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Man Gets 40 Years in Jail after Rejecting Plea Deal That Would Have Freed Him Immediately
Houston Chronicle ^ | September 1, 2016 | Conroe Courier

Posted on 09/04/2016 1:51:51 AM PDT by BlessedBeGod

A Montgomery County man accused of assaulting a public servant and threatening to kill police officers could have walked free Monday. However, after refusing a plea bargain, he was convicted and hit with a 40-year sentence.

Jurors in the 9th District Court of Judge Phil Grant convicted Raymond Lindsey Jr., 46, last week of Assault on a Public Servant and Retaliation. His attorney said he already had been in jail 19 months and would have been released with "time served..."

(Excerpt) Read more at chron.com ...


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society
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To: Freedom_Is_Not_Free

or he was being Nifonged. Prosecutorial misconduct is common.


41 posted on 09/04/2016 9:13:00 AM PDT by longtermmemmory (VOTE! http://www.senate.gov and http://www.house.gov)
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To: Drew68

I have a problem with this and I believe it makes a mockery of our treasured legal principal of “innocent until proven guilty.”

*******

But he was proven guilty. It’s more likely that the DA offered to let the thug off easy due to political pressure from blacks but he was too dumb to take the deal.


42 posted on 09/04/2016 9:17:13 AM PDT by Socon-Econ
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To: Oatka

Overcharging seems to be a common way to coerce a plea.
In famous cases (eg, Duke Lacrosse, Zimmerman, the Baltimore police officers/Freddie Gray case), prosecutors often come across as incompetent, dishonest, schemers, etc., and are outmanned by competent defense attorneys. You have to wonder how bad they are normally, since they put their A-Teams on high profile cases.

It’s not hard to see why they like forcing poorly represented defendants to plea; it’s easy, quick, low expense, and has a low risk of public embarrassment, plus an appearance of fairness (hey, the defendant agreed to it...). DA’s seem to drop the charges that are complicated. As a result, those looking for injustice can point to convicts serving time for what appears limited offenses, when actually, they were guilty of a large spree. I’ve seen this in local news reports of court action repeatedly — not just TV shows.


43 posted on 09/04/2016 12:54:55 PM PDT by Chewbarkah (o)
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To: Drew68

” What if they made the same deal to you, except you knew damn well you were innocent?”

He’s not innocent!. You make a bogus argument


44 posted on 09/04/2016 6:11:23 PM PDT by Figment
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To: Thumper1960

Good point


45 posted on 09/04/2016 6:12:27 PM PDT by Figment
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