Tag: bar review

An Example of an MBE Question (and what goes on in a student’s head)

Here is an example of an easy question I missed:

A mechanic and his former employee were indicted for automobile theft. Unbeknownst to the mechanic, the former employee confessed to the crime and implicated his employer. In exchange for favorable treatment by the prosecutor, the former employee agreed to cooperate in the prosecution of the mechanic. The police were also investigating the mechanic for an alleged plan to kill another person who was to serve as a witness for the state at the mechanic’s trial. The mechanic sought a meeting with the former employee. Upon learning of the proposed meeting, the police wired the former employee in order to record the conversation between the mechanic and the former employee. The police directed the former employee to encourage the mechanic to talk about his criminal activity. At the meeting the mechanic made incriminating statements about stealing automobiles. The mechanic’s lawyer filed a pretrial motion to suppress these statements on the grounds that his client’s right to counsel was violated.

Should the court grant this motion?

A. No, because the statements were obtained by police during an investigation of a possible crime, a plan to murder a witness, for which the right to counsel had not attached.

B. No, because the mechanic initiated the meeting with his former employee.

C. Yes, because the police knowingly used the former employee to elicit incriminating statements from the mechanic about the charged crime.

D. Yes, because the police used a secret agent to obtain the incriminating statements.

Ready?  Okay, let’s go through it together…

…A mechanic and his former employee were indicted for automobile theft…  Okay, now, once a person is indicted for a crime, their 6th Amendment right to counsel automatically attaches.  This is not to be confused with your 5th Amendment right to counsel, which must be affirmatively invoked after you are in police custody.

…Unbeknownst to the mechanic, the former employee confessed to the crime and implicated his employer. In exchange for favorable treatment by the prosecutor, the former employee agreed to cooperate in the prosecution of the mechanic…Now, you need to be thinking about what the police want to do with this guy.

…The police were also investigating the mechanic for an alleged plan to kill another person who was to serve as a witness for the state at the mechanic’s trial…Interesting.  Now recall I said that when a person is indicted their 6A right to counsel attaches.  However, that right is attached only for the crime in which he’s been indicted.  He has not been indicted for conspiracy to commit murder.  Are they trying to catch you here?

The mechanic sought a meeting with the former employee…Hmm.  Note here that even if you have a right to counsel, you can get in trouble if you ignore that right and volunteer statements.

…Upon learning of the proposed meeting, the police wired the former employee in order to record the conversation between the mechanic and the former employee… Okay, the cops can do this.

The police directed the former employee to encourage the mechanic to talk about his criminal activity… Ah ha!  Note that word in bold.  The entire question pivots on this one word.  The police cannot violate your ConX rights.  A private citizen can.  If your neighbor smells your reefer, busts into your house while you’re gone and turns that evidence over to the cops, it CAN be used against you.  But, the police cannot use that person as an agent to violate your rights for them.  That’s what happened here.  However, if they directed him to ask about murder, that’d be okay.  Remember, no 6A right for that.  But they didn’t.  They said to talk about criminal activity.

At the meeting the mechanic made incriminating statements about stealing automobiles… Gah!  Why’d you have to do that?!

…The mechanic’s lawyer filed a pretrial motion to suppress these statements on the grounds that his client’s right to counsel was violated.

Should the court grant this motion?… You have an answer yet?

A. No, because the statements were obtained by police during an investigation of a possible crime, a plan to murder a witness, for which the right to counsel had not attached…Wrong.  But this is their first trick they use to get you.  This is good law.  It just doesn’t apply here the way we need it.  This was just a distraction.

B. No, because the mechanic initiated the meeting with his former employee… Wrong.  But congratulations, you’re only as stupid as me.  I read this and as I said previously, even if you’ve got your 6A right, you can still have statements used against you that you volunteer.  Apparently cops have been known to just go hang out in holding cells pretending to be in trouble too in order to get information.  They just can’t actively interrogate.

C. Yes, because the police knowingly used the former employee to elicit incriminating statements from the mechanic about the charged crime… Ding Ding Ding!  Remember when I said that the cops can’t use an agent to violate your ConX rights?  I passed on this because I missed the word “directedI thought they were just wiring him knowing he was going to talk regardless.

D. Yes, because the police used a secret agent to obtain the incriminating statements.  Do not be fooled just because it uses the word secret agent.  But yeah, in this case for the reasons I’ve said above, this isn’t the answer. 

