� If you didn't commit any offense you obviously have the option to go to trial.� The Prosecutor will have to prove your guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.� It is possible, though not guaranteed, that justice will prevail.� Given the layperson's unfamiliarity with the law, it is advisable to retain an attorney if you desire to take your matter to trial.

Yes!� Court Rules require, and the Judge will tell you during his opening remarks, that matters with attorneys take precedence over matters without attorneys.� If there weren't enough reasons not to like attorneys this is yet another that can be added to the list.� The lawyers get to cut in front of you to speak to the Prosecutor� and after that, the Judge moves the lawyers' cases post haste.� Ever since preschool you've been told that its wrong to cut in line, but an attorney in Municipal Court is allowed to do it, does it quite brazenly, and astonishingly, you are told that those are in fact the rules!� If you are one of those people who end up waiting 4 or 5 hours for your case to be heard you will wonder why you didn't hire an attorney who got in and out of Court in an hour. These Court rules exist� to accommodate the fact that lawyers have to often be in more than one Court at a time.� The rules seem to give little weight to the fact that the unrepresented defendant has places he or she might like to be as well.� Where you have to be is apparently not as important as where I have to be.� Sorry, those are the rules.

Since this tutorial tells you� everything you need to know about Municipal Court (that's sarcasm) you may wonder why would you need an attorney.�� An attorney is schooled, trained and experienced.� He is familiar with the rules of evidence, knows what defenses do and don't� work and often has familiarity with the players involved in your Municipal Court hearing.� You yourself represent very little opposition to an experienced Prosecutor.� If you don't like the deal he proposes or if he doesn't propose a deal you have little leverage or ability to counter this fact.� Conversely, an attorney represents a genuine obstacle.� He can make appropriate motions and knows the appropriate means, if any, to combat the proofs presented.� Even if you defense might not succeed, the threat of a defense will often cause a Prosecutor to offer a better plea bargain.� It is simply a matter of fact that a represented defendant will generally receive a better plea offer than the unrepresented one.

Beyond the above, an attorney provides a certain comfort level you otherwise don't have.� He knows where to go, who to speak to, where to sit, where to stand, what to say� and, as indicated earlier, he gets preference over the other matters without attorneys.

Hopefully you will find the above useful.� .� If you have a NJ Speeding Ticket or other New Jersey Traffic Ticket please visit our website www.njpleabargain.com.� We will be happy to offer any assistance we can.

www.njpleabargain.com



Ric Futerfas, Esq. is a NJ attorney specializing in NJ Speeding Ticket and other New Jersey Traffic Ticket defense. The Author has prosecuted and defended thousands of municipal court matters with over fifteen years of experience in New Jersey Municipal Courts. His office has a unique online submission form to review your municipal court matter for free. See their site at www.njpleabargain.com




Related Guilty Articles

Friday, February 3, 2012

Conviction Christopher Paget Series

Conviction (Christopher Paget Series #4)



Fifty-nine days. That's how long Rennell Price has to live - after spending fifteen years on death row for the horrifying sexual assault and murder of a girl whose body was found floating in San Francisco Bay. But attorney Terri Paget has dedicated her life to fighting for people like Rennell Price. This time, Terri has a client she believes may actually be innocent, which means that an unpunished killer may still be free. Rennell, along with his older brother, Payton, was found guilty of the heinous crime, and the conviction has been upheld through one appeal after another. But as Terri spends time with Rennell and re-creates the events that put him on death row, she starts to understand the forces that shaped Rennell and the reason he has never been able to defend himself adequately. As Terri prepares for a last appeal, she gets a new weapon for her battle - fresh evidence suggesting that another man, not Rennell, helped Payton commit the atrocity. But the grim...


