tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-573188106264061392.post3601300623227747694..comments2024-03-28T05:47:44.752-05:00Comments on RIFLES AT DAWN: Nose As Long As A Telephone Wire (Liar, Liar....)Tim Morrisseyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00457723301178870851noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-573188106264061392.post-39528500699123864242009-11-21T06:52:57.329-06:002009-11-21T06:52:57.329-06:00>> Pull that kind of crap in a courtroom, gi...>> Pull that kind of crap in a courtroom, giving testimony, and you’ll be charged with perjury. <<<br /><br />That got me thinking: what if it's one of the attorneys pulling it? I mean, what if you're Butler and you're in the witness stand for some reason, and the attorney for Gableman asks a series of yes/no questions relating to that rapist's release? You know, just like on TV where the bad guy attorney keeps saying, "Just answer the question, Mr. Butler!" The questions, like all questions formed by fancy-schmancy, expensive attorneys, have answers that the attorney already knows beforehand. Then when Butler has answered the last of the series of leading questions in the affirmative, the bad guy attorney turns away in disgust and says, "No more questions, Your Honor!"<br /><br />I wondered, would THAT be perjury?Steve Erbachhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05065643506800242801noreply@blogger.com