• Quick note - the problem with Youtube videos not embedding on the forum appears to have been fixed, thanks to ZiprHead. If you do still see problems let me know.

Merged Rob Reiner and his wife apparent victims of homicide

Well I'm biased cause I ran from the law ;). Mainly cause I could not take the stress and did not want to die at age 40. But also because I felt, from doing a bunch of trials, that I could not be 'successful' in an adversarial system without at least bending the rules and compromising my sense of ethics. I refused to play dirty to get ahead. And I got sick of seeing decisions being made by stupid people. Probably why I never was interested in politics either. :p

Oh, looks like I'd misunderstood you again. I'd taken you to mean that you'd left criminal defense, but had moved off to other areas within law. (I suppose in criminal defense, this issue is the most ...well, dramatic, pronounced. But the principle of it will apply in all areas of litigation, or so I would imagine. And hence my question about how you were navigating that, given your ethics.)

Anyway, clearly we're of the same view as far as this. (In addition, point taken about the stress thing that, as you say, was a factor as well: that's an additional factor, related somewhat I suppose but different than the integrity issue per se.)


eta: And kudos, for having the spine to have been able to walk away from it all. The sunk cost of it, after law school and after five years of practice, must have been colossal. Double cool!(y)
 
Last edited:
The sunk cost of it, after law school and after five years of practice, must have been colossal. Double cool!(y)
Thanks! Yeah now that I am on career #3 (starving artist, career 2 was atmospheric scientist) I often question my sanity since I probably could have retired early if I had just stuck it out, but then again, could have died of heart disease. So, no regrets, it was a great experience, I could write a book about some of the outrageous cases I handled. Gave me a solid foundation on how to evaluate quality of evidence, which obviously comes in handy in today's virtual world.
 
Nick Reiner's arraignment is still sometime off -- I've seen different dates (his original attorney withdrew) -- but People Magazine reports he's off "suicide watch."

Nick Reiner is no longer on suicide watch at the Twin Towers Correctional Facility in downtown Los Angeles, PEOPLE can exclusively confirm, according to a Los Angeles County sheriff source. When Nick entered the jail system on the morning of Dec. 15, he was swiftly placed under heightened supervision. The 32-year-old is currently being held in solitary confinement, where he is required to wear a yellow jail-issued shirt and blue pants, according to the same source. The jail has since removed the suicide-prevention smock he was required to wear at all times. The sheriff source says Nick will not be released from High Observation Housing (HOH) unless a judge or a court hearing determines otherwise and will continue to be monitored and housed alone. People Magazine article link
A source in the Los Angeles sheriff's office also told People that doctors and mental health professionals have determined that Nick has a "mental disability."
 
Last edited:

Back
Top Bottom