Originally posted by s_stabeler
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If a poor person gets a really good PD who actually does his homework and fights for his client (I know, mostly dreaming here), it's conceivable that he could get the same sort of sentence. But it's only available if the defense fights for it, and most PDs are so overburdened that they don't have the time to even meet their clients, much less craft any sort of defense for them.
My brother got taken in because he was on probation, and he was following it to the letter (hey, look, poor people can get probation, too), but a 'friend' of his left a baggie of something in his glove box, despite knowing that brother was on probation. At his arraignment, the PD showed up late and had to look through his stack of cases and confirm with my brother which one was his. He would have gone to prison over the charge if it weren't for the fact that the now-ex-friend's mother hired a real lawyer to represent him, and he got the entire case dropped due to there no longer being any evidence left after it was tested to confirm what it was. The PD could have argued the same thing, but there was just no way he would have had time to even find that out, much less craft a defense around it.
The issue isn't that rich people get lighter sentences because they can afford a real defense, but that poor people are assigned defense counsel that is so overburdened and so short of time, that they don't actually get any counsel at all.
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