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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Friday, February 22, 2008
“Kill all the white people
Then we’ll be free”
Barry Bonds seized on a pair of typos, complaining in court papers Thursday that the government’s mistakes could compromise his chances for a fair trial.
The typographical errors showed up in a recent filing by prosecutors wrongly accusing Bonds of flunking a drug test in 2001. They later admitted they instead meant 2000.
...The mistakes were corrected the next day, but Bonds’ lawyers argue in their response to the government’s filing that the damage to the case was already done.
“As is always the case, many more prospective jurors will have read the original story than the retraction,” wrote Dennis Riordan and Donald Horgan, two of Bonds’ six attorneys.
Repoz
Posted: February 22, 2008 at 02:50 AM | 10 comment(s)
Related News: General, Special Topics, Steroids, San Francisco
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Wow
Six lawyers itself is not extreme for a defendant with this level of resources. But a press story I read -- can't find it now -- suggested that Bonds was really screwing up his defense by mismanaging his legal team. (Part of the story made the news -- the part about Bonds trying to get some prominent lawyer to lower his rates, and the lawyer refusing and declining to represent Bonds. But there was more to the story than that, with Bonds making other mistakes.)
it is just part of the smear campaign.
Both sides are acting like sleazeballs, to my taste. Which is why I try to avoid paying attention at all.
Well, for those who actually read the excerpt (much less the entire article), the claim is that the day of front page news the "typo" generated has helped to contaminate the jury pool - people will tend to remember the falsehood, and not the later retraction.
I seem to recall that Bonds also wanted an independent law firm to review this attorney's time sheets.
Not surprisingly, the attorney said "thanks, but no thanks."
I doubt it. But, I don't know, not having experience in the legal field or knowing the mechanics of how such documents are prepared and reviewed. It would seem that since this is THE BARRY BONDS CASE Federal people would be doing extra double checks on documents etc.
WSJ Law Blog article
And
Article on Keker/Bonds
From what I can tell Keker commands huge fees because of a great track record. And Bonds may well have made a penny wise, pound foolish decision.
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