L&O: Interdimensional Edition: Friday, March 26

Mar 26, 2010 12:25

When Alex entered the classroom, she had a German shepherd with her. No worries, he was housebroken. In fact, he was possibly better behaved as a dog than he ever had been as a human, but saying that out loud would probably earn you a head-slap.

A Lawyer's Perspective )

law and order

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Comments 25

Sign In! glasses_justice March 26 2010, 16:26:28 UTC
Standing mute.

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Re: Sign In! guardianborn March 26 2010, 20:03:02 UTC
Rose Hathaway

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Re: Sign In! momslilassassin March 26 2010, 20:19:44 UTC
Ben Skywalker

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Re: Sign In! itsjustlanguage March 26 2010, 22:00:18 UTC
Hoshi Sato

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During the Lecture and/or Video glasses_justice March 26 2010, 16:26:55 UTC
Watch the video. Take notes. Or pass notes. Or suspect your classmates of being monkey-ponies. (They probably aren't really monkey-ponies.)

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Re: During the Lecture and/or Video momslilassassin March 26 2010, 20:22:56 UTC
Ben had a very fashionable, really, just ask him, rebreather with him that stopped the fog's hallucinatory effects on him.

Besides, he'd never skip out on this class. He was a nerd dedicated that way.

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Re: During the Lecture and/or Video itsjustlanguage March 26 2010, 22:10:26 UTC
Neither rain nor snow nor sleet nor toxic fog would keep Hoshi from missing class, especially when she had friends who could teleport.

But when she saw the German shepherd accompanying the teacher, she was glad she'd stashed Porthos in the journalism classroom until she returned for the newspaper meeting.

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Re: During the Lecture and/or Video blondecanary March 27 2010, 00:07:13 UTC
Dinah was taking a lot of notes. Both as a potential law enforcer, and, let's face it, a habitual law-breaker. It was dismaying to realize how easily testimony could go all the wrong way.

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Class Activity glasses_justice March 26 2010, 16:28:40 UTC
"Pair off with one of your neighbors," Alex said. "One of you will be interrogating the other. Interrogation continues until one of you says something that the other can consider to be incriminating, either for the offense in question or an unrelated charge. Then you'll switch. After that, we'll have a short discussion."

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Class Discussion glasses_justice March 26 2010, 16:31:00 UTC
"From a police officer's perspective," Alex said, "if nothing else, you should have seen how easily suspects will hand themselves to you on a silver platter -- and, conversely, how easy it is to twist anything into seeming like a confession. The former is a gift, but the latter is a warning. So. What did you make of the video? Did your opinions change after our activity? If a suspect insisted on having a lawyer present, would you assume he or she was guilty? Would you, personally, speak to the police if contacted as a suspect of a crime?"

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Talk to the TAs glasses_justice March 26 2010, 16:31:19 UTC
Do not interrogate them, please!

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Re: Talk to the TAs blondecanary March 26 2010, 23:19:01 UTC
Dinah was sipping her coffee and trying not to yawn. Also, considering how best to get back out and fight effectively.

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Re: Talk to the TAs provostsdog March 27 2010, 00:44:40 UTC
Beka was frowning at the lecture, wondering how she'd do her work if all witnesses refused to talk. There was sommat wrong with this world's system if they had to fear their police.

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