Ideally yes, the presence of lawyer is to ensure fairness and due process. In actuality and practice fairness of trial is dependent on the integrity of the court and even the quality and proficiency of the hired or appointed legal counsel.
honestly i think the lawyer is there just to defend or help the Innocent people and make sure that the innocent don't end up in prison or worse.
The Human Rights Act and Convention of Rights of the United Kingdom guarantee the right to trial fairness. Article VI affords the accused with the presumption of innocent (i.e. "innocent until proven guilty"). Furthermore, the accused have the rights to prepare a defense, have counsel, and translators as necessary to ensure trial fairness.
No. In England a, barrister is a trial lawyer.
Hans Köchler observed the Lockerbie trial in the Netherlands in 2000. He was appointed by the United Nations as an international observer to ensure fairness and transparency in the proceedings.
Having an adversarial system of justice is the most accepted system, fairness is subjective.æ However, having a set of jurours decide versus just a judge seems more fair.
right to lawyer, speedy trial
If you want a lawyer that is a certified criminal trial expert, Certified as a Criminal Trial Specialist by the Tennessee Commission on Continuing Legal Education and Specialization and Certified in Arkansas as a Criminal Trial Specialist by the National Board of Trial Advocacy, then he is your lawyer.
Trial by impartial jury, speedy public trial, right to a lawyer, and right meet the lawyer against him/her.
yes
Lawyer may conduct a deposition during the discovery stage of a civil trial.
CBS Reports - 1959 The Trial Lawyer was released on: USA: 30 April 1968
yes everybody has a lawyer
That is up to the lawyer