kevin...@gmail.com wrote:
>Those nights he was having trouble with his girlfriend where he had
>been living for most of that year. ...
> He is related to the owner of the property
> and I have been involved with her for many years.
Probably unimportant but who is "her", the owner of where you live?
His girlfriend? What does involved mean? You're partners in an
oil-drilling company in Mexico?
I am not a lawyer
>So, I'm thinking, just for the sake of settling the argument, to give
>him the benefit of the doubt, even if he had established residency
>can anyone out here answer: would he have gotten more time or less?
Are you thinking of saying this directly to him, to a court, to a
parole hearing, to people he knows? What?
IIUC he wants you to pay him money because you lied and his prison
sentence was longer? So the only way you will "selttle the argument"
is by your paying him money? How much money? Will that amount of
money really satisfy him in the long run? (He'll sign a contract
waiving any possible right to more money? Do you need a lawyer for
that?) Is he still in jail? Who are you to pay the money to?
Someone who will hold it for him, or someone he wants to give the
money to, like a child or girlfriend? If the person holding the money
for him, spends it and doesn't give it to him when he gets out, with
whom will he be angry? Her, you, both of you?
Are you going to give him the benefit of the doubt IN COURT? Might
not that make you guilty of perjury? Even if out of court, IN
WRITING? Perjury again?
Unless I misunderstand something, I would not make an admission that
he was a resident at the time. It seems unlikely that his goal is
just to be vindicated, to get the last word (See, I *was* a resident).
He either wants out of jail earlier than expected, or he wants money,
doesn't he?
You could say, "I deny that you were a resident, (or Regardless of
whether you were a resident) but if you were a resident, your
sentence would be longer" So he gets nothing. Would that settle
things? Is that what you mean? I think that IS a possibility, if he
were convinced the sentence would have been longer, or no shorter.
But I'm not sure what you're saying.
In addition, you're not a lawyer. Neither am I but it seems to me, you
can't say whether he was a resident or not, which is a legal
conclusion. You can only tell the facts, which you did in the part I
snipped. Are you saying one or more of those facts are incorrect?