Ronmr
Know what you're doing yet?
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2020
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However the judge, while sympathetic to Taylor, must make his decisions based on the law and evidence, in that order. Unless he finds a superior of both Piggot and Amstrong giving orders about Phase that are explicit enough to be considered a conspiracy he must consider each different regional PRT/Protectorate office as different organizations.
In the case of the ENE Wards he contacted the local District Attourney, first to check in how advanced was the case against Hess and Barnes and then when he discovered that there was no open investigation he gave the local DA the evidence Taylor and the Boston office had gathered as well as hints that if they didn't want the Department of Justice to go looking for people to smack down they would stop treating it in-house and start acting like cops instead of covering their asses. That's about as much as he can do without getting into a fight with a completely different jurisdiction, and in practice is probable that Sophia had her parole revoked and Emma, who did show remorse, cooperated with the investigation and was kinda crazy would get on probation herself; and of course Piggot would have to at least fire a few more administrative and legal drones at the same time her paperwork for warrants triples to calm down the DA.
On her being forced into the Wards with a serious conflict of interests the fact is that Danny wasn't lied about it with the PRT just mentioning that the matter was 'under investigation' and still signed her off to a different state and regional office. And even Taylor and Young Guard has to admit that the Boston Office acts well within both the letter and the spirit of the laws and regulations regarding Wards so legally speaking she cannot complain of her treatment, not even of the tour incident counts since even the most basic forms of Loco Parentis guardianship does allow schools to force children to interact with others through either community service, extracurricular and curricular classes as well as other events, and at the same time schools are allowed to restrict the Right of Expression within school grounds and hours, plus Taylor didn't even receive a punishment so arguing any kind of abuse of authority would be hard and ambiguous.
Ironically enough the one incident that a canny lawyer could use to demostrate incompetence from the Boston Office is the fact that Taylor was able to put herself in harms way as a vigilante without proper supervision from the PRT/Protectorate and their own regulations prevented them from doing anything about it even when having her in front of them. That said the judge, being a responsible adult himself would be just as angry with Taylor and would slap a number of restrictions and punishments, so using this tactic would be pyrrhic at best.
Would the judge be in right if that Taylor was going as a Vigilante came to light to set it so that she goes to a mandated psychiatrist? Because it would show that she isn't acting against the PRT/Protectorate to not go out as a cape, but rather go out independently outside of PRT/Protectorate oversight.