How’d you do?  Alright!  Only 199 more to go!

Damn you 90’s Country! I bite my thumb at you!

Bar Tally: 326 Hours

I’m a Wuss

I’m throwing in the towel short of reaching my objective. It’s 0320.  I damn near feel like I’ve been in the field.  But damn I am happy.

 

An Incredible Specimen

I spent 3 hours yesterday studying the law of Evidence in a strip club.  I decided a break was due and after putting in about 5 hours of bar study went to go see Seether in concert with some good friends and my gorgeous motivator of a girlfriend.  I didn’t even realize it, but I ended up witnessing the Crime of the Century:  Bush opening for Nickelback.  It was wrong for Seether and My Darkest Days to open for Nickelback, but seriously, I feel personally insulted to see Bush open for Nickelback.

I didn’t even realize Bush was going to be there.  So when they showed up I was about as happy as a man can be.  The girlfriend looks at me confused.  She’s never heard of Bush.  I don’t know if that means I’m doing something right or wrong.  Poor thing.  I cannot explain how awesome it was pretty much getting to hear Sixteen Stone live.  Hell, I was 14 listening to them when they came out.

Getting back to the main thrust of this post, my ride back decided they were going to the strip club.  I’ve been putting in ~12 hour days for more than a week.  I do not have the time to go to the strip club.  So I load the books, find a reasonably quiet place to study and re-re-re-review Heresay Exceptions.  I think this unprecedented display of discipline should earn me an extra 100 points on the Bar Exam.

Bush.  Gavin Rossdale covering “Come Together”.  Glycerine, Everything Zen, Machinehead, Comedown.  Seriously, how cool is that?

Bar Tally:  192 Hours.  It’s 0401.  I wrapped up about 20 minutes ago to get this post off before bed.  Gotta get up in less than 4 to get my little motivator off to school.  I’m driving hard.  It feels great.  I am so damn happy.

Video Dump, you win! Very NSFW with some of the lyrics kids.

I Can’t Never Get This Stuff Right

Bar Study has exposed a weakness in my head.  My ex-wife used to say, “Don’t forget to X.”  I had read somewhere a few years ago that the brain doesn’t respond well to negative statements and a trick to avoid forgetting things was to avoid negative terms.  For example, in the above statement, some weak minded people like myself and my friend here will not process the negative statement well and read it as, “Wa, wa, wa, forget to X”.  So we forget to X.

Well, I’m finding the same problem is happening with multiple choice questions on the Bar Exam.  The questions I have the hardest time with will generally give you a very long fact pattern and then ask something along the lines of, “If the court agrees that Joe Schmoe does NOT have a life estate at the lap of luxury it will be because which of the following statements is FALSE?  Then the answer will be something like, “The Hutch CAN’T make this devise in his will because it violates the Rule Against Perpetuities.”

My brain can’t handle the negatives.  When I review a lot of the questions I miss, a great many of them I actually know the answer to.  But even in simple instances when it asks me which answers are false, my brain stares at the answers struggling, because I only want to look for answers that are true.  So I click on answers that are true knowing full well that they are true because my brain refuses to accept clicking on an answer that is a false statement.  So when you throw double, triple, quadruple negatives, well, trouble ensues.

Bar Tally: 138 Hours

Never Let It Go to a Decision

So I just posted earlier this week that the one person I’ve never lost faith in is myself.  Well…

… I still haven’t.

Look, when I was a teenager I used to box.  Every once in a while I’d walk into the gym and my coach would overhear me complain about a bad decision I saw during that weekend’s fight.  His answer was always the same:  “Never let it go to a decision.  If you really wanted to win, you’d knock that other fucker out.”

This applies to life as well.  Presently, it applies to academics.  I fell short at the finish line.  I suppose I shouldn’t have declared victory early.  I accomplished an incredible amount this semester.  I’m proud of myself.  I did everything I set out to do.  I didn’t deserve how this ended.  But, I let it go to a decision.  I put it in the hands of the judges and in this life, unless you knock that other fucker out you have nowhere to point that finger but at yourself.  I did better than I got credit for, but no one was out to get me.  It’s just that sometimes you roll snake eyes.  <–( Snake Eyes can beat you up.  That’s the joke.  Work with me people.)

