So he admitted to billing "Medicare, Medicaid and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Nebraska for falsely represented medical tests." when he did nothing illegal at all in order to avoid what?
I provided his own confession. What do you have that says he was coerced into confessing to a crime he didn't commit? Other than your own opinion, that is?
I don't know how to be more clear with you: in America, people plea guilty to crimes they didn't commit because of the unfairness of the court system. People accept deals under threat of having their lives ruined and verdicts and sentences are unpredictable.
I will not accept what happens in a courtroom as proof.
And that is not even the crux of the argument. It is a logical fallacy that a person's purported immorality makes something they say incorrect.
So you're sure he didn't falsely represent medical tests but you have no idea why he confessed to doing it. Just a voice in your head saying "they made him do it".
It is a logical fallacy that a person's purported immorality makes something they say incorrect.
If they lied professionally once for profit it lowers the value of their professional opinion. If you're going to bring an expert to testify for you your opponent shouldn't be able to say "Look here, he's lied in these circumstances before."
So he admitted to billing "Medicare, Medicaid and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Nebraska for falsely represented medical tests." when he did nothing illegal at all in order to avoid what?
Some facts, please.
The burden of proof in yours. I don't accept court decisions at face value.
I provided his own confession. What do you have that says he was coerced into confessing to a crime he didn't commit? Other than your own opinion, that is?
I don't know how to be more clear with you: in America, people plea guilty to crimes they didn't commit because of the unfairness of the court system. People accept deals under threat of having their lives ruined and verdicts and sentences are unpredictable.
I will not accept what happens in a courtroom as proof.
And that is not even the crux of the argument. It is a logical fallacy that a person's purported immorality makes something they say incorrect.
So you're sure he didn't falsely represent medical tests but you have no idea why he confessed to doing it. Just a voice in your head saying "they made him do it".
If they lied professionally once for profit it lowers the value of their professional opinion. If you're going to bring an expert to testify for you your opponent shouldn't be able to say "Look here, he's lied in these circumstances before."