Typical court process for an indictable criminal charge

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  • Опубликовано: 29 апр 2019
  • Mike discusses what you can expect if facing an indictable (more serious) criminal charge.
    Here's a quick video answering another question you may have,'how long does a typical indictable charge take?' Click here: www.kruselaw.ca/video-gallery...
    Call us today at 1-800-699-0806 for a free and no-obligation consultation. We can help.

Комментарии • 15

  • @shanepankhurst9958
    @shanepankhurst9958 2 года назад +1

    Great information. Thank you

  • @patrickmckay619
    @patrickmckay619 Год назад

    Very informative, Ty.

  • @swordsmith3785
    @swordsmith3785 3 года назад +5

    I've been on hold for over 3 years now, still no trial date. My "lawyer"??? Said probably 2022. Makes no sense. Insane!!. #NoManIsSafe

  • @Thunderz8831
    @Thunderz8831 3 года назад +2

    What happens at your trial you do not receive the original documents from the Crown? Instead you receive a document that is dated few months before the trial date. Please kindly briefly explain.. thank you

  • @conbrass7081
    @conbrass7081 3 года назад +1

    does the crown have to give self represented all disclosure??

  • @naomikhan9431
    @naomikhan9431 2 года назад

    What does it mean when a lawyer is seeking for 18 months time served, if a person has already served 3 months? How much time will the individual actually do?

  • @edwarddelaney1981
    @edwarddelaney1981 3 года назад

    How does the court handle a summary case

  • @edwarddelaney1981
    @edwarddelaney1981 3 года назад

    How does the court handle a summary case?

  • @kent5535
    @kent5535 3 года назад

    Can lie detector results be used in the sentencing phase?

    • @mdogzino
      @mdogzino 3 года назад +1

      I don't think lie detectors are used in any legitimate court process in North America. They are unreliable and can be beaten and or manipulated

  • @tonyarnez5193
    @tonyarnez5193 3 года назад +3

    in regular people words, if you do something stupid, you will pay the stupid tax, but if you smarten up fast, listen to your lawyer, don't cause further problems and behave, society would rather have you out working at your job & contributing than to be a burden in jail. That sounds like we should be having citizenry courses in schools, perhaps preventative measures to keep people on the right path. Junkies didn't get to be junkies on their own, so why are always reacting to the social problems drugs cause, the war on drugs have done nothing. If you prove to society you are drug addicted, you can't clean yourself up, you require an intervention, that's when I would agree with government intervention. After all it's much better having a person working and contributing, I would be okay with those people being managed and supervised. Prevention seems way better than reaction.

  • @edwarddelaney1981
    @edwarddelaney1981 3 года назад

    How does the court handle a summarily charge case?