Legal Question in Criminal Law in Massachusetts
incarceration at an arraignment
If a person was issued a summons for assault and battery with a dangerous weapon towards a police officer but was not arrested at the time of the incident is it likely that they will be incarcerated at the time of the arraignment. There are no priors and the person is a middle aged women who was suffering from a bad medication reaction at the time of the incident and was basically out of her mind.
2 Answers from Attorneys
Re: incarceration at an arraignment
Almost certainly not, although it does depend on the information contained on your official criminal record. You should retain an attorney for the arraignment or, at the very least, plead guilty then. If you truly have no prior criminal history, an attorney can probably get rid of this for you on relatively favorable terms. Feel free to contact me for help.
Re: incarceration at an arraignment
IN MY PREVIOUS ANSWER I MEANT YOU SHOULD PLEAD ***NOT*** GUILTY!!! NOT GUILTY. NOT NOT NOT GUILTY!
(Sorry for omitting that critical word)