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Legally Blonde The Musical

Legally Blonde: The Musical
Event on 2012-02-03 20:00:00
It's "An 'Elle' of a show!" - Time Magazine

The hilarious MGM film is now a smash hit musical! When college sweetheart and sorority queen, Elle Woods, gets dumped by her boyfriend she is determined to get him back. So she grabs her Chihuahua, puts down her credit cards, hits the books and sets out to go where no other Delta Nu has gone before - to join him at Harvard Law School. The verdict is that this much fun should not be legal! From sunny California to the Harvard Halls of Justice this all-singing, all-dancing feel good musical will be the highlight of your year.



at Marriott Theatre in Lincolnshire
10 Marriott Drive
Lincolnshire, United States

Elizabeth O’Neill Scholarship Pancake Breakfast
Event on 2012-02-18 08:30:00
The Fourth Annual Elizabeth O’Neill Scholarship Pancake Breakfast helps fund a scholarship to support female heads of households who are attending San Joaquin College of Law. The all-you-can-eat breakfast cost is for adults and for kids 4-12 years old. The breakfast runs from 8:30 a.m. until 10:30 a.m. at the Law School in Clovis. It also includes a children’s book drive. Participants are asked to bring new or gently used children’s books to help beef-up the libraries at Weldon and Miramonte Elementary Schools! For more information, call 323-2100 or visit www.SJCL.edu

at San Joaquin College of Law,
901 Fifth Street
Clovis, United States

The Different Types Of Lawyers


The Different Types Of Lawyers


Today, we can find all types of lawyers to answer whatever legal need we come across with. If you are looking for a specific kind of lawyer or if you are considering a carer in law, here are some of the types of lawyers that we have today to help you out.

1. Asbestos Lawyer

Asbestos lawyers or Mesothelioma lawyers, are those lawyers who represent clients experiencing health problems which resulted from the inhalation of minute asbestos particles. Such clients would include any individual who has been under some level of exposure to small asbestos particles, like those people who have worked or have lived around asbestos. A few examples would be construction and office workers, school children who go to schools that have been constructed with the use of asbestos-containing building materials, as well as those who live in apartment that are considered as toxic buildings.

2. Assault Lawyer

Assault lawyers would be those lawyers who handle various criminal as well as civil assault cases. Criminal assault lawyers or criminal defense lawyers would be those who defend individuals who have been charged with some kind of criminal assault. Civil assault lawyers or personal injury lawyers represent victims of assault and battery so that they would be able to recover the damage for the physical injuries that resulted from the crime.






3. Car Accident Lawyer

If you are the victim of some kind of hit-and-run accident, or have been involved in a vehicle collision, a pedestrian accident or an alcohol or a drug-related incident, a car accident lawyer would be just what you need. This particular type of lawyer would be able to ensure that you would be receiving a fair treatment and compensation from insurance companies and assisting you in the recovery of everything that you are entitles to such as lost wages, pain, sufferring, medical bills, as well as property damages.

4. Bankruptcy Lawyer

If you are in a stage in your life where you are considering filing bankruptcy, a competent bankruptcy lawyer would be able to help you out. He or she would be helping you to evaluate your situation, the available options as well as the best course of action to take before actually filing for it.

5. Criminal Lawyer

Criminal defense lawyers would probably one of the most popular types of lawyers today. This type of lawyer actually has a rather difficult job as he or she represents those individuals who have been accused of a crime, as they make sure that there would be a just trial given to the defendant or to their client.

Some other types of lawyers would be divorce lawyers, employment lawyers, fraud lawyers, medical malpractice lawyers, litigation lawyers, tax lawyers, traffic lawyers, software lawyers and many more.

The above are a few of the common lawyers that people hire on an everyday basis. I would say these are the lawyers that make a major portion of the legal market. There are a few others, which I will cover in a later article.

The Author Althaf Ahmed is a general writer and maintains 2 blogs at Ask My Chef and How To Repair Windows




Provocative International Human Rights Program


University Park, PA (PRWEB) February 03, 2012

The new television and interactive series, World on Trial, premiered on public television stations beginning January 31 and via the internet. The program, which was produced by Penn State University Dickinson School of Law and WPSU, brings together the best legal talent in the world to argue both sides of sharply contested human rights issues before live juries. The inaugural episode deals with the French law prohibiting conspicuous religious attire in public schools. The program asks jurors and viewers to consider whether the law is a violation of the United Nations International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.


?By presenting both sides of sharply contested international human rights issues in the context of courtroom trials, we are able to bring awareness to important human rights issues and the international treaties that govern state conduct,? said Penn State Law faculty member Randall Robinson. An acclaimed human rights advocate and author, Professor Robinson conceived of and hosts the program.


An Emmy Award-winning team from Penn State Public Broadcasting partnered with Penn State University?s Dickinson School of Law and School of International Affairs to produce the program. In addition to the jury watching the live courtroom debate in the Lewis Katz Building, remote juries at distinguished universities throughout the world watched the proceedings by video before rendering their verdicts.


