I intend to become a criminal defense lawyer.
[insert lawyer joke]
Anything specific inspire you to want to do that? I know hearing stories in the sad thread sure don't make it seem like a good field.
It pays well, seems interesting enough, and the Juris Doctor that I'll get from the education required would help me get more earnings anyway.
I am well aware that most of the job is not yelling at people in courtrooms.
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Everybody who saw me quoting that and replying knows what I'm going to say beforehand....
Respectfully, if you are in the United States, then you need to seriously research the field, which is frankly dying. New grads are screwed. There is a glut of unemployed lawyers who were frankly lied to and told all of the things you stated. Until and unless your parent has a law firm ready for you to take over, I cannot stress strongly enough that you should reconsider, please, for your own sake. I sincerely regret pursuing a career in law, and am trying rather desperately to get the heck out of it myself. Feel free to make my mistake if you are dead set on the idea.... Google phrases like "law school scam...."
I am an attorney. I did a lot of criminal defense, and family law, and business law, and all sorts of things really. It was horrid, as an understatement.
I have been oddly harassed and ignored at the same time by clients who frankly want 2+2 to equal 5. It doesn't; they repeatedly threatened to kill me and my entire family for it (and some took steps to sincerely try, forcing me to move). They want to buy results, which would be abhorrent blood money paid to some lawyer rather than the victim or their family, and impossible. Also you will be universally viewed as a crook no matter how moral and ethical you are. No one will want to pay you, even if they can. Every second of your time will be scrutinized, not because you didn't spend it working, you did, but because nobody wants to pay for anything, ever. If you "lose" then it will be "your fault" (expect death threats from the prison, and I'm not joking). If you "win" then it should've been "obvious" and not taken you anywhere near that long.... Good luck being paid or being safe from the inmates or even the people who get acquittals sometimes. Don't even get me started on the debt, which you will be paying for the rest of your life if you go to law school. I am not joking.
Then of course there's the fact that you'll have to constantly fish for clients in criminal defense (without running afoul of the rules arguably against that, depending upon what you do). Don't let the suits fool you, because that's just a uniform. You'll have to take orders from terrible criminals who will all view you as another jerk trying to screw them over (when in fact they are the jerks much of the time). You'll be placed in literally and morally unwinnable situations. You'll have to confront victims of a horrid crime which ... all the evidence will show your client committed ... but you still have to cross examine that poor 7 year old girl who did absolutely nothing wrong... but has had a terrible amount of wrong done to her.... If you try to use kid gloves (which you should) when cross examining her, your client will accuse you of "selling [him] down the river," because you didn't get 3 inches from her face like he wants you to.... Then of course there's the toll this will take upon your mental health and any romantic relationship you may have. Lawyers often get divorced and have alcohol and substance abuse problems. Do not believe what you see on TV. I wish somebody could have told me this....
Don't. I don't recommend a legal career to anyone these days. It has never been this bad.
I would like to be in finance again, or management, perhaps quality management. Accountants always seem to get paid one way or the other, and if people want to argue, you can hand them a K-Mart calculator to do it themselves. Accounting is what Law USED TO be, and should be but isn't. Accounting has an exclusive skill set (people hate math and taxes etc), as well as the potential for side work or firm work. Finally, there's the tangible product of a report that you can produce. Being a CPA is NEVER a bad thing.