A couple comments/points:
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The raping of a woman as an "initiation" into a gang seems over the top and VERY unrealistic, especially once the initiate is unable to perform everything seems to be ok
The reason for the gang perpetrating these crimes is over the top/absurd. There are plenty of people who are unable to get women that do not rape people. Also, how did this gang get together and meet? One of them accidentally blurts out that he is a rapist and the other says, "Hey, me too! We should go rape people together!"?
Why is Manning in the meeting with other, regular officers? Is his undercover assignment over? It seems foolish for him to be in a meeting with regular officers/detectives while still undercover.
What was the court date for Sheila about that she missed? On what grounds did Tyler get the warrant? How did the warrant specify the pool hall as a place for her to be arrested?
A police officer CANNOT issue contempt of court charges, only a Judge can do that and that is only allowed for things that occur inside his/her courtroom/chambers
Safe house? Like the US federal witness protection?
Wray's attorney CANNOT ask a potential witness questions ESPECIALLY when that person is not in a deposition or an attorney is not present for that potential witness. How does Tyler know that Sheila is a material witness? And what is she a material witness to?
So, Kimble and Tyler come across Sheila as co-working cops but then when they see her Kimble does a complete 180 and starts to attack Tyler so he can play off being a gang member? Seems kinda absurd.
Cops CANNOT delay a trial. Only attorneys, through a written motion and a Judge may not accept it due to his calendar
What kind of a trial is this? How much time has passed? Trials of important magnitude, in the US, do not happen immediately. Usually it takes a couple years for a case to be brought to trial
You make this "trial" sound like a motion hearing. The whole thing of Tyler not identifying himself as a cop would be an issue for a hearing through a motion to suppress and WOULD NOTt be brought up in a trial at all
I don't understand that "probable cause cannot be used as a defense..."
Again, cops DO NOT have any bearing on trial procedures, only attorneys do. While shows like Law and Order portray that they do, that is the long running suspension of disbelief of the show
Why is Sheila claiming the 5th Amendment? I thought that this was taking place in Canada? The 5th is a part of US jurisprudence, not Canadian jurisprudence.
Cops do not sit at attorney tables.
Witnesses CANNOT produce evidence
Sheila CANNOT claim immunity on the rape of Tyler as that has NOTHING to do with this hearing/trial (what is this hearing/trial about anyway?)
WHY WAS SHEILA CHARGED? Wasn't she initially a victim in the cops eyes???
Tyler screaming that she is a rapist in front of tv cameras sounds petulant
I don't think that you understand the concept of "blood out" when it comes to gangs
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Sorry, but I stopped at the start of the 15th sequence. As other say above this is a hard one to digest. It has a lot of lapses in logic and asks the audience to suspend a TON of disbelief in order to make it through this film. Also, it is kinda hard to get through due to the seemingly carefree attitude of the characters when its comes to rape. FSF is correct in that the message that will be perceived is "If you can't get a date boys and girls, it's okay to rape," the way it currently is because there are too many instances where that crime is seemingly shrugged off or that a character comes out to defend the nonsensical "mission statement" of the gang.
Okay thanks. Well these villains are not normal villains and since they are evil and twisted they can choose do whatever evil acts they want. Now that doesn't meant they will do anything but they chose this as their M.O. Plus there are movies out there with over the top criminals that do nasty things. I don't think I pushed the envelope too much but I guess I'm wrong. As far as how they met, I do go into that more in the real script, I just didn't write it in the outline, since the outline is a summary that does not explain all the background story.
Manning was not undercover. I did not mean to confuse readers. He is corrupt. No one knows he is associated with the gang.
Tyler was given a warrant because since she missed previous court dates to testify at before, a material witness warrant was issued for he arrest. As far as arresting her at a pub, lots movies do not show how the cops figure out where the suspects are, when they go to arrest them. For example in The Dark Knight, we have the mob character, Salvatore Maroni (played by Eric Roberts). Gordon and other officers show up to arrest Maroni, at a restaurant he is eating at. They do not explain how they knew Maroni was eating at that restaurant. Lots of other movies do this same thing. They will arrest a villain in a public place, like a restaurant, bar, etc, not knowing how he was there. It's left up the audience's imagination.
