And therefore Could BE questioned by police to find out if he knows more information.
And therefore Could BE questioned by police to find out if he knows more information.
And therefore Could BE questioned by police to find out if he knows more information.
And therefore Could BE questioned by police to find out if he knows more information.
not only have all 4 wheels fallen off the defense wagon
but the darn axles are rotting from within:woohoo:
I guess they could but JB already covered that at the press conference today..he spouted how TB is NOT part of the defense team and has not been privy to meetings and conversations. I doubt if he would talk, pretty sure he would say the same as JB, if they could get on the same page lol.
The only Todd Black I could find works in a production co. with two employees. He calls himself a producer. The contact number is the same as the one on his correspondence so it has to be him. What is that all about?
They're all producers or Full Sail grads. What venues do these guys work in? Who are their lighting, audio and video venders? What gear do they own? What have they produced? TB sure produced a lot of ridicule from NG tonight.
I reckon him and Yuri need to chat tommorow
He can be questioned by law enforcement, that doesn't mean he has to answer, the atty. client still applies. WESH has it wrong. An atty. who even has a consult with a potential client is bound by atty. client.
I could be wrong, but I don't think so.
Oh, sorry I missed the todd black tb=todd black. duh. I guess I read it too fast. forgive me. No atty client there.:blushing:Todd Black is not an attorney. He is a PR person that Jose hired. He can not invoke the attorney client priviledge because he is not an attorney.
This all sounds so silly to me...I doubt that the guy knows anything. He may have his opinions but I think that's about it...Sounds like the beginning of another SLOW news day!
I don't understand how he can possibly NOT be bound by atty/client privilege. that's like the number one thing they teach you when you join a law firm. doesn't it ALWAYS apply? is there a Florida law I'm missing here? in what circumstances would it not apply? someone enlighten me please...