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** The judge orders the jury switched with a jury next door. No judge has the power to call in a jury that the parties didn't select. Also, the new jury was brought in ''after'' the key prosecution witness had testified. Any defense lawyer would ''love'' to have a jury that never saw the prosecution's evidence! The actual judge did switch the ''pool'' of available jurors when he saw evidence Capone bribed them, but that happened prior to the trial's start. In the movie's scenario he would have just declared a mistrial and they'd select uncorrupted jurors for a new trial.
** Income tax evasion is a federal, not a state, crime. The RealLife case was prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney's office, not the Cook County District Attorney, and tried in United States Courthouse, not the Cook County Courthouse, by a federal judge.

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** The judge orders the jury switched with a jury next door. No judge has the power to call in a jury that the parties didn't select. Also, the new jury was brought in ''after'' the key prosecution witness had testified. Any defense lawyer would ''love'' to have a jury that never saw the prosecution's evidence! The actual judge Judge Wilkerson did switch the ''pool'' of available jurors when he saw evidence Capone bribed them, but that happened prior to the trial's start. In the movie's scenario he would have just declared a mistrial and they'd select uncorrupted jurors for a new trial.
** Income tax evasion is a federal, not a state, crime. The RealLife case was prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney's office, Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois (George E. Q. Johnson), not the Cook County District Attorney, and was tried in United States Courthouse, the Chicago Federal Building, not the Cook County Courthouse, by a federal judge.
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* ''Film/TurkeyHollow'': Turkey Hollow has an old law dating to the 1800s saying anyone who's taken another person's livestock must compensate them within two days or their own land is forfeit. Probably not surprisingly, it's doubtful a law like that would be constitutional now (or even in the 19th century) as it's too little notice, not to mention that liability isn't even proven (Cly's blamed without real evidence nor a chance to legally defend herself).
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** The film features a scene where, after Lau is captured, Harvey Dent decides to charge the entire mob (as in all the three big crime families in Gotham as a single entity) under RICO. The problem is local district attorneys cannot charge RICO offenses. Not even the local US Attorneys can; it has to come directly from the Department of Justice. Dent's mass-trial would also count, but the movie points out that he doesn't expect it to succeed and it's only proceeding because of his local stature.

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** The film features a scene where, after Lau is captured, Harvey Dent decides to charge the entire mob (as in all the three big crime families in Gotham as a single entity) under RICO. The problem is local district attorneys cannot charge RICO offenses. Not even the local US Attorneys can; it has to come directly from the Department of Justice. Dent's mass-trial would also count, but the movie points out that he doesn't expect it to succeed and it's only proceeding because of his local stature.[[note]]It would be possible, if Dent charged them under ''state'' RICO statutes. Both New York and New Jersey have one.[[/note]]
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** As a rule, forensics analysts don't just plug digital media straight into their computer. For one, it becomes inadmissible in court since it can argued that the cops may have planted incriminating evidence on the drive. The other thing is it might trigger a logic bomb, which is exactly what happens when Gordon pulls up the pictures on the "thumb" drive. In reality, the drive would go to the lab and be imaged for a copy that could then be looked through. A detective as seasoned as Gordon would and should know better. It's semi-{{Justified}} because Gordon is showing Batman--who doesn't have a good relationship with the rest of the police at this point-- the drive's contents to keep him 'in the loop', and if he'd turned it straight in, Batman would likely have been barred from crucial evidence he'd need to solve Riddler's CriminalMindGames. As Gordon and Batman work together almost as closely as actual partners in the force, Gordon necessarily has to skirt some corners to avoid limiting Batman's effectiveness, especially in a police force as corrupt as Gotham's. [[spoiler:The fact that the next stage of Riddler's plan ''depended on'' Gordon making such an error shows that this isn't the first time he's done something like this, and Riddler is aware of it, given how the drive contained information that the police would ''not'' have released if he'd gone through proper channels]].

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** As a rule, forensics analysts don't just plug digital media straight into their computer. For one, it becomes inadmissible in court since it can argued that the cops may have planted incriminating evidence on the drive. The other thing is it might trigger a logic bomb, which is exactly what happens when Gordon pulls up the pictures on the "thumb" drive. In reality, the drive would go to the lab and be imaged for a copy that could then be looked through. A detective as seasoned as Gordon would and should know better. It's semi-{{Justified}} semi-{{Justified|Trope}} because Gordon is showing Batman--who Batman -- who doesn't have a good relationship with the rest of the police at this point-- point -- the drive's contents to keep him 'in the loop', and if he'd turned it straight in, Batman would likely have been barred from crucial evidence he'd need to solve Riddler's CriminalMindGames. As Gordon and Batman work together almost as closely as actual partners in the force, Gordon necessarily has to skirt some corners to avoid limiting Batman's effectiveness, especially in a police force as corrupt as Gotham's. [[spoiler:The fact that the next stage of Riddler's plan ''depended on'' Gordon making such an error shows that this isn't the first time he's done something like this, and Riddler is aware of it, given how the drive contained information that the police would ''not'' have released if he'd gone through proper channels]].
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** The ''Posse Comitatus Act'' is intended to prevent the president from using the military to enforce executive decisions of the United States; the military cannot be deployed on U.S. soil ''to enforce the law''. An armed attack on the White House is not one of the situations where the military would refuse to act, because it has nothing to do with the law and everything to do with the security of the United States. In fact, one would be more likely to have to explicitly order the military ''not'' to intervene, because an attack on any government building by a paramilitary force is effectively a declaration of war on the United States.
** Interestingly, when the movie came out, the ''Posse Comitatus Act'' also did not apply at ''all'' to the Marine Corps or the Navy (that was added in 2022). When [[spoiler:Marine Corps One]] was attacked, it would have also been considered a direct hostile act against the Marine Corps, who would be empowered to act in their own self-defense.
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* ''Film/BasicInstinct'': Catherine knows a woman who'd served time in San Quentin Prison. This is and has only ever been a men's facility. It's also unlikely she would do under a decade for a triple murder.
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* ''Film/{{Snitch}}'': Throughout the film, many of the ex-cons talk about having two strikes. Missouri, where the story largely occurs, is one of the few states that doesn't have the "three strikes" law. In some cases they could be referring to federal charges, though it's not made clear.

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* ''Film/TheAccused'': When one of the rapists is arrested and his rights are read, the "OnePhoneCall" line is dropped.






* In ''Film/CriminalLaw'', defense attorney Ben Chase becomes aware that his client Martin Thiel is a murderer and has reason to believe he will commit further murders. At this point he should go to the police, since attorney-client privilege doesn't cover planned crimes, nor ones the attorney discovers on his own without the client telling him. Of course, he doesn't do anything sensible like that, but tries to prove his client guilty while simultaneously defending him in court. This is an unbelievable violation of professional ethics which he could be disbarred over, along with him also being charged for not reporting the client's earlier crimes.



* ''Film/DieHard2'':
** There is no airport police force at Washington Dulles International Airport. Policing at Dulles is actually the responsibility of the Metropolitan Washington Airport Authority and (since 2001) the TSA.
** In Lorenzo's first scene, he tells John [=McClane=], "You're the asshole that's just broke seven FAA and five District of Columbia regulations, running around my airport with a gun, shooting at people. What do you call that shit?" Washington, D.C. law would not apply to Washington Dulles International Airport, as the airport is located in Loudoun County, Virginia, a full 25 miles west of Washington D.C. So the laws actually broken would be based on local ordinances, Virginia state law, or whatever is stipulated by the MWAA.
** Not to mention that the entire plot only becomes possible because of everyone in the airport and the planes forgetting some FAA regulations which would have made averting the crisis a trivial effort. First, all aircraft in the air must be listening to a specific frequency dedicated for use to alert pilots to emergency situations, and second, any airfield capable of accepting an aircraft declaring a need for an emergency landing must do so. Since there are at least three other major airfields within 15 minutes flight time of Dulles, and two hours (the length of the siege in-film) flight time makes half the airports on the Eastern Seaboard reachable in a stretch, there are plenty of other airports in range that could use their transmitters to tell the circling aircraft "Dulles is compromised, land here instead". Military airports are included, since they allow civilian planes to land in an emergency there. The cockpit of a plane in the air must be listening in on an emergency broadcast frequency too (which any other airport in the area could have used to warn the planes off after Dulles' transmitter went offline).
** Lorenzo is stated to be a Captain and wears Captain's bars on his uniform, but when he orders a mobilisation after [=McClane=] reveals the plot, he addresses himself as Chief, a distinct rank. However that may be just a case of cop parlance, as it is common for the boss in a workplace to be informally referred to as "chief" by themselves or their subordinates.



* In the HBO original movie ''The Enemy Within'', a remake of the film ''Literature/SevenDaysInMay'', the President, discussing with Col. Casey the coup that the military and members of the President's cabinet are plotting, says that the coup-plotters will have to do something to give the coup "the illusion of legality". They then realize that they plan to use Section 4 of the 25th Amendment to the Constitution, which allows a majority of the cabinet to remove the President temporarily by sending a letter to the President pro tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives saying that the President is unable to discharge the duties of his office; permanent removal requires a vote of two-thirds of Congress. It eventually comes out that the conspirators are banking on the fact that the President has become so unpopular that two-thirds of Congress will go along with his removal. The problem is that that's not the "illusion of legality", that's actual legality. That is, what the "coup plotters" in the movie are doing is perfectly legal. In point of fact, there is no reason whatsoever to involve the military. In the original film and in the novel on which it was based, both of which, incidentally, came out before the 25th Amendment was ratified, the military was planning a straight-up coup.



* ''Film/AFewGoodMen'':
** The prosecution would never be able to get to a jury with a murder charge. The victim, PFC Santiago, died after the two defendants tied him up and gagged him. The prosecution alleges that poison on the gag killed him, but they cannot prove that there was poison on the gag, and a doctor testifies that his cause of death could also be an undiagnosed heart condition, so the cause of death cannot be proven to be poison. Without the poison, they cannot prove intent to murder either, since it's not reasonable to assume that a healthy Marine would die from being bound and gagged. With no poison, there's no intent, and with no intent, there's no murder. The judge should have dismissed the murder charges at the end of the prosecution's case.
** Related to that, there is Jo's infamous "I strenuously object" scene, which she justifies by saying that she got their objection to the doctor's testimony noted for the record. Objections spoken out loud during the trial are always noted for the record. Everything (with certain particular exceptions) said in the trial is supposed to be noted for the record; that's what the record is for.
** Following up with Jo, she is such a hard-core KnightTemplar that she absolutely refuses a plea bargain for the men she and Kaffee are defending (downgrading the charge of murder (which would get Downey and Dawson executed or serving time for life in a military stockade) to involuntary manslaughter (which would give them a ''much'' lesser time in jail and a dishonorable discharge)) and makes the case go to court in the hopes she will expose the misbehavior of the Marines at Guantanamo. Lawyers ''cannot'' refuse plea bargain options without first having discussed them with their defendants. Furthermore, their duty is to their clients, not to expose criminal wrongdoing by others.
** At the end of the movie, Dawson and Downey are acquitted of the most serious charges, but convicted of "conduct unbecoming a Marine". This is a fictional charge that does not exist in real life. There's only "conduct unbecoming an officer" which doesn't apply as they're enlisted men. They could have been convicted under Article 93 of the Universal Code of Military Justice ([=UCMJ=]), which prohibits a soldier from ''"cruelty toward, or oppression or maltreatment of, any person subject to his orders"''. However, that would not be referred to as "Conduct Unbecoming a Marine."



* ''Film/Ghostbusters1984'': The government is not allowed to simply shut down a business's machines without any due process (i.e. a hearing in court where defendants can tell their side). If it happened, they might have explained just why shutting down their machines would be a bad idea to someone reasonable.



* ''Film/HarrysWar'': More than one example.
** During his speech after breaking into the talk show in a tank, Harry says that the Constitution doesn't authorize the IRS. Oh really, Harry? How about Article 1, Section 8, Clause 1: "The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States"
** And if that wasn't blatant enough, how about Amendment 16: "The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration."
** While it's true the Constitution doesn't specifically authorize an ''Internal Revenue Service'' to collect taxes, it's pretty blatant about the (nearly unlimited) taxing power it gives the federal government, and every court in the land agrees that an agency to enforce the federal tax laws is well within the rights of the Executive branch.
** Aunt Beverly claims that the Tax Court judges are all in the hip pockets of the IRS, since it's the IRS that pays their salaries (and can hit them with severe audits if they don't toe the line the IRS wants). In RealLife, many neutral parties have criticized the Tax Courts for being ''too soft'' on tax cheats out of judicial dislike for the IRS. Also their salaries are set by the Congress and paid by the taxpayer like all federal officials, which doesn't differ in amount from other judges. Punitive audits from the IRS of judges would also get them in a lot of trouble.
* ''Film/IAmSam'': In reality it's unlikely Sam would lose custody entirely, since he is neither abusing or neglecting Lucy, though he might be required to have supervision from a social worker. Also these proceedings are generally much more informal. The state attorney verbally attacking Sam on the stand is also inappropriate and a judge likely would not permit it, particularly given his mental disability (it's akin to him dressing down a child).



* ''Film/IShotJesseJames'' features a gross misrepresentation of extradition law. Once Frank James (the brother of UsefulNotes/JesseJames) is acquitted of charges in Colorado, the jail immediately lets him go, even though they acknowledge he's wanted in other states like Kansas and Missouri. In reality, the Colorado authorities would’ve alerted the other states (telegrams were widespread by 1892, so there wouldn’t be a long delay) and kept Frank locked up until one of the states contacted them about extradition via the U.S. Marshals. The only reason to let him go would've been if ''none'' of the other states wanted to try him, which seems unlikely given him and his brother's notorious reputation.
* ''Film/ISpitOnYourGrave'': The poster to the original film boasts that the protagonist would not be convicted by any jury in America after going through her RoaringRampageOfRevenge, because it's a RapeAndRevenge scenario. This isn't true. While it varies from state to state (let alone country to country), self-defense laws explicitly say that doing violence to protect yourself only applies ''while the crime is being committed'' (and even then something like killing may only have its sentence reduced because of extenuating circumstances, not flat-out given a "get away with murder" card). Hunting down and killing your rapists in ways not unlike a SlasherFilm villain would ''definitely'' put you in trouble with the law no matter what (and interestingly enough the remake's continuation (yes, it has one) showcases in a moment of SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome that [[spoiler:the moment the protagonist devolves into killing people in the middle of a metropolitan city because she believes they are rapists and have it coming, her KarmaHoudiniWarranty expires and she ends up being hunted down ''and killed'' by the police, like any other SerialKiller.)]] However, as a practical matter, a woman with no priors who claims she was raped might manage to avoid prison by (a) garnering enough sympathy from the jury to forestall a conviction, or (b) being declared insane and sent to a mental institution.
* ''Film/IdentityThief'':
** In real life, even if a criminal escapes to another state the police can just call that state's police and get them to arrest them. And since Diana's crimes (identity theft and wire fraud) are federal it should be a job for the** Sandy would also have a pretty easy wrongful dismissal claim against his employer if they truly let him go because of a police mix-up.



* ''Film/InsideMan'': After all is said and done, Detective Frasier is ordered to drop his investigation on the bank robbery because (allegedly) nothing was stolen and this there is no crime (that "allegedly" [[spoiler:is the millions in unreported diamonds the thieves did took which leads to [[JusticeByOtherLegalMeans the ruin]] of Mr. Case after [[KarmaHoudiniWarranty decades of hiding being a Nazi collaborator]], though]]). Even with the extremely heavy implication of political maneuvering [[spoiler:from Case and White]] trying to keep a lid on things, there is no way that a hostage situation in the middle of New York City would just be allowed to slide.

