I am Your Lawyer

I Am Your Lawyer is a game where you play the role of a lawyer. Your task is to represent your clients in court. You have to defend innocent, harmless people and shady guys (murderers, thieves, crooks). See you in court!

Introduction

You are an ambitious lawyer who, conscientiously, defends innocent people from being wrongfully convicted by the court... but are you sure? But are your clients surely not guilty? To dispel doubts, immerse yourself in the case files and analyze the course of events step by step.

Interrogation

Speak with your client - find out where he was on the day of the crime. You have a range of tools at your disposal such as audio recordings, crime scene photos, fingerprints, etc. to get to the truth. The interrogation will lead you to interesting, unexplored details of the case.

Police station

Talk to the policemen who were at the scene. Ask questions, commission additional research, but remember - it takes time. Be careful, every decision has time consequences - you need to decide which evidence to re-examine in the lab.

City

Move around the town and obtain information and evidence of the case. You have at your disposal places such as a police station, a restaurant where lawyers meet, a laboratory, offices and other places where you can find people useful in this matter.

Laboratory

In the laboratory, you can commission detailed examination of case evidence, such as: fingerprints on objects, surveillance tapes, photos from crime scenes, handwriting and documents.

In court

During the trial, ask questions to any witnesses who are involved in your client's prosecution.
Find out if they are not lying, have not been under the influence of alcohol, or are not involved in the case.
Listen to testimony in court and react to unfounded accusations!

Investigate the case, reject the prosecutor's accusations and try to get clear evidence of your client's innocence.
Many different people sit on the jury. Learn everything about jurors and choose a strategy for action. Decide who to focus on during your final speech.