tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1399665524506828027.post5468915448348856280..comments2023-09-19T04:58:45.143-07:00Comments on Shoot The Lawyers: Ben Kuehne, The AftermathShoot The Lawyershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14718705572802712594noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1399665524506828027.post-76904494624872427712009-11-27T14:46:07.908-08:002009-11-27T14:46:07.908-08:00"The government's dismissal is basically ..."The government's dismissal is basically an admission that they never should have brought this case to begin with. In other words, we indicted you, almost ruined your life, put you through emotional hell, embarrassed you in front of your colleagues, but now, on second thought, we realized it was all a misunderstanding. Sorry!"<br /><br />Great point. I've been writing about a similar incident (albeit less publicized) on the state level stemming from this article:<br /><br />http://mortgagefraud.squarespace.com/storage/Coral%20Gables%20lawyer%202%20othe...pdf<br /><br />In my research of what sounded to be a bizarre case I've uncovered police misconduct, suborning perjury, fabrication of evidence, prosecutorial misconduct, etc and now the makings of a cover up in the SAO. <br /><br />Based on what I've learned from the Kuehne case and the case that I quoted above I would have thought that overzealous prosecutors would use an abundance of caution before moving against a fellow attorney but that hardly seems to be the case.<br /><br />Like you said "they never should have brought this case to begin with." What can they do to ever put the genie back in the bottle? How can they restore Mr. Kuehne's reputation?The Straw Buyerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00161729289044418708noreply@blogger.com