?The idea is to explore the tension between universal and culturally-relative notions of human rights,? said Penn State Law Dean Phil McConnaughay. He stressed that creating a dialogue and forum for discussion is a key objective of the program. ?The web-based elements of the program will continue to grow and feature an array of informational and interactive education materials related to the issues and parties of each World on Trial episode.? The program website is http://worldontrial.psu.edu.


By visiting http://www.worldontrial.psu.edu, viewers can see uncut deliberations of juries from University of Edinburgh (Scotland), Hebrew University (Israel), Sciences Po (France), Yeditepe University (Turkey), Peking University School of Transnational Law (China), University of Hong Kong (China), and University of Cape Town (South Africa) along with the complete televised episode.


More about Episode 1

The presiding jurist is the eminent human rights barrister Cherie Booth Blair, who also happens to be the wife of former British Prime Minister Tony Blair. Harvard Law Professor and renowned trial lawyer Charles Ogletree leads the challenge to the headscarf law; noted French avocat R? Schwartz, who served as Rapporteur of the Stasi Commission that recommended the headscarf law, leads the defense. Prosecution witnesses include John R. Bowen, the Dunbar-Van Cleve Professor of Arts and Sciences at Washington University, St. Louis and author of Why the French Don?t Like Headscarves (Princeton 2007) and Can Islam be French (Princeton 2009), and Widney Brown, Senior Director of International Law, Policy and Campaigns, Amnesty International, London, and a specialist in women?s rights. Defense witnesses include Hanifa Cherifi, a leading sociologist and official of the French Ministry of Education who served as the only Muslim woman member of the Stasi Commission, and Karima Bennoune, an authority on international law and the approach of international law to Muslim fundamentalism, who is Professor of Law and the Arthur L. Dickson Scholar at Rutgers School of Law, Newark.


Additional Planned Episodes

Future episodes of World on Trial will include similarly distinguished participants contesting such issues as the United States? use of unpiloted drones to target suspected terrorists; Nigeria?s responsibilities to impoverished indigenous populations in the oil rich Niger Delta; India?s response to child labor practices within certain traditional castes; certain Israeli eviction and resettlement practices pertaining to homes occupied by Palestinians; particular Chinese government practices toward Uighurs; certain Sri Lankan practices toward Tamils; and similar issues of significance worldwide that raise sharply contested questions of compliance with various international human rights treaties.


Check local public television schedules for air dates and times.


###







Over The Holidays

Over the Holidays



The best holiday traditions are meant to be broken. It's only December 1, and Vanessa Clayton has been dreading Christmas since she spotted tinseled trees at her local mall in September. Thankfully, she and her husband, JT, can't afford to drag their twin boys across the country to New England for the annual celebration at her stuffy sister-in-law Patience's home. Not that Vanessa has prepared a proper Christmas for her family in years, and she has less time than ever since she agreed to consult on the script of a local play. Her older sister, Thea, is no help — she'd rather make art and flirt with surfers than babysit her nine-year-old nephews. Then Patience drops a holiday stress bomb: Her family will come to California instead. In between "baking" cinnamon rolls for the school potluck and overbearing Patience testing her patience, Vanessa can't stop thinking about the difficult but charming playwright at work. Meanwhile, Patience's teenage daughter, Libby, obsesses over a college boy she has met by the pool, and Thea searches desperately for the meaning of Christmas — for her latest installation, of course. As their holiday plans go comically awry, these four women discover the true spirit of the season is hidden in every festive surprise.


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The future of international law
This book is a replica, produced from digital images of the original. It was scanned at the University of Toronto Libraries and ma...
The Future of International Law
This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on ...
The Law
The Law was originally published in French in 1850 by Frederic Bastiat. It was written two years after the third French Revolution...

Foreign Workers Malaysia Plantation


Foreign Workers Malaysia (Plantation Sector)
Employment of Foreign Worker

In Malaysia, foreign workers can be employed in the manufacturing, construction, plantation, agricultural, services and domestic help sector.

Services sector consists of eleven sub sectors: (restaurant, cleaning services, cargo handling, launderette, caddy in golf club, barber, wholesale/retail, textile, metal/scraps/recycle activities, welfare homes and �hotel/resort island.

