View Full Version : judge and criminal
tormund
Mar12-09, 03:50 PM
I got a good one for y'all
A criminal was to be sentenced, and the judge told him, "You may make a statement. If it is true, I'll sentence you to four years in prison. If it is false, I'll sentence you to six years in prison." After the man made his statement, the judge decided to let him go free. What did the man say?
good luck:biggrin:
You will sentence me to six years in prison.
TheStatutoryApe
Mar16-09, 03:29 AM
"I'm innocent"?
"I'm the Bailiff"?
"I'm innocent"?
No one, save a new-born, is innocent. Just pointing that out haha, that doesn't discredit your answer.
Vanadium 50
Mar20-09, 06:19 AM
You will sentence me to six years in prison.
Then the judge turned around and sentenced him to ten.
Jimmy Snyder
Mar20-09, 10:01 AM
Then the judge turned around and sentenced him to ten.
Then the criminal's statement was false, and the judge didn't keep his word as to what he would do in that case.
Vanadium 50
Mar20-09, 11:14 AM
the judge didn't keep his word as to what he would do in that case.
Yup. And now the criminal has ten years to stew on it. :devil:
"Mom said to take off that silly robe and quit clowning around, Billy-Bob."
legal Forum
Jul1-09, 09:34 PM
When making an appearance in criminal court, learning how to speak to the judge is essential to getting what you want or what you need. Following these steps could be the difference between keeping yourself in or out of custody.
Legal Advice Forum (http://www.legal-advice-forum.com)
bleedblue1234
Jul2-09, 10:48 AM
The poster above me is spammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
humanino
Jul2-09, 11:52 AM
the judge didn't keep his wordI think what Vanadium is saying is that, given the above sentence (which I believe is what was expected), the judge can not keep his word in any case. So whether he lets the prisoner go or sentence him to 10 years, what difference does it make with regards to what the judge keeping his word ?
20questions
Jul7-09, 12:43 PM
the judge gives a 4 yr sentence, and a 6 yr sentence (to serve consecutively ?) it happens in real life, and no contradictions
thrill3rnit3
Jul7-09, 03:54 PM
He said two words:
Chuck Norris
AUMathTutor
Jul8-09, 02:54 AM
I have arranged for your wife to get the name of your "secretary" and an envelope of photographs of you and her "on the job" in the case of my incarceration.
Capt. McCoy
Jul21-09, 01:06 PM
i agree with f(x)'s answer...because if the criminal said "You will sentence me to six years in prison." and it is true, then the judge can't sentence the criminal to four years to prison because the criminal's statement is already true. while if the judge said that the criminal's statement is false, the judge will sentence him to six years, which will actually make the criminal's statement true...out of confusion the criminal was set free...
Office_Shredder
Jul22-09, 06:43 PM
The judge never said what would occur if the criminal's statement has no truth value. Probably executes him or something
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