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* ''Film/InsideMan'': ''Film/InTheLineOfFire'': Despite the Secret Service consultation, some errors show up:
** Lilly's gown during the party scene would be inappropriate for a female Secret Service agent, as it would prevent her from performing her duties should there be an attempt on the President's life. In those situations female agents instead wear dress pants and more practical shoes. (With the gown, there is also the problem of where to hide the service weapon.)
** In the scene where the Secret Service counter-snipers attempt to get a sight on Leary, it is reported that it is too dark for them to see inside the elevator. In modern times (and certainly in the year the movie was released in and is set), Secret Service counter-snipers are equipped with night-vision goggles to allow them to see targets through darkness.
** Also, in the climactic scene where Leary is getting ready to shoot the President and Horrigan has figured out he's in the room, there's a drawn-out scene where Horrigan is trying to figure out what table he's at in order to apprehend him before he shoots the President. In reality, a scenario where there's a gunman in the area but their identity and location are unknown is something the Secret Service trains for. Upon entering the room, Horrigan would have yelled out the code phrase for this scenario, whereupon all the agents would have swarmed the President to shield him with their bodies while the rest ordered everyone to hit the floor.
*** In the same scene, after Leary assembles and loads his gun, he holds it in his hand with a napkin draped over it for concealment, then stands up to shake the President's hand. ''No one'' is allowed to approach or be near the President with their hands concealed. Period. As soon as he stood up, the Secret Service would have had their eyes on him. Seeing that he had his hands concealed would have meant at least two agents would be immediately in his face, hands on their pistols and ordering him to show his hands right now.
*** There's also no way Watts would have dismissed Frank telling him point blank that the very assassin who's been stalking the President for weeks is present, no matter what personal or professional animosity there was.
* In ''Film/InsideMan'', NYPD Detective Keith Frazier is ordered to drop the investigation into the bank robbery on the grounds that "nothing was taken" = "no crime was committed"... ignoring the fact that the hostage taking and associated actions could result in any number of charges -- and surely the hostages would like someone to pay for what they've been through. However, at the same time, it could just be that Frazier's higher-ups, plus the media, found bigger fish to fry, since the faked heist resulted in a member of New York City's high society being outed as a former Nazi collaborator. Considering the field day the media's probably having once they find out about Case's connections, they'd probably laud the robbery team as akin to Robin Hood. Plus without any visible leads and no one pressuring the NYPD to actually look more closely for the gunmen, there wouldn't be much push to keep the case open. As for the hostages, they won't forget what happened, but they probably are either thankful to have survived or just as amazed and confused as anybody about what really happened.
**
After all is said and done, Detective Frasier is ordered to drop his investigation on the bank robbery because (allegedly) nothing was stolen and this there is no crime (that "allegedly" [[spoiler:is the millions in unreported diamonds the thieves did took which leads to [[JusticeByOtherLegalMeans the ruin]] of Mr. Case after [[KarmaHoudiniWarranty decades of hiding being a Nazi collaborator]], though]]). Even with the extremely heavy implication of political maneuvering [[spoiler:from Case and White]] trying to keep a lid on things, there is no way that a hostage situation in the middle of New York City would just be allowed to slide.slide.
* ''Film/IntolerableCruelty'': In America, if you were in your spouse's will before, but the two of you divorce later, the part of the will that left his/her property to you is automatically nullified. Also, one party's adultery is irrelevant, as divorce law is now no-fault in California and the rest of the US.
* ''Film/JohnDoeVigilante'': The judge in John Doe's trial is wearing a black robe and no wig, and the barristers are wearing business suits. At a trial in an Australian Supreme Court, the judge should be wearing a red robe and full wig, and the barristers black robes and horsehair wigs.
* ''Film/JohnnyEnglish'': With respect to the (albeit unwritten) Constitution and the power of the Crown. In RealLife, you could ''not'' get the Queen to abdicate with the stroke of a pen,[[note]]it requires an Act of all Parliaments in nations where she is head of state[[/note]] and whilst the bit where [[spoiler: all land in the country is technically the possession of the Crown and can be confiscated at will]] needs clarification,[[note]]and it would probably violate human rights law/treaties[[/note]] the monarch has very little actual power, which is ''de facto'' exercised by their government. It also ignores historical precedent concerning [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Execution_of_Charles_I what happens to monarchs who try to exercise too much personal power]]. Of course all of this is (thankfully?) ignored in favor of RuleOfFunny and a good story (see below).
** There's also the notion that Mr. Sauvage only becomes King Pascal at the moment the crown touches his head, when actually (assuming that Elizabeth II's abdication and Pascal's claim to the throne are recognized), he would be monarch as soon as the abdication form was signed and Parliament has given consent. The coronation is just a ceremony.
** Furthermore, in real life a coronation takes more than a year to organise, rather than just days as this film suggests. Also, it seems unlikely that a monarch would be allowed to quietly slip away to a castle in France so soon before getting crowned.[[note]]It is traditional for the monarch to spend the night before in the Speaker's apartment of the Palace of Westminster.[[/note]]
** Oh, and throughout the film, various characters consistently refer to "England" rather than "Britain". In particular they talk of Sauvage being "King of England", even though that title was abolished in 1707, when the crowns of England and Scotland were unified.
** In any case, even were Elizabeth to abdicate, Prince Charles would be next in line. If she were to renounce the throne for her descendants as well, the next in line would be David Armstrong-Jones, 2nd Earl of Snowden.[[note]]Son of Princess Margaret, the Queen's sister.[[/note]]
* ''Film/JohnQ'': There is no way that John would only spend 2 years in prison for all his crimes in any reasonable court of law, whether or not his intentions were good. He's found not guilty of attempted murder and armed criminal action simply because there were no bullets in the gun, which would not hold up, because an empty gun is still considered a deadly weapon. The jury can ignore the evidence and acquit him, which is likely what happened here since he had lots of public sympathy, but that still doesn't explain getting only two years on multiple kidnapping charges. In many places kidnapping is punishable by up to a life sentence.
** The ''Posse Comitatus Act'' is intended to prevent the president from using the military to enforce executive decisions of the United States; the military cannot be deployed on U.S. soil ''to enforce the law''. An armed attack on the White House is not one of the situations where the military would refuse to act, because it has nothing to do with the law and everything to do with the security of the United States. In fact, one would be more likely to have to explicitly order the military ''not'' to intervene, because an attack on any government building by a paramilitary force is effectively a declaration of war on the United States.
** Interestingly, when the movie came out, the ''Posse Comitatus Act'' also did not apply at ''all'' to the Marine Corps or the Navy (that was added in 2022). When [[spoiler:Marine Corps One]] was attacked, it would have also been considered a direct hostile act against the Marine Corps, who would be empowered to act in their own self-defense.
* ''Film/KickAss2'': The police "detain" all masked superheroes in New York City, but most aren't shown committing any crimes. Dave's dad even explicitly says he has to be released because of this. In reality, the cops would not do this because it could result in the city being sued for false arrest, which might cost millions. The Justice Forever members also say they're "on parole" in the funeral scene after their release, though there it may be a joke.
* ''Film/{{Kimi}}'': After Angela incapacitates the hitmen in her apartment, she finishes each of them off with a nail gun to the head. [[KickThemWhileTheyAreDown She doesn't face any legal repercussions for committing lethal force on people who were no longer a threat, and in two cases, clearly helpless.]] Even though they are in her home, attacking someone on the ground and helpless (let alone ''murdering them'') voids self-defence.
* ''Film/TheLimehouseGolem'': Lizzie is sentenced to hang the every next day after she's convicted, necessitating then that Kildare race to get her pardoned. However, hangings could not be carried out until three weeks had passed, giving the defendant time to appeal (although this rarely worked).
* ''Film/LastOunceOfCourage'':
** Hammerschmidt is implied to be either a civil rights lawyer or at the very least have some knowledge of the law, but his accusations against Bob are ridiculously flimsy, and are limited to very broad claims like "breaking the law" or "violating the Constitution", without ever mentioning any specific law, article or amendment.
** Bob, who is also the Mayor of his town, is stated to have been "fired by the city council" following Hammerschmidt's revelation of his wartime snafu. In real life, there is no such thing. Being elected officials, Mayors can only be removed via impeachment or a recall election.
** The church community center's cross got taken down sometime prior to the film's present-day events because "it offended somebody," when in reality, no such incident would occur due to being an obvious violation of the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment.
** The film claims that government property is not allowed to put up Christmas decorations (not even secular Christmas lights) because they're public property. In actuality, however, many cities both big and small put on Christmas decorations even including Nativity scenes. In fact as ''WebVideo/CinematicExcrement'' pointed out, this includes the city of San Jose, a major metropolitan city located in the San Francisco Bay Area region of northern California, which is one of the most stereotypically liberal states/regions one could possibly think of. The caveat is simply they have to allow for non-Christian displays too if someone wants them.



* ''Film/LiarLiar''
** After Samantha Cole leaves Miranda's office following her introduction to Fletcher, Miranda tells Fletcher that Samantha's case is worth a lot of money to the firm, hinting that the firm is being paid a contingency fee since it's later revealed that a settlement offer has been made and refused, whereas if the firm were accepting a flat fee, the amount of Samantha's settlement would be irrelevant, and there would be no need to bring Fletcher in to replace the attorney who refused unethical behavior earlier in the movie. Attorneys are barred from accepting divorce cases on a contingency basis, unless it's a suit to recover past due alimony or child support.
** Contracts with a minor are considered voidable, not ''void ab initio''. A minor who enters into a contract can choose to void it, but if they turn 18, they only have a limited window in which to declare the intention to void the contract. This window is usually six months -- for marriage in California, it's two years. Past this window, the contract is considered ratified -- the basic assumption is that, being an adult now, she retroactively consents to the agreement -- and must be executed. Given Samantha Cole's age at the time of the divorce hearing, both her marriage and the prenup should have been considered ratified. However, even if the marriage were valid but the prenup weren't, her husband clearly states that he "didn't know she was a minor!" At this point, he could probably get an annulment on the grounds of fraud, reverting Samantha to ''status quo ante matrimonium'' - i.e., legally in possession of none of his wealth.
** One scene is premised on the idea that the judge can't stop Fletcher from badgering a witness because "it's his witness." A real-life judge would probably put a stop to that and give the lawyer a dressing down for it. Possibly the statement was simply a bewildered reaction to the fact that Fletcher was badgering the witness into giving evidence which would harm his own client's case. But then, long before the end, the judge should have stopped everything and said to Samantha, "Your lawyer is clearly nuts, so you'll have to get a new one and we'll start over."
** Fletcher's secretary claims someone broke into her friend's house, fell and injured himself in her kitchen and sued her with the help of a lawyer like Fletcher. Fletcher then claims he could have gotten him more. Intruders illegally entering a dwelling cannot sue for injuries caused by breaking and entering, though the characterization of Fletcher being an AmoralAttorney could mean that he'd use lies and chicanery to confuse the actual scenario and managed to squeeze a settlement out of the defendant.
** Samantha's husband's lawyer presents a tape recording to be used against her in court. Tape recordings are not admissible as evidence without foundation in a court of law, which isn't given even though the content of the tape is irrelevant in her case. Additionally, California's strong laws on electronic surveillance forbid this except by two-party consent (which obviously did not occur here). The private investigator might also be in trouble here for invasion of privacy.
** Many courthouses do not allow cell phones at all. Even the ones that do don't allow them in the courtroom.
** Like most courtroom scenes, the film shows lawyers entering the "well" of the court (i.e. the area between counsel table and the judge's bench). They aren't allowed to do this without the judge's permission, and this doesn't happen except to have a sidebar with him. When questioning witnesses, they stand at the podium.
** In the analysis of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QNnDvdtj9Us an actual lawyer]] ([[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Pt51e3U7IY Part 2]]), while there are accurate moments (such as when Fletcher notes that suing the impound lot for scratching his car wouldn't be worth it), the fact that Fletcher used to defend criminals and accepts a divorce case is an unusual change, Fletcher could not yell "Settle!" before talking to his client first, and a throwaway line regarding filing would be enough for disbarment (respecting the court clerk's deadlines is SeriousBusiness!).
* ''Film/LordOfWar'': Interpol gets portrayed as something of an international FBI, with field agents who hunt down arms traffickers. This is not the case. Interpol serves as a network to coordinate the efforts of national police combating international crimes (including arms trafficking). It has no agents who can make arrests. Interpol primarily serves to put different national police agencies in contact with each other, maintain a criminal database and put out notices of wanted criminals. In any case, a US Army general would have no authority to have Interpol agents release an arms trafficker (which they would not be holding anyway). The same error crops up in ''Film/{{Assassins}}'', which had not only Interpol field agents conducting a sting, they also get compared with the CIA regarding their supposed influence.
* ''Film/TheManFromEarth'': Will repeatedly threatens to have John involuntarily committed for a psychiatric evaluation if he doesn't admit he's making the whole story up. He'd have a lot of trouble convincing a judge to sign an order for involuntary commitment based on being told a story he doesn't like. John hasn't threatened anyone, committed any acts of violence, displayed any symptoms of mental illness, John isn't his patient, and he doesn't have any valid reason for having John committed. All John would have to do is look at the judge and say it was just a story, and it probably wouldn't even get to that point. Basically, Will is an asshole.



* ''Film/MinorityReport'': There's no mention of the US Constitution having changed to allow {{precrime arrest}}s and detentions. However, while it was authorized in Washington D.C. and a proposal for extending this further is scheduled to be voted on during the film, a constitutional amendment indeed would be necessary. Otherwise, arresting a person for something they have not yet done, let alone detaining the person afterward indefinitely, would be completely unconstitutional. This would also be necessary to have the precogs, who are slaves (even if not called by the name) and mass surveillance/searches which we see (the film does at least hang a lampshade on the constitutionality or lack thereof of {{precrime arrest}}s: there's a brief reference to the ACLU making trouble for the D.C. pilot program, and the process is overseen by a pair of judges).



* ''Film/MixedNuts'': In reality, the cops probably would not just let Gracie off once they discover her victim was really the Seaside Strangler. While they might be glad he's gone, further investigation likely would take place, and she could be charged with involuntary manslaughter, reckless endangerment, etc. Of course, a jury might still be sympathetic regardless, or they could cut her a deal.
* ''Film/MostWanted'': US Army General Woodward takes over the investigation into the murder of the First Lady by the President's order. No one mentions the Posse Comitatus Act that prevents the military from law enforcement absent exceptions that don't apply here, and the LAPD meekly complies in this (when real life civilian/state police would be up in arms if this happened). Interestingly, it was accurate until then with showing that the murder is under LAPD jurisdiction, since "First Lady" isn't a federal position, just the honorary title a President's wife is given and so the crime is covered by California state law (whereas murdering federal officials is covered by the US Code).
* ''Film/AMurderOfCrows'': The killer's family was killed by a drunk driver, who got off because police didn't read his MirandaRights correctly. However, drunk driving cases heavily involve physical evidence (breathalyzer, blood tests, etc.). It's thus very unlikely the whole case would hinge on any statement he made (which is all that Miranda applies to).
* ''Film/MyCousinVinny'' [[ShownTheirWork got a lot of things right about the legal system]]. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a1I7QBCHqng It still had a few mistakes, though]]:
** Vinny is licensed to practice law only in New York State. In order for him to be able to act as a lawyer in Alabama, he would either have to take the Bar Exam for Alabama, or a lawyer that can practice in Alabama would need to file a motion, and be a part of his legal team.
** Judge Haller had no legitimate reason to overrule Vinny's objection to Wilbur's testimony. While he can theoretically overrule it, the verdict would've almost certainly been overturned by a higher court simply for this reason, as this shows extreme prejudice against the defendants.
** Although probably staged this way for humorous effect, a real police line-up would not have people with wide discrepancies between height, weight, build and facial features. Real police line-ups are made up of the suspect(s) and a couple of volunteers who look similar to the suspect in height, weight, build, skin color, hair color and general facial features so that when an identification is made, if it is the actual suspect, they are chosen because they are truly recognized by the witness(s).
** When Bill and Stan get arrested, they're under the impression that they're in jail for shoplifting until Bill figures it out during the confession. Due to the Writ of Habeas Corpus, it's nearly impossible for someone in custody to go that long without being told what he has been arrested for.
** The black lady on the jury (seen when Trotter talks of "our ancestors from England") also serves Vinny in the café during the lunch recess before his presentation of evidence. If she's on the jury, she would not have been allowed to leave the court to work, and least of all to serve the defense attorney.
** Near the end of the movie, Judge Haller walks out of his office, and the sign on the door says "Probate Court". A Probate Judge would never conduct a criminal trial; murder trials in Alabama (and most states) are always conducted by Circuit Judges.
* ''Film/MyDaysOfMercy'': The first prisoner executed (who killed Mercy's dad's partner) is said to have been mentally disabled. However, the US Supreme Court has ruled that such prisoners cannot be executed.



* ''Film/NationalLampoonsVacation'' and ''Film/NationalLampoonsChristmasVacation'' both showcase a pitch-perfect example of the "charges dropped, get-out-of-jail-free" bullet point, even with the fact Clark Griswold twice (deliberately in the first film, accidentally in the second… [[RhetoricalQuestionBlunder at least by Clark]]) took someone hostage and required a SWATTeam intervention, a fact that neither the states of California ([[MrAltDisney Roy Walley notwithstanding]]) or Illinois would take lightly.
* ''{{Film/Nightcrawler}}'': The police would most likely have enough probable cause to get a warrant to search Lou's residence, but the film acts as if their hands are tied.



* ''Film/NineLives'': Executives can't be summarily fired, since their employment is under contract and they will have clauses that restrict this. A majority shareholder also can't do things which damage the minority shareholders' stake in the company, as continuing the tower construction would.



* ''Film/OfficeSpace'': While the events of the film would probably prevent Initech from being able to track Peter down internally, he still had his photo taken at the ATM. Given that none of the participants had the rank at Initech to open an account in the bank's name (they're engineers, not bursars), and given how quickly the account drew money from Initech, it's likely that Peter should be expecting a visit from the FDIC over his obvious attempt at embezzlement.



* ''Film/{{Peppermint}}'': Let's just say that the hearing Riley takes place in where her family's killers get off bears absolutely zero resemblance to how an actual hearing would go. But without it [[RuleOfDrama we wouldn't have a plot]]. It's also somewhat justified as the judge is in their pocket. It's also implied that the prosecutor is too, along with the police, or are at least afraid of opposing the cartel.
* ''{{Film/Persecuted}}'': The film revolves around a bill called The Faith and Fairness Act, which will somehow force religious institutions to give all religions equal status (or something like that). The bill is hopelessly unconstitutional and would never get passed into law, or, assuming it somehow did, ever stand up in court.



* ''Film/{{Prisoners}}'': Loki not working with a partner and walking into dangerous situations without calling for backup first is not in line with actual police procedure. But it does make for good drama.
* ''Film/ThePurgeElectionYear'':
** Election Day has been moved from November to May, which would require unprecedented control over all three branches of government by the New Founding Fathers. Of course, the Purge would be even harder to implement, and they managed that, so changing Election Day is small potatoes by comparison.
** The Purge was passed by Constitutional Amendment (confirmed in [[AllThereInTheManual promotional materials]], plus no other means would be legally feasible). A Constitutional Amendment can only be repealed by another Constitutional Amendment, which requires a 2/3 majority in both houses of Congress and a 3/4 majority of State Legislatures. The President, while having some ability to get creative with interpreting the law, has absolutely no power to repeal a Constitutional Amendment via a simple executive order, and attempting to do so would be the most blatant grounds for Impeachment in the history of the Republic. Of course, it's still possible that pragmatism (e.g., the economic and social cons of the Purge having vastly exceeded its pros) and self-preservation (e.g., fear of the resistance simply continuing to exploit the Purge to kill all of its remaining supporters) will persuade enough officials to support Roan's efforts -- regardless of party lines -- anyway. However, as we don't know the details of the amendment, it could be the president was given the power to unilaterally make something legal or illegal. This could be indicated by the fact the NFFA can remove the exemption of top government officials from the Purge (i.e. change the law) apparently all by themselves.



* ''Film/Rampage2009'': In one of his political rants, Bill claims that firearms purchases do not mandate background checks, and cites this as proof of the gun industry's greed making mass murderers such as himself possible. In truth, this gets complicated. Licensed firearms businesses (where, obviously, the overwhelming majority of gun sales take place) or "[=FFLs=]" are obligated under federal law to perform background checks on ALL their customers. No matter the location--there is no such thing as an internet or gun show "loophole" for any lawful purchase. ''Private'' purchases, where one person might decide to sell a gun to one of their friends living in the same state, do not. If it's across state lines, an FFL will have to act as a middleman. Oft-repeated talking points such as "universal background checks" effectively just amounts to taxing private individuals who probably cannot afford such a burden, in addition to possibly trespassing on privacy rights. In other words, Bill's statement is ''technically'' (kind of) correct, but [[MetaphoricallyTrue highly misleading]].
* Played for laughs in both ''Reckless Kelly'' and ''Film/TheAdventuresOfRockyAndBullwinkle'' in which celebrities are legally exempt from any laws.



* ''Film/Resurrection1999'': When one of the detectives recites the Miranda warning, he says the ending wrong to express anger at the killer. Understandable, but it would invalidate anything he said after that. Also, the killer is arraigned on a charge of impersonating a federal agent in the Cook County courthouse, with the district attorney involved, and he's held in Chicago Police custody before he makes bail. However, this a federal crime, and he would be arraigned in the US District Courthouse, with the US Attorney's Office prosecuting, and held in federal custody.



* ''Film/TheRoom2003'':
** Chris-R is never actually arrested, yet Johnny and Mark "take him to jail" in about four minutes.
** Johnny apparently gets to keep Chris-R's gun after he gets carted off to jail, eventually [[spoiler: using it to commit suicide]]. Nobody ever considers that it's an important piece of evidence that the police might want to take a look at.[[note]][[http://www.imfdb.org/wiki/The_Room They're actually different models of guns]]: The original script had Johnny own a piece himself unrelated to Chris-R's gun, but it was changed to tie the stories together more.
* The low-budget sci-fi movie ''Film/{{ROTOR}}'' bungles law as badly as it bungles everything else. To pick just one example, the conflict begins because the protagonist's benefactor, Senator Douglas, wants to unveil a new law-enforcement robot and ride the publicity to win a presidential election in six months -- or else he will have everyone associated with the project jailed for graft and corruption. Never mind that such a move would likely get the senator in trouble as well,[[note]]And raise the question why he'd need to secretly fund such a project to begin with.[[/note]] how would the senator become one of the major parties’ candidates for president just a few months before an election? And there is also the whole thing about the titular robotic project having a "hunt down and kill all [[AllCrimesAreEqual criminals, no matter how small the crime]]" programming--even with the most cynical of societal projections ''and'' an expectation of 25 years before it becomes factual, this fact is still a massive civil lawsuit waiting to happen the moment the robot is unveiled, not to mention possible criminal prosecutions.



