I have no idea what you're talking about. I don't know what your legal books say or how they do it in Lansing Michigan. I went through this process. I know other people who went through this process. You get arrested. You go to the precinct. They take your fingerprints and mug shot. Then at some point they transport you downtown to Criminal Court. If you can't make Criminal Court before they close you go to the House of Detention on Centre Street. The next day they take you to court. You go to an anteroom off the courtroom. You meet with your lawyer. They ask you how you want to plead.
Then the case is called and you go before the judge and they ask you how you plead. If you plead Not Guilty the judge asks the arresting officer to step forward. He explains why he made the arrest. What evidence he has. That's it. Then the judge asks a couple questions and decides the case. Judges in New York City brag about how many cases they can dispose of at a single sitting.
You might want to write to the person who wrote
this to correct it.
Regardless, my problem is not with how fast the New York City Criminal Court can handle its docket. My problem is this -- convicting a defendant on the basis of he's been arrested four other times. And that's where I get skeptical. Maybe that happened. Or maybe he was convicted because the judge believed the cop over the defendant, and
then, at sentencing, the judge remarked that he had been arrested four other times, and used that to justify the 45-day sentence. Or maybe, at sentencing, the judge remarked that he had been
convicted four other times, and used
that to justify the 45-day sentence.
Or maybe, the website I linked to above is accurate, and you were watching an arraignment, and he was sent to Rikers to await trial. Or maybe the judge denied the motion to dismiss, and the defendant decided to plead guilty after that.
I can't know. So yes, if there's a judge in New York convicting people based on the fact that they've been arrested multiple times previously (on unrelated charges!), then that's a Bad Thing. Hopefully some lawyer or defendant finds it worth their while to appeal one of these Bad rulings.
But if there's a judge in New York who thinks that a defendant needs some jail time for his fifth misdemeanor conviction, I don't see that as a big deal.
These are misdemeanors. You don't get a drawn out legal procedure in New York City for a misdemeanor. Trial by jury for a misdemeanor? In New York City? That's fantasy.
Of course, I never said otherwise.
The way things work...there was a guy in the Bronx charged with murder. He was in detention for
five years awaiting trial. Another lie?
Please tell us what the cause of the delay was.