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I don't understand. In your example the defendant didn't lie to their lawyer, they lied to the court. If the defendant is guilty but has opted for a trial then that fact alone is an effort to imply he isn't guilty, and presumably everything else he does will be in service of the same end too. Otherwise why not skip the trial and plead guilty?
The way I read it the lesson is "don't admit to your UK lawyer that you're guilty if you expect them to argue for your innocence". No?
Fair enough, I agree "don't admit to your UK lawyer that you're guilty if you expect them to argue for your innocence" is a more accurate reading than what I said the lesson was. Merely lying to your lawyer and it coming out during the trial that you lied to your lawyer is actually (perhaps surprisingly) significantly less bad than the earlier situation because technically your barrister can still argue that the prosecution has not discharged the burden of proving your guilt "beyond reasonable doubt", however of course if you tell your lawyer that you're guilty you suddenly tie their hands significantly in what they can say to the court without breaching their professional duties.
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