* The premise of the comedy ‘’Film/ServingSara’’ is that Sara will be massively disadvantaged if her soon-to-be-ex-husband Gordon manages to initiate their divorce in Texas, as opposed to her having it heard in New York. While it would take an actual lawyer to evaluate which state's law would be more beneficial to her in this specific instance, the movie's assertion that Texas divorce laws were written by "good old boys" to screw over ex-wives isn't true. Texas is a community property state, giving Sara automatic ownership of half the property accumulated during the marriage - there's a very good chance that she'd be better off there.
* ''Film/TheSiege'': A suspect is detained for carrying a large amount of currency in his luggage -- but a mere $20 under the $10,000 limit. This is ''[[http://www.snopes.com/business/money/10000.asp not]]'' illegal, and as the scene details, wouldn't work anyway; the arresting officer simply added some of his own cash to put the suspect over the limit.[[note]]The actual law in question regards cash deposits and withdrawals: any cash transaction to or from an account of $10,000 or more requires the bank to complete a Currency Transaction Report and send it to various government agencies for tracking. Simply ''having'' $10,000 in cash on you is not illegal. And if someone withdraws or deposits ''just less'' than $10,000 but the bank suspects that they're trying to avoid having a CTR completed, the bank is obligated to complete a Suspicious Activity Report, which includes the amount of the transaction and the belief that the person is trying to avoid having it reported (which is called "Stacking")[[/note]]
* ''Film/ShockCorridor'': The movie acts like the murderer has been nailed when Johnny beats him into a confession. In reality, that would be inadmissible in court. The only witness is also a delusional mental patient who thinks he's a little boy too most of the time. So it's likely the murderer would go free.
* ''Film/ShotCaller'': While Jacob might have been given a 16-month sentence for what he did, it is extremely implausible for somebody with his profile (stockbroker, family man, and first-time offender with a DUI manslaughter conviction) to immediately be placed in a maximum-security prison like the one Jacob goes to. He might even get probation or a suspended sentence, especially as he'd be able to get a good defense lawyer. Even if sentenced to prison, this would almost certainly be minimum or medium security, and he'd only get in maximum for breaking rules. Then [[RuleOfDrama there would be no plot of course]], but they could have had a more plausible scenario for this.
* ''Film/ASimpleFavor'': In reality, [[spoiler:Emily]] almost definitely would get life without parole if she had been convicted of two premeditated murders plus attempted murder, not simply twenty years.
* In the ''Film/SmokeyAndTheBandit'' movies, Sheriff Buford T. Justice seems to be under the wrongful impression that being in 'hot pursuit' means that he has the authority to pursue the Bandit wherever he goes. While that part of the hot pursuit doctrine ''does'' grant him the authority to chase Bandit over the county line (it was written so the police would not be hamstrung by red tape when dealing with criminals who immediately cross the border to another jurisdiction), it does ''not'' give him the authority to continue chasing him all the way across that county and into the next, and the next, and the next, ultimately resulting in a chase across multiple ''states''. There is a point where Buford would be obligated to turn over the chase to people with either local jurisdiction for that region (the local sheriff) or simply a wider jurisdiction (state police or the FBI).
** Though even ''that'' could cause some potential difficulties too, as at the beginning of the chase Buford didn't even have any proof that Bandit was doing anything illegal. Yes, Bandit ''was'' hauling several hundred cases of beer that was illegal to ship in bulk to that part of the country at the time (Coors was not licensed to do business in the southeastern US in the seventies, because they had yet to apply for said licenses), but Buford didn't know that. He was chasing the man for purely personal reasons. ''Making the entire pursuit illegal even within Buford's own jurisdiction.''
** Lampshaded in the film when the sheriff of a neighboring county reminds Justice he's out of his jurisdiction.
* ''Film/SleepyHollow1999'':
** Courts in New York in 1799 are shown as regularly using torture to extract confessions and admitting into evidence confessions extracted under torture. In 1799! Torture had been illegal throughout the English-speaking world for over a century ''before'' the American Revolution.
** There's also the fact that Jonathan Masbeth was the only witness to the elder van Garrett's new will, which left everything to van Garrett's new wife Emily Winship, which sets the plot in motion. A will requires two valid witnesses for the will itself to be valid.
* ''Film/{{Sully}}'' depicts the NTSB investigation into the crash of US Airways Flight 1549 as trying to get the eponymous pilot, insisting that simulations had confirmed that he could have made it back to [=LaGuardia=] or to Teterboro or even Newark, and that simulations proved this. Only when Sullenberger insists that they add the human factor back into the simulations by adding a 35-second delay to account for the time for the pilots to diagnose the problem, assess the level of damage and remaining capability of the plane, and decide what to do, do the simulations confirm that it would not have been possible to make it to an airport. In fact, the NTSB was not out to get Sullenberger; they were the ones who added the 35-second delay into the simulations as part of the initial investigation. Conducting the simulations without the delay was just to establish the limits of what might have been possible. By all accounts, including Sullenberger's own, the NTSB investigators thought Sullenberger was a hero, thought all along that he had made the right decision, and were thrilled to get the benefit of his experience. But movies need villains, so the administrative investigation that was primarily conducted just to gain information to help prevent future crashes was turned into an exercise in persecution.
** Another thing: finding that a cause of the crash was pilot error does not mean that the case is closed. Since the late 1970s, a pilot error is not considered a cause of the incident by itself; it's only a symptom of a deeper problem and, if the investigators find out the pilot is to blame, they continue the investigation to find out ''why'' he/she made an error. In many cases, pilots who caused a crash/incident because they messed something up still come out as heroes (eg. the Gimli Glider case, where the crew of a 767 miscalculated their fuel load, yet still were applauded for bringing their aircraft safely down and saving all souls onboard when the engines quit at 39000 ft). Even if Sully was found more or less guilty of the incident, the investigation would go on to find why (eg. lack of proper rest or improper training), and he would still be hailed as a hero for saving 155 people.
** Also, the investigation is never done to attribute responsibility, but to expose causes. In many cases, the investigators start investigating the possibility of pilot error when other options are all ruled out.
* ''Film/SupermanReturns'': Lex Luthor gets off when the appellate court calls Superman as a witness and he doesn't show. First, appellate courts don't call witnesses or take witness testimony, they only review prior court cases to make sure they followed proper legal procedure. Second, if the appellate court did find a defect in the original conviction, it would result in a new trial. Third, even if the appeals court granted a new trial and Superman was unavailable to testify, that would be grounds for his testimony from the original trial to be entered into evidence.
* ''Film/{{Suspect}}'': Unfortunately, the plot hinges on this (despite being accurate otherwise). The 1968 case which Elizabeth Quinn found had ended in a dismissal by the judge in return for an appointment to the court of appeals. However, an order of dismissal probably would just go in the judge's and lawyers' case files, rather than be a part of the trial transcript (''especially'' if it was fixed) so Quinn shouldn't have been able to discover it.
* ''Film/SuspectZero'': Mackelway retrieving a suspected serial killer illegally in Mexico would not result in him going free, unless he also somehow tainted evidence they needed to hold him (which isn't shown). In the 1800s the US Supreme Court ruled the manner of a suspect's delivery into custody was irrelevant regarding whether they could be tried. On the other hand, he might be disciplined or fired for this, and even charged with kidnapping by Mexican officials.
* In the 2009 version of ''Film/TheTakingOfPelhamOneTwoThree'', Ryder makes Garber confess to taking the bribe. People around him speak as if that is an actual confession, but no one brings up that this confession was made under duress -- Garber would have a very solid case in any court of law to have that particular confession thrown out as evidence because if he continued to deny the allegations ''a man would have died'' -- which is far worse than taking a bribe.
* ''Film/TangoAndCash'': The protagonists are prosecuted on a charge of murdering an undercover FBI agent, a federal crime. However, it was explicitly done by the LA county District Attorney, who only has jurisdiction over state crimes. Later though it's said they're sent to a federal prison.
* ''Film/TerminatorGenisys'': Several times, you see San Francisco Police Department investigators being referred to as "detectives". The SFPD is unique among American law enforcement for not using the rank "detective"; anyone who's ever seen ''Film/DirtyHarry'' can tell you that they go by the title of "inspector" instead. And even then, the rank of "inspector" has more or less been phased out, with people of that rank now being designated as Sergeants.
* ''Film/ThreeBillboardsOutsideEbbingMissouri'':
** At one point Dixon [[spoiler:beats Red to a pulp and throws him out of ''a second story window'']] in front of a street full of witnesses, including [[spoiler:the new chief of police.]] His only punishment is [[spoiler:getting fired]] instead of, you know, [[spoiler:being immediately arrested for assault and attempted murder.]]
** When the [[spoiler: new chief]] walks in and introduces himself to the assembled Ebbing Police, the desk sergeant asks him to prove who he is. The [[spoiler: chief]] acts like this an absurd request and doesn't even bother to show them his badge. Somewhat justified in that he had just seen [[spoiler: Dixon violently assault two people, and wasn't particularly impressed with the other cops, [[PoliceAreUseless who were actively ignoring it.]]]]



* ''Film/TheTrumanShow'': The entire premise of having a show where the star spends his entire life being made into what is essentially a dancing monkey for the entertainment of others violates more laws than anyone can count.
** An [[http://www.cracked.com/article_18691_the-7-most-ridiculous-movie-character-overreactions.html#ixzz1EroYZ3NS article sums up the situation]] by claiming that the universe the film takes place in ''must'' be a CrapsackWorld by definition, as it breaks so many laws that the only explanation is either bribery or sheer incompetence. Notably, the producers are heard repeatedly trying to force Truman to conceive a child with his in-universe wife -- a FormerChildStar who's publicly said to be OnlyInItForTheMoney and finally {{rage quit}}s after she snaps and threatens him when his questioning becomes too much to bear.
** This is also discussed in-universe several times -- the film gives a HandWave to the improbable setup by claiming that Truman was "adopted" by the corporation that airs the program. [[https://movies.stackexchange.com/questions/18100/can-a-corporation-really-adopt-a-person Under most known adoption laws]], this is functionally impossible, as such adoption rules generally mandate that the child be taken under the care of a single parent or family.
** The entire concept of an extra (Sylvia) who is able to divulge details of the producers' antics to Truman, tipping him off that something is wrong, also highlights the absurdly-fragile legal nature of the production. While Kristof eventually has her removed (written out of) the show, she's never shown to face any financial or legal consequences for potentially destroying the façade of what is likely one of the largest-ever lifestyle productions in that universe's history (the dome alone takes up a substantial portion of real estate, equivalent to the Hollywood Hills and surrounding L.A. area). And even if Sylvia hadn't spilled the beans (a MeaningfulBackgroundEvent implies that she tried to get close to other cast members to convince them to turn on Kristof), it's likely that someone else would have during the course of Truman's life...



* ''{{Film/Upgrade}}'':
** STEM tells Grey the evidence he's gathered (a tattoo identifying one of the men at the scene when his wife was killed) isn't enough for a conviction. However, that's likely untrue, since it shows he was involved, and even if not the trigger man could get him convicted of {{felony murder}}. Plus, it could lead the police to more evidence (and the other criminals involved). Of course, [[spoiler:STEM turns out to be lying about everything, and so this was probably deliberation manipulation so Grey wouldn't just call the police in.]]
** [[spoiler:Cortez may have survived if she'd followed standard procedures and called for backup instead of facing Eron and Grey alone. Unless the two {{mooks}} Grey shoots on his way in are actually cops, but if so they failed to announce themselves as such.]]
* ''Film/USMarshals'':
** Gerard gets in trouble with his boss for striking a suspect in handcuffs to subdue him during the opening sequence because he was attacking the arresting Marshals, and bit one. She acts like this was a breach of protocol which he has to apologize for publicly. However, what he did was completely appropriate in those circumstances.
** It's ignored here for RuleOfCool, but in real life, the FAA says that prisoners are not allowed to be chained to any part of an airplane.
** Also, when the Chinese assassin asks to use the toilet the guard says to hold it and that they will be landing in 20 minutes, but in reality guards are not allowed to tell any prisoner the time frame of any transport especially when it is a federal prisoner transport.
* ''Film/TheVerdict'':
** Galvin could have been sanctioned by the court for failing to communicate the settlement offer to the family, and could have additionally been held liable for malpractice. Courts have consistently held that lawyers have a duty to communicate all settlement offers to their clients before accepting or declining such offers. Galvin was not disciplined in this case, although he was confronted by his clients for not telling them about the offer of $210,000 that the Archdiocese had made.
** The defense should have been able to win at the close of Galvin's case by making a motion for "judgment as a matter of law" (i.e. the judge ruling in their favor as no rational jury could find against them). However that doesn't happen.
** Judge Hoyle incorrectly rules that Nurse Kaitlin Price's testimony is inadmissible hearsay, though it falls under the "admissions" exception. Topping it off, the "best evidence" rule (that when witnesses testify to the content of a document, it must be produced) gets utterly bungled. The document is a photocopy that Nurse Price brings in showing that she altered an admissions form at Towler's order to cover up his negligence. To explain, the form is a ''photocopy'' of the original, and the best evidence rule requires that the original document must be what's entered into evidence. The real problem is that the best evidence rule allows the exclusion of a copy of a writing; it does not bar a witness from testifying about what she wrote in the original document. Galvin does not even attempt to offer the document into evidence. Rather, he just asks the witness what she wrote in the document. Furthermore, there is an exception to the best evidence rule: when the original is unavailable owing to a bad act by the party against whom the copy would be offered. Here, the witness is claiming that she altered the original document under the threat of the defendant, but made a photocopy of the original before she did so. So in real life, the copy would almost certainly be admissible. As for the hearsay issue, while the admissions exception would apply to Towler's out-of-court statement to Price, the statement was not hearsay to begin with, because it was not being offered to prove the content of the statement; whether Dr. Towler would have actually had Nurse Price fired for refusing to alter the admissions form is completely irrelevant to Galvin's case. It is only hearsay when the out-of-court statement is offered as evidence for the truth of the statement.
** Judge Hoyle, who was obviously in the defense's pocket, could have issued a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judgment_notwithstanding_verdict judgment notwithstanding verdict]] nullifying the jury's decision, if only Concannon had asked for it.
** And of course Galvin could have appealed and gotten a new trial based on the defense's misconduct in placing a mole in his office.



* ''Film/LiarLiar''
** After Samantha Cole leaves Miranda's office following her introduction to Fletcher, Miranda tells Fletcher that Samantha's case is worth a lot of money to the firm, hinting that the firm is being paid a contingency fee since it's later revealed that a settlement offer has been made and refused, whereas if the firm were accepting a flat fee, the amount of Samantha's settlement would be irrelevant, and there would be no need to bring Fletcher in to replace the attorney who refused unethical behavior earlier in the movie. Attorneys are barred from accepting divorce cases on a contingency basis, unless it's a suit to recover past due alimony or child support.
** Contracts with a minor are considered voidable, not ''void ab initio''. A minor who enters into a contract can choose to void it, but if they turn 18, they only have a limited window in which to declare the intention to void the contract. This window is usually six months -- for marriage in California, it's two years. Past this window, the contract is considered ratified -- the basic assumption is that, being an adult now, she retroactively consents to the agreement -- and must be executed. Given Samantha Cole's age at the time of the divorce hearing, both her marriage and the prenup should have been considered ratified. However, even if the marriage were valid but the prenup weren't, her husband clearly states that he "didn't know she was a minor!" At this point, he could probably get an annulment on the grounds of fraud, reverting Samantha to ''status quo ante matrimonium'' - i.e., legally in possession of none of his wealth.
** One scene is premised on the idea that the judge can't stop Fletcher from badgering a witness because "it's his witness." A real-life judge would probably put a stop to that and give the lawyer a dressing down for it. Possibly the statement was simply a bewildered reaction to the fact that Fletcher was badgering the witness into giving evidence which would harm his own client's case. But then, long before the end, the judge should have stopped everything and said to Samantha, "Your lawyer is clearly nuts, so you'll have to get a new one and we'll start over."
** Fletcher's secretary claims someone broke into her friend's house, fell and injured himself in her kitchen and sued her with the help of a lawyer like Fletcher. Fletcher then claims he could have gotten him more. Intruders illegally entering a dwelling cannot sue for injuries caused by breaking and entering, though the characterization of Fletcher being an AmoralAttorney could mean that he'd use lies and chicanery to confuse the actual scenario and managed to squeeze a settlement out of the defendant.
** Samantha's husband's lawyer presents a tape recording to be used against her in court. Tape recordings are not admissible as evidence without foundation in a court of law, which isn't given even though the content of the tape is irrelevant in her case. Additionally, California's strong laws on electronic surveillance forbid this except by two-party consent (which obviously did not occur here). The private investigator might also be in trouble here for invasion of privacy.
** Many courthouses do not allow cell phones at all. Even the ones that do, don't allow them in the courtroom.
** Like most courtroom scenes, the film shows lawyers entering the "well" of the court (i.e. the area between counsel table and the judge's bench). They aren't allowed to do this without the judge's permission, and this doesn't happen except to have a sidebar with him. When questioning witnesses, they stand at the podium.
** In the analysis of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QNnDvdtj9Us an actual lawyer]] ([[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Pt51e3U7IY Part 2]]), while there are accurate moments (such as when Fletcher notes that suing the impound lot for scratching his car wouldn't be worth it), the fact that Fletcher used to defend criminals and accepts a divorce case is an unusual change, Fletcher could not yell "Settle!" before talking to his client first, and a throwaway line regarding filing would be enough for disbarment (respecting the court clerk's deadlines is SeriousBusiness!).
* In the 2009 version of ''Film/TheTakingOfPelhamOneTwoThree'', Ryder makes Garber confess to taking the bribe. People around him speak as if that is an actual confession, but no one brings up that this confession was made under duress -- Garber would have a very solid case in any court of law to have that particular confession thrown out as evidence because if he continued to deny the allegations ''a man would have died'' -- which is far worse than taking a bribe.
* In the ''Film/SmokeyAndTheBandit'' movies, Sheriff Buford T. Justice seems to be under the wrongful impression that being in 'hot pursuit' means that he has the authority to pursue the Bandit wherever he goes. While that part of the hot pursuit doctrine ''does'' grant him the authority to chase Bandit over the county line (it was written so the police would not be hamstrung by red tape when dealing with criminals who immediately cross the border to another jurisdiction), it does ''not'' give him the authority to continue chasing him all the way across that county and into the next, and the next, and the next, ultimately resulting in a chase across multiple ''states''. There is a point where Buford would be obligated to turn over the chase to people with either local jurisdiction for that region (the local sheriff) or simply a wider jurisdiction (state police or the FBI).
** Though even ''that'' could cause some potential difficulties too, as at the beginning of the chase Buford didn't even have any proof that Bandit was doing anything illegal. Yes, Bandit ''was'' hauling several hundred cases of beer that was illegal to ship in bulk to that part of the country at the time (Coors was not licensed to do business in the southeastern US in the seventies, because they had yet to apply for said licenses), but Buford didn't know that. He was chasing the man for purely personal reasons. ''Making the entire pursuit illegal even within Buford's own jurisdiction.''
** Lampshaded in the film when the sheriff of a neighboring county reminds Justice he's out of his jurisdiction.
* The low-budget sci-fi movie ''Film/{{ROTOR}}'' bungles law as badly as it bungles everything else. To pick just one example, the conflict begins because the protagonist's benefactor, Senator Douglas, wants to unveil a new law-enforcement robot and ride the publicity to win a presidential election in six months -- or else he will have everyone associated with the project jailed for graft and corruption. Never mind that such a move would likely get the senator in trouble as well,[[note]]And raise the question why he'd need to secretly fund such a project to begin with.[[/note]] how would the senator become one of the major parties’ candidates for president just a few months before an election? And there is also the whole thing about the titular robotic project having a "hunt down and kill all [[AllCrimesAreEqual criminals, no matter how small the crime]]" programming--even with the most cynical of societal projections ''and'' an expectation of 25 years before it becomes factual, this fact is still a massive civil lawsuit waiting to happen the moment the robot is unveiled, not to mention possible criminal prosecutions.
* ''Film/JohnQ'': There is no way that John would only spend 2 years in prison for all his crimes in any reasonable court of law, whether or not his intentions were good. He's found not guilty of attempted murder and armed criminal action simply because there were no bullets in the gun, which would not hold up, because an empty gun is still considered a deadly weapon. The jury can ignore the evidence and acquit him, which is likely what happened here since he had lots of public sympathy, but that still doesn't explain getting only two years on multiple kidnapping charges. In many places kidnapping is punishable by up to a life sentence.

