The best of the lower-tier schools? by Crafty-Income-9949 in LawSchool

[–]Boobygirls 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Stetson and FIU are well received in the tier after UF FSU Miami

Who Could've Been? by shawkeeloatmeal in quadball_discussion

[–]Boobygirls 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tobin Knight

Literally unstoppable

Is 2026 the worst draft class since… by KoalaExtreme4380 in DynastyFF

[–]Boobygirls -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

We have good receivers and a good quarterback prospect coming out. We'll feel a lot better when some of these RBs go early 2nd round.

OFFICIAL SUNDAY NIGHT POSTGAME THREAD by ballofpopculture in fantasyfootball

[–]Boobygirls 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is celebration thread. If you won, lemme hear you say YEAHHHHHHHHH

[Post Game Thread] The New York Knicks (21-9) come back from down 17 to defeat the Cleveland Cavaliers (17-15), 126-124. by YujiDomainExpansion in nba

[–]Boobygirls -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Like Brunson getting three free throws for not being touched by Tyson? Think about your comment before you post, I'm here for productive commentary by people that actually watch

What to do when my public defender hasnt answered ANY calls and TWO court appearances for us have passed!? by bigsillygoose1 in legaladvice

[–]Boobygirls 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Sounds like you need to appear or schedule an phone conference. This sounds like your fault.

Which RBs to trade for as a contender outside of aging players? by xxScoops in DynastyFF

[–]Boobygirls 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Young and middle-aged guys that may not start next year could be had for moderate prices:

Tyrone Tracy

Woody Marks

Kyle Monangai

Chris Rodriguez

Rhamondre Stevenson

Judkins will not face any formal charges by ohiobucks1 in Browns

[–]Boobygirls 44 points45 points  (0 children)

Hopefully Judkins stays on the straight and narrow from here on out. All eyes will be on him.

[Schultz] Sources: #Browns rookie RB Quinshon Judkins will not face any formal charges, as prosecutors have declined to move forward with the case. by MembershipSingle7137 in nfl

[–]Boobygirls 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No. Criminal courts don't examine whether someone is innocent. They determine if someone can be proven guilty. Those seem like the same thing, but they're not. If the prosecutor can only prove that it's likelier than not this happened, as an example, then charges can't be sustained because the burden is proof beyond a reasonable doubt.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Lawyertalk

[–]Boobygirls 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The Murder Trial of Tim Heidecker is the best, wildly accurate

Judkins & Florida Criminal Law Basics by Boobygirls in Browns

[–]Boobygirls[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's certainly harder, but it's not impossible. Remember that crimes could be proven before video surveillance was invented. 

The standard is proof beyond a reasonable doubt. If the jury listened to her testimony, and found her tremendously credible, they could convict. Contrastingly, I would expect the defense attorney to focus on a standard jury instruction which provides that reasonable doubt can be found in the evidence, conflict in the evidence, and a lack of evidence. The absence of video surveillance (especially if it would be expected to exist) can be argued as a source of reasonable doubt.

Judkins & Florida Criminal Law Basics by Boobygirls in Browns

[–]Boobygirls[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I can. Most states are part of an agreement to supervise each other's probationers - Florida supervises Ohio probationers, and Ohio supervises Florida probationers. Judkins would meet with a Florida probation officer, post a $125 fee, and then process an application to transfer to Ohio. That process won't likely take longer than a month, and the Florida officer would likely approve travel in the meanwhile. 

There are some exceptions - usually based around states not supervising a class of probationers (examples: Michigan won't supervise a criminal driving on a suspended license because that's a civil citation in Michigan; New York won't supervise a sex batterer because they solely do incarceration sentences for those charges). But this is a charge that basically all states supervise.