I’m not going to sit here and tell you I did my best for two reasons:  1)  Losers always whine about their best.  Winners?  Well…

2)  The second reason is that this wasn’t my best.  I tried hard.  Really god damned hard.  I put my heart and soul into this.  I put my daughter to bed at 9:30 and stayed up doing homework until after 0300.  But it wasn’t my best.  There’s this thing called 0400.  I could have stayed up until then.  I spent a few weekends chasing tail rather than than reading about renvoi, depecarge, and the 2nd restatement of conflict of laws.

 

There was this fella a few years back you might have heard of.  He liked to refer to himself as The Greatest.  The first time he lost was when he met a Taggart Continental with a left hook named Joe Frazier.  Like this last semester, it was a beautiful battle, but Ali lost when he let it go to the judges.  (even though Smokin’ Joe was the better man that day and honestly did earn the decision)

Where to from here?  Well, I’ve never quit anything before so I’m going to unfuck this JD malfunction most rickey tick..  I’m sure I’ll lose my job now, so that is unfortunate.  So I’ll take the weekend off, defer what I can and salvage the money I’ve spent to prep myself for the Bar.  But I’ll probably sit down with about $20 worth of Red Bull and dominos, grab a pad of paper and a nice green gel pen and reroute a new path to fortune and glory.

 

Bar Study and a New Feature!

I’m going to start a tally of how much time I spent studying for the Bar Exam.  No real good reason, just a morbid interest in how much time it’s going to come out to. Here’s the workstation:

I’d show off the study uniform, but then I’d have to make this site 18+ and beat back marriage proposals, so I’m going to go ahead and pass on that.

Starting well, now, I’m going to add a new feature to the blog.  I call it “The Learned Sergeant, shooting from the hip”.  Basically it’s just going to be quips about my feelings regarding general aspects of the law without going into much analysis.  It’s quite possible that with some well thought out debate I’d come to a different opinion, but then it’d be “The Learned Sergeant, shooting down the sights”, and these titles are awful, so let’s just drop it ya’ jerk!

Bar Tally:  16 hours.

Bar Study and the Benefits of a Mistake

I put in 8.5 hours of Bar study today.  Silly me, I thought I was going to be able to get a job and enjoy a leisurely 4 hours or so of study a day.

So far I’m more than satisfied with Themis.  If I’m stuck at home 8 hours a day in my underwear staring at my laptop then this isn’t all that bad a review course.

Last Wednesday I took my Workplace Law final.  It was an open book exam.  4 hours.  I’m driving into the parking lot when I’m gripped with a panic:  I’ve forgotten my book.  My first instinct was to turn around and go get it.  I’d probably be 15 minutes late or so to the exam but I’m sure it’d be worth it.  Then my usual foolish bravado kicked in and I figured to hell with it.  I’m glad I did.

I sat there for 4 full hours and answered every bit of the exam off the top of my head.  I can’t tell you what my grade will be, but I know I got all the answers right.  One of the coolest feelings walking out of that test was the realization that I have one heck of a lot more legal knowledge running around in my head than I imagined.  I guess you don’t always realize how much you’ve grown if you use a crutch.  Then it occurred to me that my head is full of evil:  Title VII employment discrimination, the Americans with Disabilities Act, ect.  Law school turned me into Derek Zoolander.  I can do mountains of good in the world, but you never know if the time will come when they ask me to just relax:

Dagny or Dumbass?

I’m a contrarian, apparently about everything.  I don’t do this on purpose.  I swear.  It’s just in my makeup I suppose.

It occurred to me today that if I were a hippy, I’d be known as a free spirit.  But when you’re not a hippy, you’re just an asshole.

So today was Day 1 reviewing for the Bar, so I had to finally pull the trigger on a Bar Review over the weekend.  Did I choose BarBri like 2/3 of the University?  No.

Did I choose Kaplan, like the other 1/3?  No.

I chose Themis.  Now, mind you I did my research.  This wasn’t a rash decision.  But this is the first time Themis is doing the Idaho Bar.  (probably because Idaho just got on the MBE)  But there are no published success rates.  In fact, it’s entirely possibly I’m the first and only Idaho Bar applicant to take it.  There are lots of reasons I think Themis is the best review course that I’m not going to go over here, but I’d be lying if I wasn’t a little concerned.  But, God Hates a Coward (TM) and what not.  I did try to turn that into haggling them down on the price.  It didn’t work, but was worth the effort.

But the point is that I think I have found some Rearden Metal here.  But it’d be nice to just be comfortable and follow the crowd one of these days.  I’m also disgustingly full of myself for even making a parallel here.  Gross.

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