to:

* ''Film/LiarLiar''
** After Samantha Cole leaves Miranda's office following
''Film/TheVoyeurs'': The film implies the agent who leased the apartment to Pippa and Thomas [[spoiler: is in on Sebastian and Julia's plans, and may have even neglected to point out the photo release form to Pippa and Thomas.]] In the real world, allowing tenants [[spoiler: to be turned into a photo exhibit without their knowledge would be a huge legal issue for both the agent (potentially leading to her introduction to Fletcher, Miranda tells Fletcher that Samantha's case is worth a lot of money to losing her real estate license) and the firm, hinting landlord (Sebastian).]]
* ''Film/WallStreet'':
** While several actions noted as bad would count as immoral, the fact
that the firm is being paid movie takes place a contingency fee since it's later revealed couple years before it was filmed means that a settlement offer has been made and refused, whereas if several of the firm actions shown were accepting a flat fee, [[ArtisticLicenseHistory not actually illegal during the amount film's time frame,]] despite Bud Fox's fears of Samantha's settlement would be irrelevant, losing his license or worse. In fact, Gordon Gekko most likely didn't break the law at all, but Bud Fox definitely broke the law by disclosing confidential information from his client (Gekko) to a competitor (Wildman) and there would be no need using that information to bring Fletcher in to replace the attorney who refused unethical behavior earlier cost his client millions.
** It's a bit of a stretch for this trope perhaps, but
in the movie. Attorneys are barred from accepting divorce cases on a contingency basis, unless it's a suit to recover past due alimony or child support.
** Contracts with a minor are considered voidable, not ''void ab initio''. A minor who enters into a contract can choose to void it, but if they turn 18, they only have a limited window in which to declare
final shot Bud is shown walking up the intention courthouse steps in Lower Manhattan's Foley Square, presumably to void the contract. This window is usually six months -- for marriage in California, it's two years. Past this window, the contract is considered ratified -- the basic assumption is that, being an adult now, she retroactively consents to the agreement -- and must be executed. Given Samantha Cole's age at the time of the divorce hearing, both her marriage and the prenup should have been considered ratified. his sentencing. However, even if he's walking up the marriage were valid but steps of the prenup weren't, her husband clearly states that he "didn't know she was a minor!" At this point, he could probably get an annulment on the grounds of fraud, reverting Samantha to ''status quo ante matrimonium'' - i.New York County Supreme Court building—i.e., legally in possession of none of his wealth.
** One scene is premised on
''state'' court, when the idea that the judge can't stop Fletcher from badgering a witness because "it's his witness." A real-life judge insider-trading charges he would probably put a stop be allocuting to that within are strictly ''federal'', and give the lawyer a dressing down for it. Possibly the statement was simply a bewildered reaction to the fact that Fletcher was badgering the witness into giving evidence which would harm his own client's case. But then, long before the end, the judge so he should have stopped everything and said to Samantha, "Your lawyer is clearly nuts, so you'll have to get a new one and we'll start over."
** Fletcher's secretary claims someone broke into her friend's house, fell and injured himself in her kitchen and sued her with
been walking up the help of a lawyer like Fletcher. Fletcher then claims he could have gotten him more. Intruders illegally entering a dwelling cannot sue for injuries caused by breaking and entering, though the characterization of Fletcher being an AmoralAttorney could mean that he'd use lies and chicanery to confuse the actual scenario and managed to squeeze a settlement out steps of the defendant.
** Samantha's husband's lawyer presents a tape recording to be used against her in court. Tape recordings are not admissible as evidence without foundation in a court of law, which isn't given even though the content of the tape is irrelevant in her case. Additionally, California's strong laws on electronic surveillance forbid this except by two-party consent (which obviously did not occur here). The private investigator might also be in trouble here for invasion of privacy.
** Many courthouses do not allow cell phones at all. Even the ones that do, don't allow them
Thurgood Marshall U.S. Courthouse next door.
* ''{{Film/Watchmen}}'': Like
in the courtroom.
** Like most courtroom scenes, the film shows lawyers entering the "well" of the court (i.e. the area between counsel table and the judge's bench). They aren't allowed
original comic book, Rorschach was sent to do this without the judge's permission, and this doesn't happen except to have a sidebar with him. When questioning witnesses, they stand at the podium.
** In the analysis of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QNnDvdtj9Us an actual lawyer]] ([[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Pt51e3U7IY Part 2]]), while there are accurate moments (such as when Fletcher notes that suing the impound lot for scratching his car wouldn't be worth it), the fact that Fletcher used to defend criminals and accepts a divorce case is an unusual change, Fletcher could not yell "Settle!"
Sing Sing before talking to even being tried for his client first, and a throwaway line regarding filing crimes, while in reality he would be enough for disbarment (respecting the court clerk's deadlines is SeriousBusiness!).
* In the 2009 version of ''Film/TheTakingOfPelhamOneTwoThree'', Ryder makes Garber confess to taking the bribe. People around him speak as if that is an actual confession, but no one brings up that this confession was made under duress -- Garber would have a very solid case in any court of law to have that particular confession thrown out as evidence because if he continued to deny the allegations ''a man would have died'' -- which is far worse than taking a bribe.
* In the ''Film/SmokeyAndTheBandit'' movies, Sheriff Buford T. Justice seems to be under the wrongful impression that being in 'hot pursuit' means that he has the authority to pursue the Bandit wherever he goes. While that part of the hot pursuit doctrine ''does'' grant him the authority to chase Bandit over the county line (it was written so the police would not be hamstrung by red tape when dealing with criminals who immediately cross the border to another jurisdiction), it does ''not'' give him the authority to continue chasing him all the way across that county and into the next, and the next, and the next, ultimately resulting in a chase across multiple ''states''. There is a point where Buford would be obligated to turn over the chase to people with either local jurisdiction for that region (the local sheriff) or simply a wider jurisdiction (state police or the FBI).
** Though even ''that'' could cause some potential difficulties too, as
held at the beginning of the chase Buford didn't even have any proof that Bandit was doing anything illegal. Yes, Bandit ''was'' hauling several hundred cases of beer that was illegal to ship in bulk to that part of the country at the time (Coors was not licensed to do business in the southeastern US in the seventies, because they had yet to apply for said licenses), but Buford didn't know that. Riker's Island until trial. He was chasing the man for purely personal reasons. ''Making the entire pursuit illegal even within Buford's own jurisdiction.''
** Lampshaded in the film when the sheriff of a neighboring county reminds Justice he's out of his jurisdiction.
* The low-budget sci-fi movie ''Film/{{ROTOR}}'' bungles law as badly as it bungles everything else. To pick just one example, the conflict begins because the protagonist's benefactor, Senator Douglas, wants to unveil a new law-enforcement robot and ride the publicity to win a presidential election in six months -- or else he will have everyone associated with the project jailed for graft and corruption. Never mind that such a move
also would likely get the senator in trouble be kept isolated from other inmates as well,[[note]]And raise the question why he'd need to secretly fund such a project to begin with.[[/note]] how would the senator become one of the major parties’ candidates for president just a few months before an election? And there is also the whole thing about the titular robotic project having a "hunt down and kill all [[AllCrimesAreEqual criminals, no matter how small the crime]]" programming--even with the most cynical of societal projections ''and'' an expectation of 25 years before it becomes factual, this fact is still a massive civil lawsuit waiting to happen the moment the robot is unveiled, not to mention possible criminal prosecutions.
* ''Film/JohnQ'': There is no way that John would only spend 2 years in prison for all his crimes in any reasonable court of law, whether or not his intentions were good. He's found not guilty of attempted murder and armed criminal action simply because there were no bullets in the gun, which would not hold up, because an empty gun is still considered a deadly weapon. The jury can ignore the evidence and acquit him,
notorious vigilante crime fighter, which is likely what happened here since he had lots of public sympathy, but that still doesn't explain getting not only two years for his protection but to avoid an incident like in the cafeteria.
* In the first ''Film/WaynesWorld'' movie, one police officer is infamous for performing cavity searches
on multiple kidnapping charges. In many places kidnapping random motorists. This is punishable by up a serious felony, when performed without a warrant; while the movie, as usual, attempts to a life sentence.justify this under RuleOfFunny, it qualifies under the law as rape.



