“the reason is this even if you're completely innocent of the charges that doesn't necessarily mean that another person isn't saying something untrue about you and police are people too they have no way of knowing what person a is saying is true or not and what you are saying is true or not so they have to take all of the evidence that they hear evidencing statements made by other people and they have to determine what they think happened”
“Many times in criminal cases, especially domestic violence cases, we hear people say, well, it's not a case. There's no evidence. It's all he said. She said, The problem is legally what someone says is evidence.”
“But in a court of law, evidence can be taken in any number of ways. So different types of evidence include police reports, pictures, 911 calls, videos, surveillance, and testimony or statements. That is where that He Said, She Said thing becomes a problem because statements are actually evidence.”
“Now it cannot be hearsay statements. In other words, it can't be I heard that someone said, but if someone was directly there and witnessed something and then tell the police what they saw, that is evidence. So even though someone may be lying and saying something completely wrong, technically they are allowed to tell their side of the story and that is evidence that can be used against you.”
“Now a criminal defense attorneys job is to dig in and poke holes into that and show okay, what they're saying makes absolutely no sense based on the evidence that we have otherwise. So other evidence like those videos, 911 calls pictures, but statements themselves can be and are evidence in any criminal trial. That's also why it's very important to remember that you have the right not to make a statement because your statement, if you're the he or the sheet, your statement will be used against you if you make any statements, just as their statements can be used against you in the same way”
“That is where that He Said, She Said thing becomes a problem because statements are actually evidence.”
Alexis explains: "But in a court of law, evidence can be taken in any number of ways. So different types of evidence include police reports, pictures, 911 calls, videos, surveillance, and testimony or statements. That is where that He Said, She Said thing becomes a problem because statements are actually evidence."
Answered by Alexis Austin Litle · Watch clip ↗Alexis explains: "it's very important to remember that you have the right not to make a statement because your statement, if you're the he or the sheet, your statement will be used against you if you make any statements"
Answered by Alexis Austin Litle · Watch clip ↗Alexis explains: "Many times in criminal cases, especially domestic violence cases, we hear people say, well, it's not a case. There's no evidence. It's all he said. She said, The problem is legally what someone says is evidence."
Answered by Alexis Austin Litle · Watch clip ↗Alexis explains: "Now a criminal defense attorneys job is to dig in and poke holes into that and show okay, what they're saying makes absolutely no sense based on the evidence that we have otherwise. So other evidence like those videos, 911 calls pictures, but statements themselves can be and are evidence in any criminal trial. That's also why it's very important to remember that you have the right not to make a statement because your statement, if you're the he or the sheet, your statement will be used against you if you make any statements, just as their statements can be used against you in the same way"
Answered by Alexis Austin Litle · Watch clip ↗Alexis explains: "Now it cannot be hearsay statements. In other words, it can't be I heard that someone said, but if someone was directly there and witnessed something and then tell the police what they saw, that is evidence. So even though someone may be lying and saying something completely wrong, technically they are allowed to tell their side of the story and that is evidence that can be used against you."
Answered by Alexis Austin Litle · Watch clip ↗Alexis explains: "That is where that He Said, She Said thing becomes a problem because statements are actually evidence."
Answered by Alexis Austin Litle · Watch clip ↗Alexis explains: "the reason is this even if you're completely innocent of the charges that doesn't necessarily mean that another person isn't saying something untrue about you and police are people too they have no way of knowing what person a is saying is true or not and what you are saying is true or not so they have to take all of the evidence that they hear evidencing statements made by other people and they have to determine what they think happened"
Answered by Alexis Austin Litle · Watch clip ↗Each answer links directly to the source where a Right Law Group attorney addressed this question.
7 answers grounded in Right Law Group sources
Got into a DV case because of an ex I let back in the home and made my life very hard
he fought hard for me
they dismissed the whole case
their belief of my side and story and their knowledge in the legal system they were able to get my case dismissed
get my case dismissed