I have attended a lecture by Professor Baez. He gets right to the point and his teaching style is 100% geared towards passing the Bar Exam. Absolutely recommend him!
@@Learnlawbetter I have two unrelated questions professor. Is it true that burglary Is actually entering a building or a home with the intention to commit a felony inside? I saw a case one time where a judge held someone in direct criminal contempt in Florida but the defendent did not have a lawyer present when the judge initiated the direct criminal contempt proceedings. I know that the judge has the authority to hold someone in contempt in Florida under rule 3.830 of the Florida rules of criminal procedure. The judge told the defendent what kind of penalty a contempt conviction Carried. The judge told the defendent that they had a right to appeal the sentence and judgment that was entered. The judge told the defendent that they have the right to have a lawyer help with appealing the conviction and the sentence. The judge also questioned the defendent without that person having a lawyer present when the judge questioned them. Did the judge break the law by holding someone in contempt, sentencing that person, and questioning that person eventhough the defendent did not have a lawyer present to help them during the criminal contempt proceedings?
Hey Professor! Thanks again for the content, it has already helped out a lot in my first year of law school. I wanted to ask, is it better so to define each term in the rule statements in that opening paragraph with the rule statement or to define them separately in paragraphs using the nested IRAC method?
I normally find all the sessions direct to the pointvand unambiguous. This one is a first exception. Enlisting definitions of key words without context is brain-dump.
All of the comments and questions that I post on Learn Law Better,s Channel are not legal advice of any kind whatsoever, is not intended to be, was not intended to be, and is not, to be, and should not be interpreted as such. I am not a lawyer. I have never and would never claim to be one. Professor, would it be unlawful discrimination if a college student who had a disability who tried to apply or applied to medical school were to be denied admission to medical school only based on the fact that the student might not have the manual dextarity or physical strength to do tasks like CPR, intubations, or administering injections? I am asking because I guess that these are things that medical students learn about ,and I would imagine they might get tested during medical school, and I would imagine that medical students are expected to do these skills under the direction and supervision of their professors during medical school. Disclaimer number two: what is writen here is a legitiminte question. What is writen here is not medical advice of any kind whatsoever. It is not intended to be medical advice, was not intended to be, and should not be interpreted as medical advice of any kind. I am not a doctor. I have never and would never claim to be one.
I have attended a lecture by Professor Baez. He gets right to the point and his teaching style is 100% geared towards passing the Bar Exam. Absolutely recommend him!
Thanks! Hope all is going well.
@@Learnlawbetter I have two unrelated questions professor. Is it true that burglary Is actually entering a building or a home with the intention to commit a felony inside? I saw a case one time where a judge held someone in direct criminal contempt in Florida but the defendent did not have a lawyer present when the judge initiated the direct criminal contempt proceedings. I know that the judge has the authority to hold someone in contempt in Florida under rule 3.830 of the Florida rules of criminal procedure. The judge told the defendent what kind of penalty a contempt conviction Carried. The judge told the defendent that they had a right to appeal the sentence and judgment that was entered. The judge told the defendent that they have the right to have a lawyer help with appealing the conviction and the sentence. The judge also questioned the defendent without that person having a lawyer present when the judge questioned them. Did the judge break the law by holding someone in contempt, sentencing that person, and questioning that person eventhough the defendent did not have a lawyer present to help them during the criminal contempt proceedings?
A defendant has the right to represent themselves without a lawyer.
Thank you very much, for the slow and simple way you impart these important skills it is very useful, Eunice LLB 2nd year student
Hey Professor! Thanks again for the content, it has already helped out a lot in my first year of law school.
I wanted to ask, is it better so to define each term in the rule statements in that opening paragraph with the rule statement or to define them separately in paragraphs using the nested IRAC method?
Absolutely! 👌🏾
🙌
I normally find all the sessions direct to the pointvand unambiguous. This one is a first exception. Enlisting definitions of key words without context is brain-dump.
Thanks for the feedback. This was one of my first videos, so I may need to rework it-I did that for another one of these early videos.
Modern law does not limit burglary to night time.
Yes, that’s the old common law. In the old days, courts then had to deal with enterings at twilight.
Thanks My first exam is coming up in 5 days!
Best of luck!
how'd you do?
All of the comments and questions that I post on Learn Law Better,s Channel are not legal advice of any kind whatsoever, is not intended to be, was not intended to be, and is not, to be, and should not be interpreted as such. I am not a lawyer. I have never and would never claim to be one.
Professor, would it be unlawful discrimination if a college student who had a disability who tried to apply or applied to medical school were to be denied admission to medical school only based on the fact that the student might not have the manual dextarity or physical strength to do tasks like CPR, intubations, or administering injections? I am asking because I guess that these are things that medical students learn about ,and I would imagine they might get tested during medical school, and I would imagine that medical students are expected to do these skills under the direction and supervision of their professors during medical school. Disclaimer number two: what is writen here is a legitiminte question. What is writen here is not medical advice of any kind whatsoever. It is not intended to be medical advice, was not intended to be, and should not be interpreted as medical advice of any kind. I am not a doctor. I have never and would never claim to be one.