** The ''Posse Comitatus Act'' is intended to prevent the president from using the military to enforce executive decisions of the United States; the military cannot be deployed on U.S. soil ''to enforce the law''. An armed attack on the White House is not one of the situations where the military would refuse to act, because it has nothing to do with the law and everything to do with the security of the United States. In fact, one would be more likely to have to explicitly order the military ''not'' to intervene, because an attack on any government building by a paramilitary force is effectively a declaration of war on the United States.
** Interestingly, when the movie came out, the ''Posse Comitatus Act'' also did not apply at ''all'' to the Marine Corps or the Navy (that was added in 2022). When [[spoiler:Marine Corps One]] was attacked, it would have also been considered a direct hostile act against the Marine Corps, who would be empowered to act in their own self-defense.
* ''{{Film/Persecuted}}'': The film revolves around a bill called The Faith and Fairness Act, which will somehow force religious institutions to give all religions equal status (or something like that). The bill is hopelessly unconstitutional and would never get passed into law, or, assuming it somehow did, ever stand up in court.
* ''Film/TheAccused'': When one of the rapists is arrested and his rights are read, the "OnePhoneCall" line is dropped.
* In ''Film/{{Carefree}}'' (1938), legal proceedings (or threats of them) exist to drive the romantic plot and bear very little reference to real-world practices. All legal matters seem to be handled on a personal basis, as Judge Travers is a friend of both Stephen and Amanda.
* ''Film/SupermanReturns'': Lex Luthor gets off when the appellate court calls Superman as a witness and he doesn't show. First, appellate courts don't call witnesses or take witness testimony, they only review prior court cases to make sure they followed proper legal procedure. Second, if the appellate court did find a defect in the original conviction, it would result in a new trial. Third, even if the appeals court granted a new trial and Superman was unavailable to testify, that would be grounds for his testimony from the original trial to be entered into evidence.
* ''Film/AFewGoodMen'':
** The prosecution would never be able to get to a jury with a murder charge. The victim, PFC Santiago, died after the two defendants tied him up and gagged him. The prosecution alleges that poison on the gag killed him, but they cannot prove that there was poison on the gag, and a doctor testifies that his cause of death could also be an undiagnosed heart condition, so the cause of death cannot be proven to be poison. Without the poison, they cannot prove intent to murder either, since it's not reasonable to assume that a healthy Marine would die from being bound and gagged. With no poison, there's no intent, and with no intent, there's no murder. The judge should have dismissed the murder charges at the end of the prosecution's case.
** Related to that, there is Jo's infamous "I strenuously object" scene, which she justifies by saying that she got their objection to the doctor's testimony noted for the record. Objections spoken out loud during the trial are always noted for the record. Everything (with certain particular exceptions) said in the trial is supposed to be noted for the record; that's what the record is for.
** Following up with Jo, she is such a hard-core KnightTemplar that she absolutely refuses a plea bargain for the men she and Kaffee are defending (downgrading the charge of murder (which would get Downey and Dawson executed or serving time for life in a military stockade) to involuntary manslaughter (which would give them a ''much'' lesser time in jail and a dishonorable discharge)) and makes the case go to court in the hopes she will expose the misbehavior of the Marines at Guantanamo. Lawyers ''cannot'' refuse plea bargain options without first having discussed them with their defendants. Furthermore, their duty is to their clients, not to expose criminal wrongdoing by others.
** At the end of the movie, Dawson and Downey are acquitted of the most serious charges, but convicted of "conduct unbecoming a Marine". This is a fictional charge that does not exist in real life. There's only "conduct unbecoming an officer" which doesn't apply as they're enlisted men. They could have been convicted under Article 93 of the Universal Code of Military Justice ([=UCMJ=]), which prohibits a soldier from ''"cruelty toward, or oppression or maltreatment of, any person subject to his orders"''. However, that would not be referred to as "Conduct Unbecoming a Marine."
* In ''Film/InsideMan'', NYPD Detective Keith Frazier is ordered to drop the investigation into the bank robbery on the grounds that "nothing was taken" = "no crime was committed"... ignoring the fact that the hostage taking and associated actions could result in any number of charges -- and surely the hostages would like someone to pay for what they've been through. However, at the same time, it could just be that Frazier's higher-ups, plus the media, found bigger fish to fry, since the faked heist resulted in a member of New York City's high society being outed as a former Nazi collaborator. Considering the field day the media's probably having once they find out about Case's connections, they'd probably laud the robbery team as akin to Robin Hood. Plus without any visible leads and no one pressuring the NYPD to actually look more closely for the gunmen, there wouldn't be much push to keep the case open. As for the hostages, they won't forget what happened, but they probably are either thankful to have survived or just as amazed and confused as anybody about what really happened.
* In ''Film/CriminalLaw'', defense attorney Ben Chase becomes aware that his client Martin Thiel is a murderer and has reason to believe he will commit further murders. At this point he should go to the police, since attorney-client privilege doesn't cover planned crimes, nor ones the attorney discovers on his own without the client telling him. Of course, he doesn't do anything sensible like that, but tries to prove his client guilty while simultaneously defending him in court. This is an unbelievable violation of professional ethics which he could be disbarred over, along with him also being charged for not reporting the client's earlier crimes.
* In the HBO original movie ''The Enemy Within'', a remake of the film ''Literature/SevenDaysInMay'', the President, discussing with Col. Casey the coup that the military and members of the President's cabinet are plotting, says that the coup-plotters will have to do something to give the coup "the illusion of legality". They then realize that they plan to use Section 4 of the 25th Amendment to the Constitution, which allows a majority of the cabinet to remove the President temporarily by sending a letter to the President pro tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives saying that the President is unable to discharge the duties of his office; permanent removal requires a vote of two-thirds of Congress. It eventually comes out that the conspirators are banking on the fact that the President has become so unpopular that two-thirds of Congress will go along with his removal. The problem is that that's not the "illusion of legality", that's actual legality. That is, what the "coup plotters" in the movie are doing is perfectly legal. In point of fact, there is no reason whatsoever to involve the military. In the original film and in the novel on which it was based, both of which, incidentally, came out before the 25th Amendment was ratified, the military was planning a straight-up coup.
* ''Film/SuspectZero'': Mackelway retrieving a suspected serial killer illegally in Mexico would not result in him going free, unless he also somehow tainted evidence they needed to hold him (which isn't shown). In the 1800s the US Supreme Court ruled the manner of a suspect's delivery into custody was irrelevant regarding whether they could be tried. On the other hand, he might be disciplined or fired for this, and even charged with kidnapping by Mexican officials.
* ''Film/LordOfWar'': Interpol gets portrayed as something of an international FBI, with field agents who hunt down arms traffickers. This is not the case. Interpol serves as a network to coordinate the efforts of national police combating international crimes (including arms trafficking). It has no agents who can make arrests. Interpol primarily serves to put different national police agencies in contact with each other, maintain a criminal database and put out notices of wanted criminals. In any case, a US Army general would have no authority to have Interpol agents release an arms trafficker (which they would not be holding anyway). The same error crops up in ''Film/{{Assassins}}'', which had not only Interpol field agents conducting a sting, they also get compared with the CIA regarding their supposed influence.
* ''Film/IntolerableCruelty'': In America, if you were in your spouse's will before, but the two of you divorce later, the part of the will that left his/her property to you is automatically nullified. Also, one party's adultery is irrelevant, as divorce law is now no-fault in California and the rest of the US.
* ''Film/OfficeSpace'': While the events of the film would probably prevent Initech from being able to track Peter down internally, he still had his photo taken at the ATM. Given that none of the participants had the rank at Initech to open an account in the bank's name (they're engineers, not bursars), and given how quickly the account drew money from Initech, it's likely that Peter should be expecting a visit from the FDIC over his obvious attempt at embezzlement.
* ''Film/MyCousinVinny'' [[ShownTheirWork got a lot of things right about the legal system]]. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a1I7QBCHqng It still had a few mistakes, though]]:
** Vinny is licensed to practice law only in New York State. In order for him to be able to act as a lawyer in Alabama, he would either have to take the Bar Exam for Alabama, or a lawyer that can practice in Alabama would need to file a motion, and be a part of his legal team.
** Judge Haller had no legitimate reason to overrule Vinny's objection to Wilbur's testimony. While he can theoretically overrule it, the verdict would've almost certainly been overturned by a higher court simply for this reason, as this shows extreme prejudice against the defendants.
** Although probably staged this way for humorous effect, a real police line-up would not have people with wide discrepancies between height, weight, build and facial features. Real police line-ups are made up of the suspect(s) and a couple of volunteers who look similar to the suspect in height, weight, build, skin color, hair color and general facial features so that when an identification is made, if it is the actual suspect, they are chosen because they are truly recognized by the witness(s).
** When Bill and Stan get arrested, they're under the impression that they're in jail for shoplifting until Bill figures it out during the confession. Due to the Writ of Habeas Corpus, it's nearly impossible for someone in custody to go that long without being told what he has been arrested for.
** The black lady on the jury (seen when Trotter talks of "our ancestors from England") also serves Vinny in the café during the lunch recess before his presentation of evidence. If she's on the jury, she would not have been allowed to leave the court to work, and least of all to serve the defense attorney.
** Near the end of the movie, Judge Haller walks out of his office, and the sign on the door says "Probate Court". A Probate Judge would never conduct a criminal trial; murder trials in Alabama (and most states) are always conducted by Circuit Judges.
* ''Film/TerminatorGenisys'': Several times, you see San Francisco Police Department investigators being referred to as "detectives". The SFPD is unique among American law enforcement for not using the rank "detective"; anyone who's ever seen ''Film/DirtyHarry'' can tell you that they go by the title of "inspector" instead. And even then, the rank of "inspector" has more or less been phased out, with people of that rank now being designated as Sergeants.
* ''Film/Ghostbusters1984'': The government is not allowed to simply shut down a business's machines without any due process (i.e. a hearing in court where defendants can tell their side). If it happened, they might have explained just why shutting down their machines would be a bad idea to someone reasonable.
* ''Film/TheSiege'': A suspect is detained for carrying a large amount of currency in his luggage -- but a mere $20 under the $10,000 limit. This is ''[[http://www.snopes.com/business/money/10000.asp not]]'' illegal, and as the scene details, wouldn't work anyway; the arresting officer simply added some of his own cash to put the suspect over the limit.[[note]]The actual law in question regards cash deposits and withdrawals: any cash transaction to or from an account of $10,000 or more requires the bank to complete a Currency Transaction Report and send it to various government agencies for tracking. Simply ''having'' $10,000 in cash on you is not illegal. And if someone withdraws or deposits ''just less'' than $10,000 but the bank suspects that they're trying to avoid having a CTR completed, the bank is obligated to complete a Suspicious Activity Report, which includes the amount of the transaction and the belief that the person is trying to avoid having it reported (which is called "Stacking")[[/note]]
* ''Film/{{Suspect}}'': Unfortunately, the plot hinges on this (despite being accurate otherwise). The 1968 case which Elizabeth Quinn found had ended in a dismissal by the judge in return for an appointment to the court of appeals. However, an order of dismissal probably would just go in the judge's and lawyers' case files, rather than be a part of the trial transcript (''especially'' if it was fixed) so Quinn shouldn't have been able to discover it.
* ''Film/DieHard2'':
** There is no airport police force at Washington Dulles International Airport. Policing at Dulles is actually the responsibility of the Metropolitan Washington Airport Authority and (since 2001) the TSA.
** In Lorenzo's first scene, he tells John [=McClane=], "You're the asshole that's just broke seven FAA and five District of Columbia regulations, running around my airport with a gun, shooting at people. What do you call that shit?" Washington, D.C. law would not apply to Washington Dulles International Airport, as the airport is located in Loudoun County, Virginia, a full 25 miles west of Washington D.C. So the laws actually broken would be based on local ordinances, Virginia state law, or whatever is stipulated by the MWAA.
** Not to mention that the entire plot only becomes possible because of everyone in the airport and the planes forgetting some FAA regulations which would have made averting the crisis a trivial effort. First, all aircraft in the air must be listening to a specific frequency dedicated for use to alert pilots to emergency situations, and second, any airfield capable of accepting an aircraft declaring a need for an emergency landing must do so. Since there are at least three other major airfields within 15 minutes flight time of Dulles, and two hours (the length of the siege in-film) flight time makes half the airports on the Eastern Seaboard reachable in a stretch, there are plenty of other airports in range that could use their transmitters to tell the circling aircraft "Dulles is compromised, land here instead". Military airports are included, since they allow civilian planes to land in an emergency there. The cockpit of a plane in the air must be listening in on an emergency broadcast frequency too (which any other airport in the area could have used to warn the planes off after Dulles' transmitter went offline).
** Lorenzo is stated to be a Captain and wears Captain's bars on his uniform, but when he orders a mobilisation after [=McClane=] reveals the plot, he addresses himself as Chief, a distinct rank. However that may be just a case of cop parlance, as it is common for the boss in a workplace to be informally referred to as "chief" by themselves or their subordinates.
* ''Film/TheTrumanShow'': The entire premise of having a show where the star spends his entire life being made into what is essentially a dancing monkey for the entertainment of others violates more laws than anyone can count.
** An [[http://www.cracked.com/article_18691_the-7-most-ridiculous-movie-character-overreactions.html#ixzz1EroYZ3NS article sums up the situation]] by claiming that the universe the film takes place in ''must'' be a CrapsackWorld by definition, as it breaks so many laws that the only explanation is either bribery or sheer incompetence. Notably, the producers are heard repeatedly trying to force Truman to conceive a child with his in-universe wife -- a FormerChildStar who's publicly said to be OnlyInItForTheMoney and finally {{rage quit}}s after she snaps and threatens him when his questioning becomes too much to bear.
** This is also discussed in-universe several times -- the film gives a HandWave to the improbable setup by claiming that Truman was "adopted" by the corporation that airs the program. [[https://movies.stackexchange.com/questions/18100/can-a-corporation-really-adopt-a-person Under most known adoption laws]], this is functionally impossible, as such adoption rules generally mandate that the child be taken under the care of a single parent or family.
** The entire concept of an extra (Sylvia) who is able to divulge details of the producers' antics to Truman, tipping him off that something is wrong, also highlights the absurdly-fragile legal nature of the production. While Kristof eventually has her removed (written out of) the show, she's never shown to face any financial or legal consequences for potentially destroying the façade of what is likely one of the largest-ever lifestyle productions in that universe's history (the dome alone takes up a substantial portion of real estate, equivalent to the Hollywood Hills and surrounding L.A. area). And even if Sylvia hadn't spilled the beans (a MeaningfulBackgroundEvent implies that she tried to get close to other cast members to convince them to turn on Kristof), it's likely that someone else would have during the course of Truman's life.
* ''Film/SleepyHollow1999'':
** Courts in New York in 1799 are shown as regularly using torture to extract confessions and admitting into evidence confessions extracted under torture. In 1799! Torture had been illegal throughout the English-speaking world for over a century ''before'' the American Revolution.
** There's also the fact that Jonathan Masbeth was the only witness to the elder van Garrett's new will, which left everything to van Garrett's new wife Emily Winship, which sets the plot in motion. A will requires two valid witnesses for the will itself to be valid.
* ''Film/{{Sully}}'' depicts the NTSB investigation into the crash of US Airways Flight 1549 as trying to get the eponymous pilot, insisting that simulations had confirmed that he could have made it back to [=LaGuardia=] or to Teterboro or even Newark, and that simulations proved this. Only when Sullenberger insists that they add the human factor back into the simulations by adding a 35-second delay to account for the time for the pilots to diagnose the problem, assess the level of damage and remaining capability of the plane, and decide what to do, do the simulations confirm that it would not have been possible to make it to an airport. In fact, the NTSB was not out to get Sullenberger; they were the ones who added the 35-second delay into the simulations as part of the initial investigation. Conducting the simulations without the delay was just to establish the limits of what might have been possible. By all accounts, including Sullenberger's own, the NTSB investigators thought Sullenberger was a hero, thought all along that he had made the right decision, and were thrilled to get the benefit of his experience. But movies need villains, so the administrative investigation that was primarily conducted just to gain information to help prevent future crashes was turned into an exercise in persecution.
** Another thing: finding that a cause of the crash was pilot error does not mean that the case is closed. Since the late 1970s, a pilot error is not considered a cause of the incident by itself; it's only a symptom of a deeper problem and, if the investigators find out the pilot is to blame, they continue the investigation to find out ''why'' he/she made an error. In many cases, pilots who caused a crash/incident because they messed something up still come out as heroes (eg. the Gimli Glider case, where the crew of a 767 miscalculated their fuel load, yet still were applauded for bringing their aircraft safely down and saving all souls onboard when the engines quit at 39000 ft). Even if Sully was found more or less guilty of the incident, the investigation would go on to find why (eg. lack of proper rest or improper training), and he would still be hailed as a hero for saving 155 people.
** Also, the investigation is never done to attribute responsibility, but to expose causes. In many cases, the investigators start investigating the possibility of pilot error when other options are all ruled out.
* ''Film/ThePurgeElectionYear'':
** Election Day has been moved from November to May, which would require unprecedented control over all three branches of government by the New Founding Fathers. Of course, the Purge would be even harder to implement, and they managed that, so changing Election Day is small potatoes by comparison.
** The Purge was passed by Constitutional Amendment (confirmed in [[AllThereInTheManual promotional materials]], plus no other means would be legally feasible). A Constitutional Amendment can only be repealed by another Constitutional Amendment, which requires a 2/3 majority in both houses of Congress and a 3/4 majority of State Legislatures. The President, while having some ability to get creative with interpreting the law, has absolutely no power to repeal a Constitutional Amendment via a simple executive order, and attempting to do so would be the most blatant grounds for Impeachment in the history of the Republic. Of course, it's still possible that pragmatism (e.g., the economic and social cons of the Purge having vastly exceeded its pros) and self-preservation (e.g., fear of the resistance simply continuing to exploit the Purge to kill all of its remaining supporters) will persuade enough officials to support Roan's efforts -- regardless of party lines -- anyway. However, as we don't know the details of the amendment, it could be the president was given the power to unilaterally make something legal or illegal. This could be indicated by the fact the NFFA can remove the exemption of top government officials from the Purge (i.e. change the law) apparently all by themselves.
* ''{{Film/Nightcrawler}}'': The police would most likely have enough probable cause to get a warrant to search Lou's residence, but the film acts as if their hands are tied.
* ''Film/HarrysWar'': More than one example.
** During his speech after breaking into the talk show in a tank, Harry says that the Constitution doesn't authorize the IRS. Oh really, Harry? How about Article 1, Section 8, Clause 1: "The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States"
** And if that wasn't blatant enough, how about Amendment 16: "The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration."
** While it's true the Constitution doesn't specifically authorize an ''Internal Revenue Service'' to collect taxes, it's pretty blatant about the (nearly unlimited) taxing power it gives the federal government, and every court in the land agrees that an agency to enforce the federal tax laws is well within the rights of the Executive branch.
** Aunt Beverly claims that the Tax Court judges are all in the hip pockets of the IRS, since it's the IRS that pays their salaries (and can hit them with severe audits if they don't toe the line the IRS wants). In RealLife, many neutral parties have criticized the Tax Courts for being ''too soft'' on tax cheats out of judicial dislike for the IRS. Also their salaries are set by the Congress and paid by the taxpayer like all federal officials, which doesn't differ in amount from other judges. Punitive audits from the IRS of judges would also get them in a lot of trouble.
* ''Film/IAmSam'': In reality it's unlikely Sam would lose custody entirely, since he is neither abusing or neglecting Lucy, though he might be required to have supervision from a social worker. Also these proceedings are generally much more informal. The state attorney verbally attacking Sam on the stand is also inappropriate and a judge likely would not permit it, particularly given his mental disability (it's akin to him dressing down a child).
* ''Film/IShotJesseJames'' features a gross misrepresentation of extradition law. Once Frank James (the brother of UsefulNotes/JesseJames) is acquitted of charges in Colorado, the jail immediately lets him go, even though they acknowledge he's wanted in other states like Kansas and Missouri. In reality, the Colorado authorities would’ve alerted the other states (telegrams were widespread by 1892, so there wouldn’t be a long delay) and kept Frank locked up until one of the states contacted them about extradition via the U.S. Marshals. The only reason to let him go would've been if ''none'' of the other states wanted to try him, which seems unlikely given him and his brother's notorious reputation.
* ''Film/ISpitOnYourGrave'': The poster to the original film boasts that the protagonist would not be convicted by any jury in America after going through her RoaringRampageOfRevenge, because it's a RapeAndRevenge scenario. This isn't true. While it varies from state to state (let alone country to country), self-defense laws explicitly say that doing violence to protect yourself only applies ''while the crime is being committed'' (and even then something like killing may only have its sentence reduced because of extenuating circumstances, not flat-out given a "get away with murder" card). Hunting down and killing your rapists in ways not unlike a SlasherFilm villain would ''definitely'' put you in trouble with the law no matter what (and interestingly enough the remake's continuation (yes, it has one) showcases in a moment of SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome that [[spoiler:the moment the protagonist devolves into killing people in the middle of a metropolitan city because she believes they are rapists and have it coming, her KarmaHoudiniWarranty expires and she ends up being hunted down ''and killed'' by the police, like any other SerialKiller.)]] However, as a practical matter, a woman with no priors who claims she was raped might manage to avoid prison by (a) garnering enough sympathy from the jury to forestall a conviction, or (b) being declared insane and sent to a mental institution.
* ''Film/IdentityThief'':
** In real life, even if a criminal escapes to another state the police can just call that state's police and get them to arrest them. And since Diana's crimes (identity theft and wire fraud) are federal it should be a job for the** Sandy would also have a pretty easy wrongful dismissal claim against his employer if they truly let him go because of a police mix-up.
* ''Film/InTheLineOfFire'': Despite the Secret Service consultation, some errors show up:
** Lilly's gown during the party scene would be inappropriate for a female Secret Service agent, as it would prevent her from performing her duties should there be an attempt on the President's life. In those situations female agents instead wear dress pants and more practical shoes. (With the gown, there is also the problem of where to hide the service weapon.)
** In the scene where the Secret Service counter-snipers attempt to get a sight on Leary, it is reported that it is too dark for them to see inside the elevator. In modern times (and certainly in the year the movie was released in and is set), Secret Service counter-snipers are equipped with night-vision goggles to allow them to see targets through darkness.
** Also, in the climatic scene where Leary is getting ready to shoot the President and Horrigan has figured out he's in the room, there's a drawn-out scene where Horrigan is trying to figure out what table he's at in order to apprehend him before he shoots the President. In reality, a scenario where there's a gunman in the area but their identity and location are unknown is something the Secret Service trains for. Upon entering the room, Horrigan would have yelled out the code phrase for this scenario, whereupon all the agents would have swarmed the President to shield him with their bodies while the rest ordered everyone to hit the floor.
*** In the same scene, after Leary assembles and loads his gun, he holds it in his hand with a napkin draped over it for concealment, then stands up to shake the President's hand. ''No one'' is allowed to approach or be near the President with their hands concealed. Period. As soon as he stood up, the Secret Service would have had their eyes on him. Seeing that he had his hands concealed would have meant at least two agents would be immediately in his face, hands on their pistols and ordering him to show his hands right now.
*** There's also no way Watts would have dismissed Frank telling him point blank that the very assassin who's been stalking the President for weeks is present, no matter what personal or professional animosity there was.
* ''Film/JohnDoeVigilante'': The judge in John Doe's trial is wearing a black robe and no wig, and the barristers are wearing business suits. At a trial in an Australian Supreme Court, the judge should be wearing a red robe and full wig, and the barristers black robes and horsehair wigs.
* ''Film/JohnnyEnglish'': With respect to the (albeit unwritten) Constitution and the power of the Crown. In RealLife, you could ''not'' get the Queen to abdicate with the stroke of a pen,[[note]]it requires an Act of all Parliaments in nations where she is head of state[[/note]] and whilst the bit where [[spoiler: all land in the country is technically the possession of the Crown and can be confiscated at will]] needs clarification,[[note]]and it would probably violate human rights law/treaties[[/note]] the monarch has very little actual power, which is ''de facto'' exercised by their government. It also ignores historical precedent concerning [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Execution_of_Charles_I what happens to monarchs who try to exercise too much personal power]]. Of course all of this is (thankfully?) ignored in favor of RuleOfFunny and a good story (see below).
** There's also the notion that Mr. Sauvage only becomes King Pascal at the moment the crown touches his head, when actually (assuming that Elizabeth II's abdication and Pascal's claim to the throne are recognized), he would be monarch as soon as the abdication form was signed and Parliament has given consent. The coronation is just a ceremony.
** Furthermore, in real life a coronation takes more than a year to organise, rather than just days as this film suggests. Also, it seems unlikely that a monarch would be allowed to quietly slip away to a castle in France so soon before getting crowned.[[note]]It is traditional for the monarch to spend the night before in the Speaker's apartment of the Palace of Westminster.[[/note]]
** Oh, and throughout the film, various characters consistently refer to "England" rather than "Britain". In particular they talk of Sauvage being "King of England", even though that title was abolished in 1707, when the crowns of England and Scotland were unified.
** In any case, even were Elizabeth to abdicate, Prince Charles would be next in line. If she were to renounce the throne for her descendants as well, the next in line would be David Armstrong-Jones, 2nd Earl of Snowden.[[note]]Son of Princess Margaret, the Queen's sister.[[/note]]
* ''Film/KickAss2'': The police "detain" all masked superheroes in New York City, but most aren't shown committing any crimes. Dave's dad even explicitly says he has to be released because of this. In reality, the cops would not do this because it could result in the city being sued for false arrest, which might cost millions. The Justice Forever members also say they're "on parole" in the funeral scene after their release, though there it may be a joke.
* ''Film/{{Kimi}}'': After Angela incapacitates the hitmen in her apartment, she finishes each of them off with a nail gun to the head. [[KickThemWhileTheyAreDown She doesn't face any legal repercussions for committing lethal force on people who were no longer a threat, and in two cases, clearly helpless.]] Even though they are in her home, attacking someone on the ground and helpless (let alone ''murdering them'') voids self-defence.
* ''Film/TheLimehouseGolem'': Lizzie is sentenced to hang the every next day after she's convicted, necessitating then that Kildare race to get her pardoned. However, hangings could not be carried out until three weeks had passed, giving the defendant time to appeal (although this rarely worked).
* ''Film/LastOunceOfCourage'':
** Hammerschmidt is implied to be either a civil rights lawyer or at the very least have some knowledge of the law, but his accusations against Bob are ridiculously flimsy, and are limited to very broad claims like "breaking the law" or "violating the Constitution", without ever mentioning any specific law, article or amendment.
** Bob, who is also the Mayor of his town, is stated to have been "fired by the city council" following Hammerschmidt's revelation of his wartime snafu. In real life, there is no such thing. Being elected officials, Mayors can only be removed via impeachment or a recall election.
** The church community center's cross got taken down sometime prior to the film's present-day events because "it offended somebody," when in reality, no such incident would occur due to being an obvious violation of the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment.
** The film claims that government property is not allowed to put up Christmas decorations (not even secular Christmas lights) because they're public property. In actuality, however, many cities both big and small put on Christmas decorations even including Nativity scenes. In fact as ''WebVideo/CinematicExcrement'' pointed out, this includes the city of San Jose, a major metropolitan city located in the San Francisco Bay Area region of northern California, which is one of the most stereotypically liberal states/regions one could possibly think of. The caveat is simply they have to allow for non-Christian displays too if someone wants them.
* ''Film/TheManFromEarth'': Will repeatedly threatens to have John involuntarily committed for a psychiatric evaluation if he doesn't admit he's making the whole story up. He'd have a lot of trouble convincing a judge to sign an order for involuntary commitment based on being told a story he doesn't like. John hasn't threatened anyone, committed any acts of violence, displayed any symptoms of mental illness, John isn't his patient, and he doesn't have any valid reason for having John committed. All John would have to do is look at the judge and say it was just a story, and it probably wouldn't even get to that point. Basically, Will is an asshole.
* ''Film/MinorityReport'': There's no mention of the US Constitution having changed to allow {{precrime arrest}}s and detentions. However, while it was authorized in Washington D.C. and a proposal for extending this further is scheduled to be voted on during the film, a constitutional amendment indeed would be necessary. Otherwise, arresting a person for something they have not yet done, let alone detaining the person afterward indefinitely, would be completely unconstitutional. This would also be necessary to have the precogs, who are slaves (even if not called by the name) and mass surveillance/searches which we see (the film does at least hang a lampshade on the constitutionality or lack thereof of {{precrime arrest}}s: there's a brief reference to the ACLU making trouble for the D.C. pilot program, and the process is overseen by a pair of judges).
* ''Film/MixedNuts'': In reality, the cops probably would not just let Gracie off once they discover her victim was really the Seaside Strangler. While they might be glad he's gone, further investigation likely would take place, and she could be charged with involuntary manslaughter, reckless endangerment, etc. Of course, a jury might still be sympathetic regardless, or they could cut her a deal.
* ''Film/MostWanted'': US Army General Woodward takes over the investigation into the murder of the First Lady by the President's order. No one mentions the Posse Comitatus Act that prevents the military from law enforcement absent exceptions that don't apply here, and the LAPD meekly complies in this (when real life civilian/state police would be up in arms if this happened). Interestingly, it was accurate until then with showing that the murder is under LAPD jurisdiction, since "First Lady" isn't a federal position, just the honorary title a President's wife is given and so the crime is covered by California state law (whereas murdering federal officials is covered by the US Code).
* ''Film/AMurderOfCrows'': The killer's family was killed by a drunk driver, who got off because police didn't read his MirandaRights correctly. However, drunk driving cases heavily involve physical evidence (breathalyzer, blood tests, etc.). It's thus very unlikely the whole case would hinge on any statement he made (which is all that Miranda applies to).
* ''Film/MyDaysOfMercy'': The first prisoner executed (who killed Mercy's dad's partner) is said to have been mentally disabled. However, the US Supreme Court has ruled that such prisoners cannot be executed.
* ''Film/NationalLampoonsVacation'' and ''Film/NationalLampoonsChristmasVacation'' both showcase a pitch-perfect example of the "charges dropped, get-out-of-jail-free" bullet point, even with the fact Clark Griswold twice (deliberately in the first film, accidentally in the second… [[RhetoricalQuestionBlunder at least by Clark]]) took someone hostage and required a SWATTeam intervention, a fact that neither the states of California ([[MrAltDisney Roy Walley notwithstanding]]) or Illinois would take lightly.
* ''Film/NineLives'': Executives can't be summarily fired, since their employment is under contract and they will have clauses that restrict this. A majority shareholder also can't do things which damage the minority shareholders' stake in the company, as continuing the tower construction would.
* ''Film/{{Peppermint}}'': Let's just say that the hearing Riley takes place in where her family's killers get off bears absolutely zero resemblance to how an actual hearing would go. But without it [[RuleOfDrama we wouldn't have a plot]]. It's also somewhat justified as the judge is in their pocket. It's also implied that the prosecutor is too, along with the police, or are at least afraid of opposing the cartel.
* ''Film/{{Prisoners}}'': Loki not working with a partner and walking into dangerous situations without calling for backup first is not in line with actual police procedure. But it does make for good drama.
* ''Film/Rampage2009'': In one of his political rants, Bill claims that firearms purchases do not mandate background checks, and cites this as proof of the gun industry's greed making mass murderers such as himself possible. In truth, this gets complicated. Licensed firearms businesses (where, obviously, the overwhelming majority of gun sales take place) or "[=FFLs=]" are obligated under federal law to perform background checks on ALL their customers. No matter the location--there is no such thing as an internet or gun show "loophole" for any lawful purchase. ''Private'' purchases, where one person might decide to sell a gun to one of their friends living in the same state, do not. If it's across state lines, an FFL will have to act as a middleman. Oft-repeated talking points such as "universal background checks" effectively just amounts to taxing private individuals who probably cannot afford such a burden, in addition to possibly trespassing on privacy rights. In other words, Bill's statement is ''technically'' (kind of) correct, but [[MetaphoricallyTrue highly misleading]].
* ''Film/Resurrection1999'': When one of the detectives recites the Miranda warning, he says the ending wrong to express anger at the killer. Understandable, but it would invalidate anything he said after that. Also, the killer is arraigned on a charge of impersonating a federal agent in the Cook County courthouse, with the district attorney involved, and he's held in Chicago Police custody before he makes bail. However, this a federal crime, and he would be arraigned in the US District Courthouse, with the US Attorney's Office prosecuting, and held in federal custody.
* ''Film/TheRoom2003'':
** Chris-R is never actually arrested, yet Johnny and Mark "take him to jail" in about four minutes.
** Johnny apparently gets to keep Chris-R's gun after he gets carted off to jail, eventually [[spoiler: using it to commit suicide]]. Nobody ever considers that it's an important piece of evidence that the police might want to take a look at.[[note]][[http://www.imfdb.org/wiki/The_Room They're actually different models of guns]]: The original script had Johnny own a piece himself unrelated to Chris-R's gun, but it was changed to tie the stories together more.
* The premise of the comedy ‘’Film/ServingSara’’ is that Sara will be massively disadvantaged if her soon-to-be-ex-husband Gordon manages to initiate their divorce in Texas, as opposed to her having it heard in New York. While it would take an actual lawyer to evaluate which state's law would be more beneficial to her in this specific instance, the movie's assertion that Texas divorce laws were written by "good old boys" to screw over ex-wives isn't true. Texas is a community property state, giving Sara automatic ownership of half the property accumulated during the marriage - there's a very good chance that she'd be better off there.
* ''Film/ShockCorridor'': The movie acts like the murderer has been nailed when Johnny beats him into a confession. In reality, that would be inadmissible in court. The only witness is also a delusional mental patient who thinks he's a little boy too most of the time. So it's likely the murderer would go free.
* ''Film/ShotCaller'': While Jacob might have been given a 16-month sentence for what he did, it is extremely implausible for somebody with his profile (stockbroker, family man, and first-time offender with a DUI manslaughter conviction) to immediately be placed in a maximum-security prison like the one Jacob goes to. He might even get probation or a suspended sentence, especially as he'd be able to get a good defense lawyer. Even if sentenced to prison, this would almost certainly be minimum or medium security, and he'd only get in maximum for breaking rules. Then [[RuleOfDrama there would be no plot of course]], but they could have had a more plausible scenario for this.
* ''Film/ASimpleFavor'': In reality, [[spoiler:Emily]] almost definitely would get life without parole if she had been convicted of two premeditated murders plus attempted murder, not simply twenty years.
* ''Film/TangoAndCash'': The protagonists are prosecuted on a charge of murdering an undercover FBI agent, a federal crime. However, it was explicitly done by the LA county District Attorney, who only has jurisdiction over state crimes. Later though it's said they're sent to a federal prison.
* ''Film/ThreeBillboardsOutsideEbbingMissouri'':
** At one point Dixon [[spoiler:beats Red to a pulp and throws him out of ''a second story window'']] in front of a street full of witnesses, including [[spoiler:the new chief of police.]] His only punishment is [[spoiler:getting fired]] instead of, you know, [[spoiler:being immediately arrested for assault and attempted murder.]]
** When the [[spoiler: new chief]] walks in and introduces himself to the assembled Ebbing Police, the desk sergeant asks him to prove who he is. The [[spoiler: chief]] acts like this an absurd request and doesn't even bother to show them his badge. Somewhat justified in that he had just seen [[spoiler: Dixon violently assault two people, and wasn't particularly impressed with the other cops, [[PoliceAreUseless who were actively ignoring it.]]]]
* ''{{Film/Upgrade}}'':
** STEM tells Grey the evidence he's gathered (a tattoo identifying one of the men at the scene when his wife was killed) isn't enough for a conviction. However, that's likely untrue, since it shows he was involved, and even if not the trigger man could get him convicted of {{felony murder}}. Plus, it could lead the police to more evidence (and the other criminals involved). Of course, [[spoiler:STEM turns out to be lying about everything, and so this was probably deliberation manipulation so Grey wouldn't just call the police in.]]
** [[spoiler:Cortez may have survived if she'd followed standard procedures and called for backup instead of facing Eron and Grey alone. Unless the two {{mooks}} Grey shoots on his way in are actually cops, but if so they failed to announce themselves as such.]]
* ''Film/USMarshals'':
** Gerard gets in trouble with his boss for striking a suspect in handcuffs to subdue him during the opening sequence because he was attacking the arresting Marshals, and bit one. She acts like this was a breach of protocol which he has to apologize for publicly. However, what he did was completely appropriate in those circumstances.
** It's ignored here for RuleOfCool, but in real life, the FAA says that prisoners are not allowed to be chained to any part of an airplane.
** Also, when the Chinese assassin asks to use the toilet the guard says to hold it and that they will be landing in 20 minutes, but in reality guards are not allowed to tell any prisoner the time frame of any transport especially when it is a federal prisoner transport.
* ''Film/TheVerdict'':
** Galvin could have been sanctioned by the court for failing to communicate the settlement offer to the family, and could have additionally been held liable for malpractice. Courts have consistently held that lawyers have a duty to communicate all settlement offers to their clients before accepting or declining such offers. Galvin was not disciplined in this case, although he was confronted by his clients for not telling them about the offer of $210,000 that the Archdiocese had made.
** The defense should have been able to win at the close of Galvin's case by making a motion for "judgment as a matter of law" (i.e. the judge ruling in their favor as no rational jury could find against them). However that doesn't happen.
** Judge Hoyle incorrectly rules that Nurse Kaitlin Price's testimony is inadmissible hearsay, though it falls under the "admissions" exception. Topping it off, the "best evidence" rule (that when witnesses testify to the content of a document, it must be produced) gets utterly bungled. The document is a photocopy that Nurse Price brings in showing that she altered an admissions form at Towler's order to cover up his negligence. To explain, the form is a ''photocopy'' of the original, and the best evidence rule requires that the original document must be what's entered into evidence. The real problem is that the best evidence rule allows the exclusion of a copy of a writing; it does not bar a witness from testifying about what she wrote in the original document. Galvin does not even attempt to offer the document into evidence. Rather, he just asks the witness what she wrote in the document. Furthermore, there is an exception to the best evidence rule: when the original is unavailable owing to a bad act by the party against whom the copy would be offered. Here, the witness is claiming that she altered the original document under the threat of the defendant, but made a photocopy of the original before she did so. So in real life, the copy would almost certainly be admissible. As for the hearsay issue, while the admissions exception would apply to Towler's out-of-court statement to Price, the statement was not hearsay to begin with, because it was not being offered to prove the content of the statement; whether Dr. Towler would have actually had Nurse Price fired for refusing to alter the admissions form is completely irrelevant to Galvin's case. It is only hearsay when the out-of-court statement is offered as evidence for the truth of the statement.
** Judge Hoyle, who was obviously in the defense's pocket, could have issued a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judgment_notwithstanding_verdict judgment notwithstanding verdict]] nullifying the jury's decision, if only Concannon had asked for it.
** And of course Galvin could have appealed and gotten a new trial based on the defense's misconduct in placing a mole in his office.
* ''Film/TheVoyeurs'': The film implies the agent who leased the apartment to Pippa and Thomas [[spoiler: is in on Sebastian and Julia's plans, and may have even neglected to point out the photo release form to Pippa and Thomas.]] In the real world, allowing tenants [[spoiler: to be turned into a photo exhibit without their knowledge would be a huge legal issue for both the agent (potentially leading to her losing her real estate license) and the landlord (Sebastian).]]
* ''Film/WallStreet'':
** While several actions noted as bad would count as immoral, the fact that the movie takes place a couple years before it was filmed means that several of the actions shown were [[ArtisticLicenseHistory not actually illegal during the film's time frame,]] despite Bud Fox's fears of losing his license or worse. In fact, Gordon Gekko most likely didn't break the law at all, but Bud Fox definitely broke the law by disclosing confidential information from his client (Gekko) to a competitor (Wildman) and using that information to cost his client millions.
** It's a bit of a stretch for this trope perhaps, but in the final shot Bud is shown walking up the courthouse steps in Lower Manhattan's Foley Square, presumably to his sentencing. However, he's walking up the steps of the New York County Supreme Court building—i.e., ''state'' court, when the insider-trading charges he would be allocuting to within are strictly ''federal'', and so he should have been walking up the steps of the Thurgood Marshall U.S. Courthouse next door.
* ''{{Film/Watchmen}}'': Like in the original comic book, Rorschach was sent to Sing Sing before even being tried for his crimes, while in reality he would be held at Riker's Island until trial. He also would likely be kept isolated from other inmates as a notorious vigilante crime fighter, which is not only for his protection but to avoid an incident like in the cafeteria.
* In the first ''Film/WaynesWorld'' movie, one police officer is infamous for performing cavity searches on random motorists. This is a serious felony, when performed without a warrant; while the movie, as usual, attempts to justify this under RuleOfFunny, it qualifies under the law as rape.


