Here's a lighthearted topic starter: With a nod to Hollywood, what are some of the greatest public misperceptions about us or our jobs as prosecutors? I'll start with a few.
- We have cushy offices with wet bars behind our desks.
- We attend swanky cocktail parties where we conspire with captains of industry.
- We are always BFFs with the police!
- Our juries are filled with some of the best dressed people in town.
- We hand out motions (always with blue paper on the back) to each other and then have "hearings" with the court as we're walking down the hall or on the sidewalk
- We get to confront the defendant in a meeting room with his attorney and he then confesses...
- that the gallery is always full of spectators and one of them will confess or has a piece of evidence that will seal the case
- that there is a master computer that has everyone's fingerprints, picture, every car they drive, who their relatives and cohorts are, where they live, where they work.....
That when you are unhappy with the court's ruling you can go upstairs, literally, to the appeals court and come back down to the trial court that same afternoon, opinion from the court of appeals in hand.
That when judges rule on suppression hearings, they give detailed findings of fact and conclusions of law from the bench, explaining exactly why they ruled.