This one is just too easy, and the thread title inevitable
Lawyer’s Pants Catch On Fire During Arson Trial
Lawyer's Pants Catch On Fire During Arson Trial | HuffPost Weird News?
This one is just too easy, and the thread title inevitable
Lawyer’s Pants Catch On Fire During Arson Trial
Lawyer's Pants Catch On Fire During Arson Trial | HuffPost Weird News?
What’s the opposite of irony? Because the defense lawyer’s pants spontaneously* catching on fire during his client’s arson trial is the precise opposite of ironic.
*I’m giving him benefit of the doubt, because although a spontaneous fire right in the courtroom might support a defense contention “See? Fire can arise spontaneously ANYWHERE!”, it’s pretty far to go to set your own pants on fire. If I were an attorney, nothing a client may offer me would induce me to that kind of demonstration.
So it was a brief where he got burnt?
I’d have gone with a mistaken-identity defense, arguing that my client was only partly Claudy.
It really doesn’t help one’s argument to have one’s pants spontaneously burst into flame.
Although, I do have to say, it does happen with cars sometimes. My husband had a Buick do that to him.
What was that Buick doing in your husband’s pants?
Pining for the Fords?
You’re no Clement Vallandigham. He was defending a client who was accusing of shooting somebody during a bar brawl. Vallandigham’s defense was that the victim had accidentally shot himself during the fight. While demonstrating how this would have been possible, Vallandigham accidentally shot and killed himself.
It apparently was a persuasive argument. His client was acquitted.
We had a judge in an Anti-Terror trial who when examining some case exhibits aka a granade took the pin out and released the lever.:smack:
Lost both her hands. The accused; died.