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* ''{{Film/Abduction}}'': Nathan's birth certificate says "State of Pennsylvania", but Pennsylvania is a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commonwealth#U.S._states Commonwealth]]. Also, Nathan rides around on his motorcycle without a helmet - but PA laws say you ''must'' wear one until you are 21 years of age. Looking that young, he would be stopped for sure.
* ''Film/AdamsRib'': The judge makes Lance Ito look like a stern model of jurisprudence, with his decision to tolerate Amanda's ridiculous defense of calling in random women to demonstrate how women are equal to men. It's also not very likely that married couples would be allowed to represent opposite sides of a criminal case. Further, pointing out the hypocrisy regarding men getting off for shooting their cheating wives vs the opposite not being true, while a valid point, is not really a defense to attempted murder. Her client did it, even if sympathetic, and she's essentially trying to get jury nullification. This isn't allowed to argue for.



* ''Film/TheAssignment2016'': Dr. Rachel Jane is said to have been ruled incompetent to stand trial, so she's put into a mental institution instead, where a psychiatrist evaluates her to see if she's become competent (he decides she's not after attacking him). We see no indication she would be incompetent though, which simply means that they are able to understand the proceedings and aid in their defense. Jane is quite intelligent, so there's every indication she could do both of those things. Being ruled incompetent usually requires that a defendant be severely mentally impaired from disability, a mental illness, brain damage or senility.
* ''Film/AugustRush'':
** Lyla's father presumably paid a lawyer a large sum of money in order to forge Lyla's signature on the adoption paperwork, but for a lawyer to go along with this plan would be highly unethical and could get them disbarred (not that such a thing is unknown, it just would be less likely).
** It's unlikely that Evan, a healthy newborn, would be placed in a group home.



* ''Film/BeyondReAnimator'': A prison warden does not have the ability to increase an inmate's sentence.
* ''Film/BodyOfEvidence'':
** It would be next-to-impossible to prove that Rebecca intentionally screwed the guy to death, something cited by numerous people in the film, and reflected in her acquittal. Even arresting her would be highly unlikely.
** During the trial, when she reveals that she caught her ex in bed with another man, he simply stands up and nods to confirm her story. That would never happen in RealLife. He'd be called back to the stand to testify again.
** Rebecca testifies, when even the worst defense attorney knows that having a defendant testifying is a bad idea. That said, Frank and the judge explicitly warn her against this, as they're obligated to do.



* A small one occurs in ''Film/BridgeOfSpies''. Attorney James Donovan informally discusses the sentencing of his client with the judge outside of court without the opposing prosecutor being present. This is called ''ex parte'' communication and is a serious breach of legal ethics, certainly unintentional given how much focus the movie gives on Donovan's refusal to compromise his integrity.



* ''{{Film/Carefree}}'': Legal proceedings (or threats of them) exist to provide impetus or obstacles to the plot and bear very little reference to real-world practices. All legal matters seem to be handled on a personal basis, as Judge Travers is a friend of both Stephen and Amanda.



* ''Film/CharliesAngels2019'': Brok's corporate security forces in his Hamburg facility carry handguns. Given Germany's very restrictive gun laws, it's unlikely that a privately owned company like his would've been given permission to arm its personnel in real life.



* ''[[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0101590/ Class Action]]''. First, [[NonIndicativeName the eponymous lawsuit]] is ''not even a class action''. A class action is when a group of similar plaintiffs combine their case as a class to sue particular defendants. The movie's case is actually a wrongful death suit brought by a ''single'' plaintiff whose wife died when her car caught on fire following a rear-end collision. It revolves around whether the defendant automaker knew the cars were defective. The problem is that automobiles are products, and product defect cases fall under strict liability. That means that the plaintiff does not have to prove that the defendant did anything wrong--they only have to prove that the cars were defective and that they were injured as a result. Furthermore, it would be trivially easy for them to prove that the cars were defective, since the cars did in fact burst into flames. The plaintiff would almost certainly prevail on a ''res ipsa loquitur'' (the thing speaks for itself) claim: the car burst into flames, ergo the car must have been defective. As such, on the facts presented in the film and not disputed by either side the plaintiff would almost certainly win on summary judgment, or even more likely the defendant would settle before the case got anywhere near trial. The finale too: Maggie unethically conspires with her father Jed to torpedo her client after discovering that her partners destroyed evidence, which could get her disbarred. However, this is something she could legally report to the judge (in fact, she is obligated) if her client wouldn't disclose the fact. The partners could themselves be disbarred and prosecuted for this. She didn't need to conspire at all.
* In ''Film/TheChase1994'', Jack Hammond is convicted of bank robbery after evidence that would exculpate him is excluded on the grounds that it was improperly collected from the crime scene by the police. This is an obvious absurdity: first, improper actions by the police can only prejudice the prosecution, not the defense. Second, mere errors in collection of the evidence would not normally raise constitutional (or statutory issues) that would lead to exclusion of the evidence. That is, if the evidence (blood left by the actual thief at the scene of one of the robberies) had been contaminated, that would not be grounds for its exclusion even if brought by the prosecution, unless the contamination was total so the evidence had no probative value whatsoever. The other side would be able to challenge the evidence, and the jury would have to sort it out. And finally, the defense could still point to the fact that this evidence was improperly collected as having given enough reasonable doubt to acquit their client... and this could also be brought up at the ''actual'' Red-Nosed Robber's trial, were they to ever catch him. In other words, if the police screwed up that badly, they would have just jeopardized ever actually bringing the culprit to justice. In the scene where this is explained Josephson (Jack's lawyer) is clearly aware of how messed up this is and is using it as an example of how his client was railroaded through the courts. The prosecution's only piece of evidence seems to have been that Jack owns a clown outfit.



* ''Film/TheDarkKnight''
** The film features a scene where, after Lau is captured, Harvey Dent decides to charge the entire mob (as in all the three big crime families in Gotham as a single entity) under RICO. The problem is local district attorneys cannot charge RICO offenses. Not even the local US Attorneys can; it has to come directly from the Department of Justice. Dent's mass-trial would also count, but the movie points out that he doesn't expect it to succeed and it's only proceeding because of his local stature.
** Before that Lau flees to Hong Kong so that he's out of Harvey Dent's jurisdiction and the Chinese won't extradite him. Although it's a moot point since Batman's the one who captures him, Lau is sadly mistaken: Hong Kong has a completely separate legal system from the rest of China and it does have [[http://www.legislation.gov.hk/blis_ind.nsf/e1bf50c09a33d3dc482564840019d2f4/9a61090f8a225bc14825655500235c91?OpenDocument an extradition agreement]] with the United States. Mainland China will not extradite its own citizens ([[http://english.gov.cn/laws/2005-09/22/content_68710.htm see Article 8(1) of Extradition Law of the People's Republic of China]]) but it will try its own citizens for overseas crimes, which can be a bad thing because China has the death penalty and some states don't.
* ''Film/DarkPhoenix'': Magneto's right-the US military can't simply come into Genosha without permission. If it's in the US, they're forbidden to carry out police functions by the Posse Comitatus Act, plus they would need a search warrant. Assuming it's not (though the land was "given to them by the US government", which makes it unclear) this would be a violation of their sovereignty that could be taken as an act of war.
* ''Film/DayOfDefense'': Everything about the Mormon elders' prosecution is completely illegal, grossly violating the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. The film at first treats it like the Christian Town Council (CTC) is just illegally running missionaries from religions they don't approve of out, which is plausible. However, when no one brings up that fact (including the Mormon defendants and judge who's semi-sympathetic to them) it beggars belief. In reality, if a town's government did this in the US, they would be quickly sued and possibly federally prosecuted. The kind of laws that it portrays were abolished in the early 1800s. A ''lot'' of the film reviews note this. There are also some CourtroomAntics and other common tropes, but that's fairly standard in films with court scenes.
* ''Film/DeathWish2018'': Due to the Firearm Owners Protection Act, passed in 1986, it would have been very difficult and expensive for Kersey to legally obtain a fully automatic rifle.



