Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would want to know first if he did it. This would be very important to me and I would be unable to think of anything else until I had established this. And it would influence how I proceeded.
And any admission to you of guilt would not be privileged.
If her son is a minor, yes it is privileged.
My son is 24 and I am not the OP. But I would not be able to bring myself to help him fight a charge if I knew it was true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would want to know first if he did it. This would be very important to me and I would be unable to think of anything else until I had established this. And it would influence how I proceeded.
And any admission to you of guilt would not be privileged.
If her son is a minor, yes it is privileged.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would want to know first if he did it. This would be very important to me and I would be unable to think of anything else until I had established this. And it would influence how I proceeded.
And any admission to you of guilt would not be privileged.
Anonymous wrote:I would want to know first if he did it. This would be very important to me and I would be unable to think of anything else until I had established this. And it would influence how I proceeded.
Anonymous wrote:I would send my kid to treatment.
Anonymous wrote:Does it make a difference if you think the allegation is true or not?
Anonymous wrote:I would send my kid to treatment.
Anonymous wrote:Not much you can do but hire an attorney if anything comes of it.