Only nationals from the specified countries below are allowed to work in the selected sectors:

Approved Sectors

Manufacturing
Plantation
Agriculture
Construction
Services sector
Nationals of:

Indonesia
Cambodia
Nepal
Myanmar
Laos
Vietnam
Philippines (male only)
Pakistan
Sri Lanka
Thailand
Turkmenistan
Uzbekistan
Kazakhstan

Though there has always been a high demand of foreign workers to work in plantation sectors in Malaysia, yet this sector has always been critisized due to the low wages being paid to the workers.

Jan 1995,

A leading planter argued that Malaysia should allow a free flow of workers among the six ASEAN countries to resolve labor shortages and surpluses. A. Navamunkundan of the National Union of Plantation Workers (NUPW), one of the world's largest farm worker unions, countered that the solution to plantation labor shortages in Malaysia is "to uplift the image of the plantation industry by providing high wages and good employment benefits for the workers." If plantations were considered "industrial agriculture," they might be expected to pay factory wages and attract workers now pouring into electronics and other factories.

January 1, 1994, Malaysia banned the recruitment of unskilled and semi-skilled foreign workers, but permitted exceptions in some cases for employers who recruited foreign workers directly. Malaysia required 70 local for every 30 foreign workers in most Malaysian workplaces, but granted exceptions to sectors such as plantations.

Malaysia?s plantation sector should come under the ambit of the Rural and Regional Development Ministry and be accorded the same privileges and benefits that settlers covered by the Federal Land Development Authority (Felda) enjoy, the Malaysian Socialist Party (PSM) said.

by Humayun Kabir (16/10/2009)

Nov 19 2009

Oil palm plantation and rubber estate workers gathered at the Parliament of Malaysia protested against the statement of Plantation Industries and Commodities Minister Bernard Dompok?s that the workers were above the poverty line. The statement would provide a reason for depriving access to government allocated benefits to plantation workers. Dompok said the net income of an oil palm harvester was about RM 1,700 and a rubber tapper earned around RM 870, which were far higher than the rural poverty line of RM 720 a month. However, the immediate study conducted by workers showed that the average wage of these labourers is lower than RM 700. The workers demanded that the minister visit the estates and to gather evidence of their wealth and the availability of the said facilities.

Recently there hase been a huge demand of Nepalese workers for plantation / reforestration sectors in Malaysia from the state of Sabah & Sarawak.



Find More Lawyer Articles

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Protect Your Freedom


Protect Your Freedom
Do You Know What To Do And Say When You Are Pulled Over Or Stopped By A Law Enforcement Officer? Do You Know Your Rights? Saying Or Doing The Wrong Thing My Land You In Jail! Your Instructions To Help You Protect Your Freedom & Stay Out Of Jail!
Protect Your Freedom




*JAIL-BROKEN APPLE iPAD 2 32GB WIFI + 3G BLACK IN MINT CONDITION*

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Elvis Presley On Stage Jail House Rock 8x10 Old Photo
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Courtroom


Question by "hearts"H-town Cutie~: Courtroom!!!?
How does the courtroom work group constrain the judge in bail setting


Best answer:

Answer by David B
It doesn't.



Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!


On Your Own In Tax Court, U. S. Tax Court Without A Lawyer
Guide To Conducting A Case In Tax Court Without A Lawyer. Step-by-step Instructions. Covers Pre-trial And Trial Practice, Motions, Research And Legal Writing, Court Rules, Evidence, And More. Linked To Rules And Cases. Appendix W Sample Docs. 8x10 260 Pgs
On Your Own In Tax Court, U. S. Tax Court Without A Lawyer


The Secret To A Friendly Divorce
The Secret To A Friendly Divorce Reveals The Precise, Eye-opening Words That Your Partner Needs To Hear You Say. This Book Lets You In On A Professional Negotiation Strategy That Puts You In Control Of The Length, Cost, And Outcome Of Your Divorce.
The Secret To A Friendly Divorce

Patent Attorney Atlanta | Ip

Patent Attorney Atlanta | IP Associate | Chemistry

required (most likely in Organic Chemistry or Pharmacology. Prior pharma research background would be a... biochemistry, pharmacology, PhD, jobs, employment...

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Atlanta, USA


Contract Attorney

Contract Attorneys Legal Staffing company in Atlanta is looking for Contract Attorneys in all

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30301 Atlanta, USA



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