* In ''Film/{{Dolittle}}'' the villain of the film, [[spoiler: Lord Bagley]]'s motivations for poisoning Queen Victoria were that he wanted to take the throne himself, but there were several problems with this plan.
** To start off, at that point in history, the royal succession was set; had Victoria died, she would have been succeeded by her eldest son, Edward VII. Even if something had happened to him, there'd still be Victoria's other children, not to mention various uncles, aunts and cousins besides. [[spoiler: Bagley]] could ''not'' have sidestepped the entire House of Hanover, no matter how ambitious he was for power or whatever arguments he could try to make to justify it.
** He attempts to justify this by claiming England could not be left in the hands of a child monarch, but there had been child monarchs in the past and there were already plans in place for a regency should Victoria die before her heir was considered of age.
*** Oddly, he seems to indicate Lady Rose when he says this, even though she would not have been the heir, even if she was somehow related to the Queen.
** Finally, it doesn't make any sense for him to want to become king, since Parliament holds the real power and as a senior member of the House of Lords, he could easily (and legally) become prime minister and have far more power than he would as king.



* ''Film/TheEigerSanction'': Hemlock says the germ warfare formula is against the Geneva Convention, which covers the treatment of prisoners of war. Presumably he's referring to the 1925 Geneva Protocol, but that only bans the use of such weapons in warfare, not their development or stockpiling.
* ''Film/EyeForAnEye'': The undercover agent who threatens Karen with life in prison if she kills Doob. In reality, Karen would probably get off completely or lightly, courtesy of an endless range of potential jurors -- and even some law enforcement -- who'd sympathize with her. Justified as the agent is attempting to intimidate her into giving up the idea and correctly states the punishment, rather than likelihood of it actually happening.
* ''{{Film/Fargo}}'': Since it involved the death of a state trooper, the Minnesota State Police should have been investigating the murders.[[note]]Though the State Police ''do'' get involved, as it's implied Marge and Lou are simply first responders — though they're mostly out of the picture until the later half of the film.[[/note]]
* The main character in ''Film/FatalInstinct'' makes his living by arresting criminals in his job as a police officer then getting them off in his job as a defense attorney. Defending criminals he arrested himself is a conflict of interest. Taken to an even more ludicrous extreme when he arrests, then defends his own wife for trying to kill ''him'', which he does by illegally calling for jury nullification (the man she ended up killing was a former client of her husband's seeking revenge for a botched defense - which was the victim's own fault for strangling a bailiff during the trial - and he argued that she was in the right to follow him and shoot him to death instead of simply calling the cops). Fortunately, the film runs on RuleOfFunny.



* ''Film/GoodWillHunting'' gets a bunch of things wrong. In the opening, Will is arrested for assaulting a police officer. This is a ''very'' serious offense that he tries to get dismissed by saying it was "self-defense against tyranny". The judge acknowledges that Will defended himself on an earlier charge of Grand Theft Auto by quoting a two-hundred year old case on the grounds of "free property rights of horse and buggy". Most likely it would have either been reversed or ignored in favor of more recent law. Anyway, the judge denies the motion to dismiss and puts him in jail. The MIT professor says that he "talked to the judge" and got his permission to have Will work for him as a form of probation. The professor is not a lawyer and therefore has no right to "talk to" the judge on Will's behalf. The professor might have put up his bail to get Will released, but Will would still have to stand trial for the assault charge.

to:

* ''Film/GoodWillHunting'' gets a bunch of things wrong. In ''Film/Glass2019'':
** Dr. Staple leads
the opening, Will is arrested for assaulting a police officer. This is a ''very'' serious offense that he tries to get dismissed by saying it was "self-defense against tyranny". The judge acknowledges that Will defended himself on an earlier charge of Grand Theft Auto by quoting a two-hundred year old case on the grounds of "free property rights of horse and buggy". Most likely it would have either been reversed or ignored in favor of more recent law. Anyway, the judge denies the motion to dismiss and puts him in jail. The MIT professor says that he "talked to the judge" Overseer and got his permission the Horde, has them stunned unconscious and dragged off to have Will work for him as a form of probation. The professor is an insane asylum under her care with absolutely no trial or lawyers or any due process, and not a lawyer and therefore has no right to "talk to" even the judge on Will's behalf. The professor Overseer's son (who, granted, might have put up be worried about being labeled an accomplice) seeks any legal recourse other than going to the doctor and pleading her to let his bail to get Will released, dad go. [[spoiler:Granted, the existence of the Shamrock conspiracy might help explain this, as any judges or lawyers might be in on it, but Will given that "David Dunn" is a local hero even outside his secret identity and nobody seems to even think about the plainly criminal lengths Dr. Staple went to capture and detain him, it still fits this trope.]]
** [[spoiler: Her decision to give Mr. Glass a lobotomy is completely unethical and illegal as well, but again the Shamrock conspiracy
would still have to stand trial for mean that legality wasn't high on her list of priorities; the assault charge.bigger issue is that nobody else, including the seemingly ignorant staff at the hospital, call her out on this.]]



* ''Film/GodsNotDeadALightInDarkness'':
** The film acknowledges that there's no basis for subpoenaing sermons, as Dave is quickly released after the order's ruled unconstitutional. However, it's never explained just ''why'' they were subpoenaed in the first place-you need a reason for this. Further, although eminent domain can be used on a church, there is no way they could legally obtain a demolition order on the property before it was actually confiscated. If this had gone through, the university would have had huge liability.
** There's no evidence for Adam's arrest either-anonymous accusations or mere suspicion won't cut it. Without that to begin with, even a later confession wouldn't be admissible. Assuming they had evidence though, it wouldn't be under Dave's control whether the charges got dropped-that is a decision for the prosecutor. Given that a man died, it's also very unlikely they would if a case existed (Adam could be facing FelonyMurder, or at least manslaughter).
** When a church on the grounds of a college burns down, the college attempts to use eminent domain to seize it and tear it down. Only a city or state government would have that power, not a school (the film claims it was given to the university, but that wouldn't happen). Plus, it was on their grounds to begin with, meaning they technically already owned the building and thus have no need to seize it.
* ''Film/GoldThroughTheFire'': The film claims US law bars ''any'' preaching or even expressing religious beliefs in public schools, with Peter being disciplined for this. However, that isn't the case. Only the teachers are forbidden to do this. The students are free to, provided this doesn't rise to disruption or harassment. While of course violations such as the film shows occur, this isn't in compliance with the law: the case thus wouldn't set a precedent as is portrayed. It's also stated separation of church and state isn't from the Founding Fathers or a legitimate part of the law. UsefulNotes/ThomasJefferson, a Founding Father, in fact coined it, and it's also been a well-established legal doctrine for years, very often because ''Christians'' brought cases over things such as being taught a version of the Bible or doctrines they disagreed with by a public school, not just anti-religious people (unlike what the film implies).
* ''Film/GoodWillHunting'' gets a bunch of things wrong. In the opening, Will is arrested for assaulting a police officer. This is a ''very'' serious offense that he tries to get dismissed by saying it was "self-defense against tyranny". The judge acknowledges that Will defended himself on an earlier charge of Grand Theft Auto by quoting a two-hundred year old case on the grounds of "free property rights of horse and buggy". Most likely it would have either been reversed or ignored in favor of more recent law. Anyway, the judge denies the motion to dismiss and puts him in jail. The MIT professor says that he "talked to the judge" and got his permission to have Will work for him as a form of probation. The professor is not a lawyer and therefore has no right to "talk to" the judge on Will's behalf. The professor might have put up his bail to get Will released, but Will would still have to stand trial for the assault charge.



* ''Film/{{Gothika}}'': The end of the film shows that [[spoiler: both Miranda and Chloe are free, despite Chloe murdering her stepfather and Miranda murdering her husband ''and'' the local police chief. Even if their targets were [[AssholeVictim assholes]], the courts '''''really''''' frown on vigilante justice. At least in the chief's case, Miranda could argue self-defense, and there's a plausible InsanityDefense as well (a rarity in fiction) for both his and Doug's murder given that she actually HAS been institutionalized in a BedlamHouse already and diagnosed as psychotic... which, if successful, would mean she goes right back to the asylum she just escaped from.]]
* ''Film/GrossePointeBlank'': The NSA does not have field agents. Also, they're not even supposed to do anything domestically. Their job is to monitor foreign communications. FBI agents would be the ones after hitmen like Martin here.
* ''Film/TheHitman'': It would not be legal for a police officer to work undercover as a ''contract killer'', no matter how much of a CowboyCop he may be. Even if he went rogue, he'd be arrested as soon as he got in contact with his bosses again.
* ''Film/TheHitmansBodyguard'':
** Massive liberties are taken to make Kincaid's testimony the only thing that can bring down Dukhovich. A victim whose family was killed in front of him and was put in a work camp for three years has his ''entire'' testimony dismissed out of hand, with the implications that all of the other witnesses so far have had the same. Such testimony would not simply be declared "hearsay" (which, by the way, is when a witness is asked what they were told happened by somebody else, not when they're asked what they themselves witnessed) and struck even if the defense claimed they were merely political opponents doing smear jobs. Somehow Kincaid was the only person to have [[spoiler:pictures]] as proof of Dukhovich's crimes despite this being set in the modern day, and that is the only kind of evidence that seems to work.
** Also, it is entirely possible to have witnesses testify from remote locations. Kincaid could easily have testified on a video chat from his cell [[spoiler:and given the website information from there]]. This is ''common practice'' when the witness might be endangered by coming to the trial.
** Even disregarding the above, you'd think the court would be a little more lax with the ExactTimeToFailure considering that ''someone racked up a massive body count of officers and agents trying to murder Kincaid en route to the Hague''.
* ''Film/HolmesAndWatson'': Moriarty's trial resembles nothing that has ever happened in a British courtroom. The judge wielding a gavel is just the beginning of the problems. Later, Dr. Watson is arrested and then sentenced to hang without any trial occurring in between.
* Near the end of ''Film/IAmWrath'' it's said Stanley will be held in federal prison until he gets tried by a FISA court on the charges against him. FISA (Federal Intelligence Surveillance) Court only has any jurisdiction over requests for surveillance warrants against foreign intelligence agents in the US or Americans connected with them. It doesn't try cases of any kind. Further, none of the crimes he committed are in federal jurisdiction (and the state would scream bloody murder here especially, since he killed the governor). It's supposedly because of his government black ops background making this into a "national security issue" but that's legally nonsense. Why this was even added is a mystery as it has no further effect on the plot, since Stanley promptly escapes before the transfer.
* ''Film/InTheBedroom'': The prosecutor tells Matt and Ruth that because Natalie did not explicitly ''see'' Richard shoot Frank, he'll only get charged with manslaughter, nor murder, and serve five to ten years at most. This is pretty ridiculous, as she'd seen plenty, like Richard breaking in, then having the murder weapon right in his hand with Frank dead on the ground. People have been convicted of murder without an eyewitness many times, or even a body sometimes-this would be far more than enough to prove the case along with his clear motive. Unless there was some problem with her testimony or the forensic evidence from the gun (none's mentioned) this would be open and shut. He might still have a plea deal, but it would likely be to second degree murder, with a much longer sentence than is mentioned. Instead, this inspires Matt to go vigilante on Richard so he won't get off so easily, which ends in Richard's murder.



* In ''Film/OtherPeoplesMoney'', Kate never suggests to Jorgy some of the most common anti-takeover defenses, notably the poison pill or the crown jewel defense. The film was released in 1991, and is presumably set in the late eighties, except that by that time the takeover movement of the eighties was waning in no small part because of defenses like the poison pill. Any competent corporate attorney at that time would have suggested those defenses to her client, but Kate never does.



* ''Film/PresumedInnocent'': It's unthinkable that the police wouldn't search for the murder weapon because "if they didn't find it that'd make Sabich appear innocent." Not finding it hurt the prosecution no matter what. Of course, this was necessary to the film's plot, since finding it earlier would have insured Sabich's conviction and prevented the {{twist ending}}. On that note, the dismissal of the case is unlikely, as there was plenty of evidence against Sabich remaining after one key piece was successfully discredited by his attorney with the implication that it was fabricated. Dismissing the case solely on this basis was suspicious, not only due to that but because Sabich's defense attorney had told the judge they knew he'd taken bribes. Sabich's attorney insists the judge didn't rule for them because of this, but it's left nebulous. The dismissal could get overturned if the prosecution appealed the ruling, and Sabich might be tried again on the same charges.



** SplitPersonality is actually ''not'' considered a valid insanity defense in most places. It's not even recognized as a mental illness by many psychiatrists (who know that patients can fake it, consciously or not).
** Illinois law ''does'' allow someone to change their plea mid-trial, unlike what Martin says.
** Also, the film neglects the fact that Aaron hasn't been acquitted at the end. Martin just agreed with the judge to retry it as a bench trial, where she would consider his insanity defense alone, without a jury. True, he can't reveal the movie's twist [[spoiler: (that Aaron was faking it)]], but there's still no guarantee he'll actually get off, as the insanity defense only works in about one fourth of the cases where it's used. Even if he did, as stated above people acquitted on the ground of insanity usually wind up living out the rest of their life in a mental institution



* ''{{Film/Runaway Jury}}'':
** Super Lawyer: Gene Hackman. He's evil, has a command center filled with computer screens, and apparently capable of quickly breaking into encrypted files.
** Dream Team: Dustin Hoffman and the two conspiring protagonists. In real life, it would mean serious prison time if caught (just as with Hackman's own attempted jury tampering.)
** DeusExMachina Lawyer: The Hero lawyer only wins because one of the Super Lawyer's employees betrays him.



* ''{{Film/Runaway Jury}}'':
** Super Lawyer: Gene Hackman. He's evil, has a command center filled with computer screens, and apparently capable of quickly breaking into encrypted files.
** Dream Team: Dustin Hoffman and the two conspiring protagonists. In real life, it would mean serious prison time if caught (just as with Hackman's own attempted jury tampering.)
** DeusExMachina Lawyer: The Hero lawyer only wins because one of the Super Lawyer's employees betrays him.
** SplitPersonality is actually ''not'' considered a valid insanity defense in most places. It's not even recognized as a mental illness by many psychiatrists (who know that patients can fake it, consciously or not).
** Illinois law ''does'' allow someone to change their plea mid-trial, unlike what Martin says.
** Also, the film neglects the fact that Aaron hasn't been acquitted at the end. Martin just agreed with the judge to retry it as a bench trial, where she would consider his insanity defense alone, without a jury. True, he can't reveal the movie's twist [[spoiler: (that Aaron was faking it)]], but there's still no guarantee he'll actually get off, as the insanity defense only works in about one fourth of the cases where it's used. Even if he did, as stated above people acquitted on the ground of insanity usually wind up living out the rest of their life in a mental institution.



* In ''Film/TheTortured'', a young couple seeks revenge on their son's murderer, abducting him on the way to prison and taking him to a remote cabin where they [[ColdBloodedTorture torture him]] in a slow, agonizing manner. In a {{twist ending}}, it turns out that the prison transport was carrying two different prisoners, and they didn't abduct their son's murderer but the prisoner with him, whom they mistook because of the (unlikely) resemblance they had plus the facial injuries he suffered from the crash, while the murderer got away. This prisoner was only incarcerated for tax evasion and embezzlement, however, so he wouldn't be going to the same prison as a murderer sentenced to life without parole, meaning he shouldn't have been in a transport with one (they don't send prisoners convicted of tax evasion to the same prisons as murderers), negating the whole plot twist at the end.



