If you have a lawyer who you believe can get you a plea deal for an infraction, and you trust that lawyer, you can hire the lawyer to take over your case.
If you have a lawyer who you believe can get you a plea deal for an infraction, and you trust that lawyer, you can hire the lawyer to take over your case.
I suffer 2 strokes, cerebrovascular accident. Life handicaps, mental retardation, aphasia, dysarthria, spatial neglect, hearing loss, inability process speech, attention handicap, multitask handicap. Blurry vision, double vision, confusion, fog. Bilateral weakness hands, legs, fainting. Hearing handicap malpractice unnecessary pharmaceuticals. Broken ankle fall. Suffer head trauma twice was attacked assaulted, brain damage, hearing loss. Sever asthma, sleep apnea with hypoxia, suffocate in sleep from airway collapse, diabetes, liver disease, glaucoma. Inability sit up fainting, low blood pressure. Lack of emotion inability feel anger from brain damage. had incorrect psych diagnosis
Which all the more indicates while you are ill-advised to deal with things pro se. Get an attorney.
It sounds fishy to me that any jurisdiction would reduce a felony conviction of DV to an infraction.
Based on all of your ailments I can understand why your original attorney would be skeptical of what you claim. You sound like a walking disaster zone and could be declared incompetent in a flash.
I wish I could access your Posting Hx but I can only see your last two posts.
No it can't be reduced to an infraction because there is no such thing in New York.
If the prosecutor has a weak case and the defendant is afraid to go to trial, it very well could end up as a plea to either simple battery or even disorderly conduct. Happens all the time.