I know that judges issue contempt of court charges, not the police. The police were just using that as a tactic to intimidate Sheila into testifying. They were not laying official charges, before the contempt happened yet. Just intimidating her.
By safe house I mean a place where Sheila can be held before the trial, but be more comfortable like with a bathroom, bedroom etc.
As far as Kimble attacting Tyler to keep his cover, you see this all the time in other movies. In 24, Jack Bauer had to shoot at federal agents to keep his cover. Not that my situation is as extreme as that, but it's the same undercover philosophy.
I know cops cannot delay a trial. The reason why Tyler calls about delaying it, is that what he means is, is that he his superior if he is going to call the courts to recommend that it be delayed. Sorry for the confusion, I just wrote that way, cause the cops and the prosecutor, judge, are kind of working together, at least I would think so I didn't write it as if they are different forces.
I know it takes a couple of years to bring a case to trial. I was thinking of writing it that way, and skip ahead two years, but lots of movies show a trial much quicker after the crime. Movies like Fracture, for example, or episodes of Perry Mason. Law and Order may skip ahead a couple of years all the those episodes, but it doesn't feel that way, since the characters all of the same hair cuts from the episodes I saw.
I thought that Wray's attorney could ask Sheila those questions. Sheila was ordered by the court to testify against Wray, so wouldn't Wray's attorney have the right to cross examine her, since she is testifying against the defendant, which is Wray?
I am aware that it's more like a motion hearing and that would have been brought up before. However, when someone who knows a lot more about law helped me write this, he said I have to write it as a trial. I wanted Sheila to testify in the same sequence as the Tyler. I was told by someone who helped me write it that arresting officer testifies at the motion hearing, but not the witness. The witness is saved until trial, especially if the witness does not give a deposition and has to be subpoenaed for not cooperating. But I wanted Sheila and Tyler to both testify in the same sequence, so I took some artistic license and decided to put both their testimonies in the same court time, even though Tyler's would be at a motion hearing, and her's at a trial.
So was it bad of me to take artistic license, and I should just stick to reality, and write two court scenes?
I realize that cops do not have a bearing on the case and only attorneys do. But Law and Order does it for artistic License to push the story forward in interesting ways, and like that show, I do not believe I have to stick to 100% reality. Is it really that bad not to nowadays in writing, depending on how far you go with it?
I know Canada does not have the fifth amendment. They have the same law but it's called section 11. However, since I have not decided where it's set yet I chose to use the 5th amendment term, because so many people around the world have heard of that term compared to section 11. I was making it easier to understand, without having to go in where it takes place specifically.
I know cops do not sit at the same table as attorneys. I did not mean to imply that. They sit further behind in my scene and speak to the attorney from there. The trial is originally about charging Wray with kidnapping. However, since the night before, Tyler was raped by the witness, Tyler pursuades the judge and prosecutor to cross examine Sheila about the rape, since a witness raping the arresting officer, could have relevance in a court case. The prosecutor wants to see how reliable the witness can be if the witness raped the arresting officer.
Sheila then pleads section 11, to avoid being held accountable by her own words, since she has a legal right not to be held for incriminating herself on the stand. Now yes they are separate charges to be pursued later, but since she covers her evidence of the rape the night before, those charges are never laid against her. I should have made that more clear, if it makes sense. And yes Tyler screaming that she is a rapist in front of TV cameras, is petulant, but it was suppose to be petulant. Tyler is angry about it, and he makes himself look petulant because his anger. It was suppose to come off that way.
When it comes gangs and blood outs, I got the information while reading Police Procedure & Investigation: A Guide for Writers, by Lee Lofland. The book says that a blood out is when a gang member wants out of the gang he has to 'spill the blood of another person', as it says in the book. Did I take that out of context?
When you say witnesses cannot produce evidence, which part are you referring to?
Sheila was not charged but arrest for missing her court dates. Does this make sense?