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Real-Life Decision Making -- Solution

You withhold the information at first, without ruling out using it in the later stages of the case.

In this case, you wait until you know you must reveal the information, only to have it viewed as a measure of desperation. The evidence is essentially wasted because it doesn't help your client.

Linda Miller is a private practitioner. Her job, she says, is to ensure that all citizens are afforded the same rights; sometimes this means having to decide whether or not a client has been appropriately charged. "I think a lot of people are charged with something that is not necessarily what they should have been charged with. A lot of times, people may have done something that was a mistake or could be wrong, but might not be criminal and instead it's been made into a criminal case," explains Miller.


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