What's wrong with this lawyer?!-Chapter 590 - 190: Consumer Association: It Never Ends, Huh! (Vote for Monthly Ticket)_2
So sour, oh so very sour!
Thus, Wu Yanzhe switched to another account and began making statements online.
"Lawyer Tang is awesome. Whoever says Lawyer Tang’s opinions aren’t reasonable, I think they are perfectly reasonable, no problems at all. Those questioning, please, can you have some brains ..."
Netizens are just like that, akin to the fourth disaster, chaos is the essence.
In such an atmosphere, at a hotel in The Capital, Old Tang was absorbed in writing something. He had two things to do now: one was to go to the Internet Court to see how to mediate the previous agent lawsuit.
The scheduling of the necessary proceedings was already on the agenda, so mediation would be acceptable, as long as the Meitian company refunded the money owed.
This had been scheduled with the presiding judge for tomorrow morning.
And now, Tang Fangjing was working on the other thing—he was going to give those who reported with their real names a hard time!
Updat𝒆d fr𝑜m freewebnøvel.com.
Perhaps some might wonder, can reporting with one’s real name infringe upon rights?
Of course, it can. Fundamentally, real-name reporting, compared to writing essays, just adds the gesture of holding up an ID card.
We’ve seen a lot of this kind of incident this year...
There’s actually a little-known fact, probably not many are aware of, that composing false contents in a lawyer’s letter, and then posting it online, might constitute an infringement of rights...
Don’t find this strange; let me repeat, lawyers are humans too, and humans make mistakes. These mistakes aren’t solely linked to professional competence but also to interests.
Many people already know that a lawyer’s letter is just trash, but here’s a step further clarification: you can’t just write whatever you want in a lawyer’s letter. Slander still bears its responsibility.
In his previous life, Old Tang encountered a similar situation. Due to various reasons, he only sued that law firm and did nothing else.
But this time it’s different. That "Lawyer Li" spoke too offensively. Calling him, Tang Fangjing, an instigator of students—that’s an accusation he can’t bear.
These netizens never learn, always dancing on the edge of getting banned.
And those internet trolls, as well as the people behind them, they better not think he, Tang Fangjing, is the kind of person who won’t fight back after being wronged. What a joke, Old Tang’s revenge is always swift from dawn till dusk!
Besides, he’s ninety percent sure that the sudden upheaval is definitely related to the game company!
Otherwise, out of nowhere, there are accusations online that he’s instigating this and that while he himself was caught off guard when seeing the students wanting to help.
Then let’s take it step by step. He was worrying that the task completion rate wouldn’t be very high, since Wang Qingqing had involved public opinion, which can’t be considered a legal method.
But now, there’s a new handle. Although tracing it back might eventually scapegoat someone, it doesn’t matter; it serves as a lesson to the game company either way. Read new adventures at novelbuddy
It’s to let everyone know that you can cause disputes, but how this dispute will be settled—that’s up to me.
Civil matters belong to civil law, criminal matters... to criminal law!
Meanwhile, at Meitian Company, Director Cao listened to Director Fang’s report and sighed, "Looking at it this way, it seems that the policy will definitely be pushed through."
"Moreover, it will be very unfavorable for our companies... Never mind, it’s no use talking about it now. We can only try to prevent the policy from being too biased towards players."
Now that things had reached such a stage, saying anything else was pointless. Director Cao, who had braved through many crises, of course regretted it. If only he had known, he wouldn’t have engaged in those nonsensical procedures and would have directly refunded Ju Haiqing’s money...
In the current situation, if they’re not careful, Meitian could be kicked while down by other companies.
"Right, there’s one more thing, we need to sign the mediation agreement tomorrow. When the time comes, you go take a look, see if there’s room for further negotiation..."
Time flew to the next morning as Old Tang carried his bag to the Internet Court.
"Hello, Judge Zhang. I’m inside already. You’re on the third floor, right? Okay, I’ll come up right away."
Soon enough, Old Tang carrying his bag reached the third floor, knocked on the door, and entered to meet Judge Zhang, whom he had seen on video.
"Lawyer Tang, welcome, have a seat here. People from Meitian haven’t arrived yet, let’s wait. Want some water?" Judge Zhang warmly offered.
If it had been other lawyers here for mediation, they certainly wouldn’t have received the same treatment, but Tang Fangjing was different.
Old Tang quickly replied, "No, no need. I’ll just wait. You go on with your work... Eh, Judge Zhang, you look... didn’t sleep well?"
Upon hearing this, Judge Zhang sighed with a hint of resentment, "Lawyer Tang, do you think I could have slept well with all the documents you sent over?"
Impossible to finish. Simply can’t get through it all...
If it were just a couple thousand, that would be manageable. Everyone would work overtime, make an effort to get through it, as reviewing this kind of stuff is usually quick.
But it wasn’t just a couple thousand. It was over seventy thousand documents. The sheer volume was disheartening.
"Er... well, Judge Zhang, you all have had it tough," Old Tang could only offer a sheepish smile.
He could confront those professors who complained about "wasting judicial resources," but faced with a judge with panda eyes from working overtime, there really wasn’t much to say.
Judge Zhang said bleakly, "It’s not hard work; it’s a hard life."
"We’re actually doing okay here. You have no idea about the case-filing chamber. Recently, similar cases have soared. It’s tough for them since they have to handle normal case filings while also reviewing all these..."
What Judge Zhang didn’t mention was that everyone in the court had thought it would be impossible to negotiate since the divergence between the two parties was so wide, and the attitude from the supervisory authorities was also ambiguous.