wrote in message
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On Feb 7, 10:17 pm, wrote:
J.D. Walker wrote:
wrote:
On Feb 7, 12:56 pm, "J.D. Walker" wrote:
What is perjury? As a novice in matters of law, I looked it up at the
Wikipedia site to get a basic understanding.
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perjury)
If any of our more knowledgeable readers cares to elaborate, I'd be
appreciative. I am hoping that the USCF Imposter(s) make it to the
witness stand and lie under oath. Then hopefully he/she/they will be
unmasked, convicted of perjury and sent to prison. That would be a
fitting end to all the trouble he/she/they have caused.
--
Cordially,
Rev. J.D. Walker, MsD, U.C.
Paul can't testify. He will take the fifth amendment. EVEN if he is
innocent,
the statements he makes can be used against him. Paul Truong has no
business answering questions.
Marcus Roberts
So you can take the fifth in civil cases too? I didn't know that.
--
Cordially,
Rev. J.D. Walker, MsD, U.C.
No. There is no privilege against self-incrimination in civil cases.
You can refuse to answer and lose your case. Basically, the theory is
that if you want to come into civil court you shouldn't have done
something you're not willing to be deposed about.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Cite OJ Simpson case. OJ was not tried criminally until the civil case
concluded. A defense may be maintained even though the fifth amendment
is invoked.
You are wrong, OJ was tried in Crimminal Court long before there was any
civil action. Generally civil actions cannot proceed if there is a
crimminal case ongoing. OJ cannot be compelled to testify against himself
by the government, however in civil cases he can because he's not at risk of
his liberty and it was a private suit not a government action. The
standards of proof are much different also. It's much more difficult to get
a guilty verdict in crimminal court than in civil court.
I have had similar issues in litigation myself over my wealth. When
you serve as an ambassador in wartime, you get sued in civil matters,
you earn over a million
dollars, you would be suprised how the world really works, chess
player.
Marcus Roberts
Marcus ole boy, things are a bit different up here on the mainland than they
are down in the islands.
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