* In the first ''Film/WaynesWorld'' movie, one police officer is infamous for performing cavity searches on random motorists. This is a serious felony, when performed without a warrant; while the movie, as usual, attempts to justify this under RuleOfFunny, it qualifies under the law as rape.
* ''Film/WallStreet'':
** While several actions noted as bad would count as immoral, the fact that the movie takes place a couple years before it was filmed means that several of the actions shown were [[ArtisticLicenseHistory not actually illegal during the film's time frame,]] despite Bud Fox's fears of losing his license or worse. In fact, Gordon Gekko most likely didn't break the law at all, but Bud Fox definitely broke the law by disclosing confidential information from his client (Gekko) to a competitor (Wildman) and using that information to cost his client millions.
** It's a bit of a stretch for this trope perhaps, but in the final shot Bud is shown walking up the courthouse steps in Lower Manhattan's Foley Square, presumably to his sentencing. However, he's walking up the steps of the New York County Supreme Court building—i.e., ''state'' court, when the insider-trading charges he would be allocuting to within are strictly ''federal'', and so he should have been walking up the steps of the Thurgood Marshall U.S. Courthouse next door.
* In ''Film/TheTortured'', a young couple seeks revenge on their son's murderer, abducting him on the way to prison and taking him to a remote cabin where they [[ColdBloodedTorture torture him]] in a slow, agonizing manner. In a {{twist ending}}, it turns out that the prison transport was carrying two different prisoners, and they didn't abduct their son's murderer but the prisoner with him, whom they mistook because of the (unlikely) resemblance they had plus the facial injuries he suffered from the crash, while the murderer got away. This prisoner was only incarcerated for tax evasion and embezzlement, however, so he wouldn't be going to the same prison as a murderer sentenced to life without parole, meaning he shouldn't have been in a transport with one (they don't send prisoners convicted of tax evasion to the same prisons as murderers), negating the whole plot twist at the end.
* ''[[http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0101590/ Class Action]]''. First, [[NonIndicativeName the eponymous lawsuit]] is ''not even a class action''. A class action is when a group of similar plaintiffs combine their case as a class to sue particular defendants. The movie's case is actually a wrongful death suit brought by a ''single'' plaintiff whose wife died when her car caught on fire following a rear-end collision. It revolves around whether the defendant automaker knew the cars were defective. The problem is that automobiles are products, and product defect cases fall under strict liability. That means that the plaintiff does not have to prove that the defendant did anything wrong--they only have to prove that the cars were defective and that they were injured as a result. Furthermore, it would be trivially easy for them to prove that the cars were defective, since the cars did in fact burst into flames. The plaintiff would almost certainly prevail on a ''res ipsa loquitur'' (the thing speaks for itself) claim: the car burst into flames, ergo the car must have been defective. As such, on the facts presented in the film and not disputed by either side the plaintiff would almost certainly win on summary judgment, or even more likely the defendant would settle before the case got anywhere near trial. The finale too: Maggie unethically conspires with her father Jed to torpedo her client after discovering that her partners destroyed evidence, which could get her disbarred. However, this is something she could legally report to the judge (in fact, she is obligated) if her client wouldn't disclose the fact. The partners could themselves be disbarred and prosecuted for this. She didn't need to conspire at all.
* The main character in ''Film/FatalInstinct'' makes his living by arresting criminals in his job as a police officer then getting them off in his job as a defense attorney. Defending criminals he arrested himself is a conflict of interest. Taken to an even more ludicrous extreme when he arrests, then defends his own wife for trying to kill ''him'', which he does by illegally calling for jury nullification (the man she ended up killing was a former client of her husband's seeking revenge for a botched defense - which was the victim's own fault for strangling a bailiff during the trial - and he argued that she was in the right to follow him and shoot him to death instead of simply calling the cops). Fortunately, the film runs on RuleOfFunny.
* In ''Film/TheChase1994'', Jack Hammond is convicted of bank robbery after evidence that would exculpate him is excluded on the grounds that it was improperly collected from the crime scene by the police. This is an obvious absurdity: first, improper actions by the police can only prejudice the prosecution, not the defense. Second, mere errors in collection of the evidence would not normally raise constitutional (or statutory issues) that would lead to exclusion of the evidence. That is, if the evidence (blood left by the actual thief at the scene of one of the robberies) had been contaminated, that would not be grounds for its exclusion even if brought by the prosecution, unless the contamination was total so the evidence had no probative value whatsoever. The other side would be able to challenge the evidence, and the jury would have to sort it out. And finally, the defense could still point to the fact that this evidence was improperly collected as having given enough reasonable doubt to acquit their client... and this could also be brought up at the ''actual'' Red-Nosed Robber's trial, were they to ever catch him. In other words, if the police screwed up that badly, they would have just jeopardized ever actually bringing the culprit to justice. In the scene where this is explained Josephson (Jack's lawyer) is clearly aware of how messed up this is and is using it as an example of how his client was railroaded through the courts. The prosecution's only piece of evidence seems to have been that Jack owns a clown outfit.
* ''Film/TheDarkKnight''
** The film features a scene where, after Lau is captured, Harvey Dent decides to charge the entire mob (as in all the three big crime families in Gotham as a single entity) under RICO. The problem is local district attorneys cannot charge RICO offenses. Not even the local US Attorneys can; it has to come directly from the Department of Justice. Dent's mass-trial would also count, but the movie points out that he doesn't expect it to succeed and it's only proceeding because of his local stature.
** Before that Lau flees to Hong Kong so that he's out of Harvey Dent's jurisdiction and the Chinese won't extradite him. Although it's a moot point since Batman's the one who captures him, Lau is sadly mistaken: Hong Kong has a completely separate legal system from the rest of China and it does have [[http://www.legislation.gov.hk/blis_ind.nsf/e1bf50c09a33d3dc482564840019d2f4/9a61090f8a225bc14825655500235c91?OpenDocument an extradition agreement]] with the United States. Mainland China will not extradite its own citizens ([[http://english.gov.cn/laws/2005-09/22/content_68710.htm see Article 8(1) of Extradition Law of the People's Republic of China]]) but it will try its own citizens for overseas crimes, which can be a bad thing because China has the death penalty and some states don't.
* ''Film/KramerVsKramer'': The book ''Reel Justice'' notes that Ted's fear of Billy having to testify if he appeals is ridiculous, considering that an Appeals Court does not hear new evidence, and ''nobody'' testifies as a witness. Also, the "tender years" doctrine (that mothers are better parents than fathers of young children) was on the wane by the late 1970s, when the film came out, thus it's unlikely a judge would still make that the sole basis of his decision.
* ''Film/WitnessForTheProsecution'': Surely a barrister of Sir Wilfred's experience could have gotten Christine's testimony for the prosecution disallowed by arguing that since Leonard Vole did not know she was already married, that would make her his putative spouse and thus spousal privilege would still apply.
* ''Film/TheVerdict'':
** Galvin could have been sanctioned by the court for failing to communicate the settlement offer to the family, and could have additionally been held liable for malpractice. Courts have consistently held that lawyers have a duty to communicate all settlement offers to their clients before accepting or declining such offers. Galvin was not disciplined in this case, although he was confronted by his clients for not telling them about the offer of $210,000 that the Archdiocese had made.
** The defense should have been able to win at the close of Galvin's case by making a motion for "judgment as a matter of law" (i.e. the judge ruling in their favor as no rational jury could find against them). However that doesn't happen.
** Judge Hoyle incorrectly rules that Nurse Kaitlin Price's testimony is inadmissible hearsay, though it falls under the "admissions" exception. Topping it off, the "best evidence" rule (that when witnesses testify to the content of a document, it must be produced) gets utterly bungled. The document is a photocopy that Nurse Price brings in showing that she altered an admissions form at Towler's order to cover up his negligence. To explain, the form is a ''photocopy'' of the original, and the best evidence rule requires that the original document must be what's entered into evidence. The real problem is that the best evidence rule allows the exclusion of a copy of a writing; it does not bar a witness from testifying about what she wrote in the original document. Galvin does not even attempt to offer the document into evidence. Rather, he just asks the witness what she wrote in the document. Furthermore, there is an exception to the best evidence rule: when the original is unavailable owing to a bad act by the party against whom the copy would be offered. Here, the witness is claiming that she altered the original document under the threat of the defendant, but made a photocopy of the original before she did so. So in real life, the copy would almost certainly be admissible. As for the hearsay issue, while the admissions exception would apply to Towler's out-of-court statement to Price, the statement was not hearsay to begin with, because it was not being offered to prove the content of the statement; whether Dr. Towler would have actually had Nurse Price fired for refusing to alter the admissions form is completely irrelevant to Galvin's case. It is only hearsay when the out-of-court statement is offered as evidence for the truth of the statement.
** Judge Hoyle, who was obviously in the defense's pocket, could have issued a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judgment_notwithstanding_verdict judgment notwithstanding verdict]] nullifying the jury's decision, if only Concannon had asked for it.
** And of course Galvin could have appealed and gotten a new trial based on the defense's misconduct in placing a mole in his office.
* ''Film/PresumedInnocent'': It's unthinkable that the police wouldn't search for the murder weapon because "if they didn't find it that'd make Sabich appear innocent." Not finding it hurt the prosecution no matter what. Of course, this was necessary to the film's plot, since finding it earlier would have insured Sabich's conviction and prevented the {{twist ending}}. On that note, the dismissal of the case is unlikely, as there was plenty of evidence against Sabich remaining after one key piece was successfully discredited by his attorney with the implication that it was fabricated. Dismissing the case solely on this basis was suspicious, not only due to that but because Sabich's defense attorney had told the judge they knew he'd taken bribes. Sabich's attorney insists the judge didn't rule for them because of this, but it's left nebulous. The dismissal could get overturned if the prosecution appealed the ruling, and Sabich might be tried again on the same charges.
* In ''Film/OtherPeoplesMoney'', Kate never suggests to Jorgy some of the most common anti-takeover defenses, notably the poison pill or the crown jewel defense. The film was released in 1991, and is presumably set in the late eighties, except that by that time the takeover movement of the eighties was waning in no small part because of defenses like the poison pill. Any competent corporate attorney at that time would have suggested those defenses to her client, but Kate never does.



* ''Film/TheWizardOfOz'': Dorothy's family is ordered to get rid of Toto without any investigation or due process. Miss Gulch presents an order from the sheriff permitting her to take him to be put down, which is...not at all how it works. A judge could give orders along those lines, but a sheriff couldn't, and again, there would be an investigation. Also, Miss Gulch would not be the one taking the dog; the sheriff would.



* A small one occurs in ''Film/BridgeOfSpies''. Attorney James Donovan informally discusses the sentencing of his client with the judge outside of court without the opposing prosecutor being present. This is called ''ex parte'' communication and is a serious breach of legal ethics, certainly unintentional given how much focus the movie gives on Donovan's refusal to compromise his integrity.



* ''{{Film/Carefree}}'': Legal proceedings (or threats of them) exist to provide impetus or obstacles to the plot and bear very little reference to real-world practices. All legal matters seem to be handled on a personal basis, as Judge Travers is a friend of both Stephen and Amanda.

to:

* ''{{Film/Carefree}}'': Legal ''Film/HarrysWar'': More than one example.
** During his speech after breaking into the talk show in a tank, Harry says that the Constitution doesn't authorize the IRS. Oh really, Harry? How about Article 1, Section 8, Clause 1: "The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States"
** And if that wasn't blatant enough, how about Amendment 16: "The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration."
** While it's true the Constitution doesn't specifically authorize an ''Internal Revenue Service'' to collect taxes, it's pretty blatant about the (nearly unlimited) taxing power it gives the federal government, and every court in the land agrees that an agency to enforce the federal tax laws is well within the rights of the Executive branch.
** Aunt Beverly claims that the Tax Court judges are all in the hip pockets of the IRS, since it's the IRS that pays their salaries (and can hit them with severe audits if they don't toe the line the IRS wants). In RealLife, many neutral parties have criticized the Tax Courts for being ''too soft'' on tax cheats out of judicial dislike for the IRS. Also their salaries are set by the Congress and paid by the taxpayer like all federal officials, which doesn't differ in amount from other judges. Punitive audits from the IRS of judges would also get them in a lot of trouble.
* ''Film/IAmSam'': In reality it's unlikely Sam would lose custody entirely, since he is neither abusing or neglecting Lucy, though he might be required to have supervision from a social worker. Also these
proceedings (or threats of them) exist to provide impetus or obstacles to are generally much more informal. The state attorney verbally attacking Sam on the plot stand is also inappropriate and bear very little reference a judge likely would not permit it, particularly given his mental disability (it's akin to real-world practices. All legal matters seem to be handled on him dressing down a personal basis, as Judge Travers child).
* ''Film/IShotJesseJames'' features a gross misrepresentation of extradition law. Once Frank James (the brother of UsefulNotes/JesseJames)
is a friend acquitted of both Stephen charges in Colorado, the jail immediately lets him go, even though they acknowledge he's wanted in other states like Kansas and Amanda.Missouri. In reality, the Colorado authorities would’ve alerted the other states (telegrams were widespread by 1892, so there wouldn’t be a long delay) and kept Frank locked up until one of the states contacted them about extradition via the U.S. Marshals. The only reason to let him go would've been if ''none'' of the other states wanted to try him, which seems unlikely given him and his brother's notorious reputation.



* ''{{Film/xXx}}'':
** Xander's stunt at the beginning couldn't trigger the Three Strikes law, as they cannot be three felonies from the same "transaction."[[note]]Unless he already has two, but that's not what Gibbons said.[[/note]] Also, they would be state crimes and he wouldn't be sent to Leavenworth (a federal prison). Of course, the chief could have just been saying that to pressure him into working for him.
** The NSA does ''not'' have agents in the field--they're strictly signals intelligence (phone calls, emails, that sort of thing). Non-military human intelligence is the CIA's business.
* ''Film/IShotJesseJames'' features a gross misrepresentation of extradition law. Once Frank James (the brother of UsefulNotes/JesseJames) is acquitted of charges in Colorado, the jail immediately lets him go, even though they acknowledge he's wanted in other states like Kansas and Missouri. In reality, the Colorado authorities would’ve alerted the other states (telegrams were widespread by 1892, so there wouldn’t be a long delay) and kept Frank locked up until one of the states contacted them about extradition via the U.S. Marshals. The only reason to let him go would've been if ''none'' of the other states wanted to try him, which seems unlikely given him and his brother's notorious reputation.

to:

* ''{{Film/xXx}}'':
''Film/IdentityThief'':
** Xander's stunt at In real life, even if a criminal escapes to another state the beginning couldn't trigger the Three Strikes law, as police can just call that state's police and get them to arrest them. And since Diana's crimes (identity theft and wire fraud) are federal it should be a job for the** Sandy would also have a pretty easy wrongful dismissal claim against his employer if they cannot truly let him go because of a police mix-up.
* ''Film/InTheLineOfFire'': Despite the Secret Service consultation, some errors show up:
** Lilly's gown during the party scene would
be three felonies inappropriate for a female Secret Service agent, as it would prevent her from performing her duties should there be an attempt on the President's life. In those situations female agents instead wear dress pants and more practical shoes. (With the gown, there is also the problem of where to hide the service weapon.)
** In the scene where the Secret Service counter-snipers attempt to get a sight on Leary, it is reported that it is too dark for them to see inside the elevator. In modern times (and certainly in the year the movie was released in and is set), Secret Service counter-snipers are equipped with night-vision goggles to allow them to see targets through darkness.
** Also, in the climatic scene where Leary is getting ready to shoot the President and Horrigan has figured out he's in the room, there's a drawn-out scene where Horrigan is trying to figure out what table he's at in order to apprehend him before he shoots the President. In reality, a scenario where there's a gunman in the area but their identity and location are unknown is something the Secret Service trains for. Upon entering the room, Horrigan would have yelled out the code phrase for this scenario, whereupon all the agents would have swarmed the President to shield him with their bodies while the rest ordered everyone to hit the floor.
*** In
the same "transaction."[[note]]Unless scene, after Leary assembles and loads his gun, he already has two, but that's not what Gibbons said.[[/note]] Also, they holds it in his hand with a napkin draped over it for concealment, then stands up to shake the President's hand. ''No one'' is allowed to approach or be near the President with their hands concealed. Period. As soon as he stood up, the Secret Service would have had their eyes on him. Seeing that he had his hands concealed would have meant at least two agents would be state crimes immediately in his face, hands on their pistols and he wouldn't be sent ordering him to Leavenworth (a federal prison). Of course, show his hands right now.
*** There's also no way Watts would have dismissed Frank telling him point blank that
the chief very assassin who's been stalking the President for weeks is present, no matter what personal or professional animosity there was.
* ''Film/JohnDoeVigilante'': The judge in John Doe's trial is wearing a black robe and no wig, and the barristers are wearing business suits. At a trial in an Australian Supreme Court, the judge should be wearing a red robe and full wig, and the barristers black robes and horsehair wigs.
* ''Film/JohnnyEnglish'': With respect to the (albeit unwritten) Constitution and the power of the Crown. In RealLife, you
could have just been saying that to pressure him into working for him.
** The NSA does
''not'' have agents get the Queen to abdicate with the stroke of a pen,[[note]]it requires an Act of all Parliaments in nations where she is head of state[[/note]] and whilst the bit where [[spoiler: all land in the field--they're strictly signals intelligence (phone calls, emails, that sort of thing). Non-military human intelligence country is technically the CIA's business.
* ''Film/IShotJesseJames'' features a gross misrepresentation of extradition law. Once Frank James (the brother of UsefulNotes/JesseJames) is acquitted of charges in Colorado, the jail immediately lets him go, even though they acknowledge he's wanted in other states like Kansas and Missouri. In reality, the Colorado authorities would’ve alerted the other states (telegrams were widespread by 1892, so there wouldn’t be a long delay) and kept Frank locked up until one
possession of the states contacted them about extradition via Crown and can be confiscated at will]] needs clarification,[[note]]and it would probably violate human rights law/treaties[[/note]] the U.S. Marshals. The only reason to let him go would've been if ''none'' of the other states wanted to try him, monarch has very little actual power, which is ''de facto'' exercised by their government. It also ignores historical precedent concerning [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Execution_of_Charles_I what happens to monarchs who try to exercise too much personal power]]. Of course all of this is (thankfully?) ignored in favor of RuleOfFunny and a good story (see below).
** There's also the notion that Mr. Sauvage only becomes King Pascal at the moment the crown touches his head, when actually (assuming that Elizabeth II's abdication and Pascal's claim to the throne are recognized), he would be monarch as soon as the abdication form was signed and Parliament has given consent. The coronation is just a ceremony.
** Furthermore, in real life a coronation takes more than a year to organise, rather than just days as this film suggests. Also, it
seems unlikely given him that a monarch would be allowed to quietly slip away to a castle in France so soon before getting crowned.[[note]]It is traditional for the monarch to spend the night before in the Speaker's apartment of the Palace of Westminster.[[/note]]
** Oh,
and his brother's notorious reputation. throughout the film, various characters consistently refer to "England" rather than "Britain". In particular they talk of Sauvage being "King of England", even though that title was abolished in 1707, when the crowns of England and Scotland were unified.
** In any case, even were Elizabeth to abdicate, Prince Charles would be next in line. If she were to renounce the throne for her descendants as well, the next in line would be David Armstrong-Jones, 2nd Earl of Snowden.[[note]]Son of Princess Margaret, the Queen's sister.[[/note]]



* ''Film/USMarshals'':
** Gerard gets in trouble with his boss for striking a suspect in handcuffs to subdue him during the opening sequence because he was attacking the arresting Marshals, and bit one. She acts like this was a breach of protocol which he has to apologize for publicly. However, what he did was completely appropriate in those circumstances.
** It's ignored here for RuleOfCool, but in real life, the FAA says that prisoners are not allowed to be chained to any part of an airplane.
** Also, when the Chinese assassin asks to use the toilet the guard says to hold it and that they will be landing in 20 minutes, but in reality guards are not allowed to tell any prisoner the time frame of any transport especially when it is a federal prisoner transport.
* ''Film/HarrysWar'': More than one example.
** During his speech after breaking into the talk show in a tank, Harry says that the Constitution doesn't authorize the IRS. Oh really, Harry? How about Article 1, Section 8, Clause 1: "The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States"
** And if that wasn't blatant enough, how about Amendment 16: "The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration."
** While it's true the Constitution doesn't specifically authorize an ''Internal Revenue Service'' to collect taxes, it's pretty blatant about the (nearly unlimited) taxing power it gives the federal government, and every court in the land agrees that an agency to enforce the federal tax laws is well within the rights of the Executive branch.
** Aunt Beverly claims that the Tax Court judges are all in the hip pockets of the IRS, since it's the IRS that pays their salaries (and can hit them with severe audits if they don't toe the line the IRS wants). In RealLife, many neutral parties have criticized the Tax Courts for being ''too soft'' on tax cheats out of judicial dislike for the IRS. Also their salaries are set by the Congress and paid by the taxpayer like all federal officials, which doesn't differ in amount from other judges. Punitive audits from the IRS of judges would also get them in a lot of trouble.
* ''Film/ShockCorridor'': The movie acts like the murderer has been nailed when Johnny beats him into a confession. In reality, that would be inadmissible in court. The only witness is also a delusional mental patient who thinks he's a little boy too most of the time. So it's likely the murderer would go free.
* ''Film/AMurderOfCrows'': The killer's family was killed by a drunk driver, who got off because police didn't read his {{Miranda rights}} correctly. However, drunk driving cases heavily involve physical evidence (breathalyzer, blood tests, etc.). It's thus very unlikely the whole case would hinge on any statement he made (which is all that Miranda applies to).
* ''Film/JohnnyEnglish'': With respect to the (albeit unwritten) Constitution and the power of the Crown. In RealLife, you could ''not'' get the Queen to abdicate with the stroke of a pen,[[note]]it requires an Act of all Parliaments in nations where she is head of state[[/note]] and whilst the bit where [[spoiler: all land in the country is technically the possession of the Crown and can be confiscated at will]] needs clarification,[[note]]and it would probably violate human rights law/treaties[[/note]] the monarch has very little actual power, which is ''de facto'' exercised by their government. It also ignores historical precedent concerning [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Execution_of_Charles_I what happens to monarchs who try to exercise too much personal power]]. Of course all of this is (thankfully?) ignored in favor of RuleOfFunny and a good story (see below).
** There's also the notion that Mr. Sauvage only becomes King Pascal at the moment the crown touches his head, when actually (assuming that Elizabeth II's abdication and Pascal's claim to the throne are recognized), he would be monarch as soon as the abdication form was signed and Parliament has given consent. The coronation is just a ceremony.
** Furthermore, in real life a coronation takes more than a year to organise, rather than just days as this film suggests. Also, it seems unlikely that a monarch would be allowed to quietly slip away to a castle in France so soon before getting crowned.[[note]]It is traditional for the monarch to spend the night before in the Speaker's apartment of the Palace of Westminster.[[/note]]
** Oh, and throughout the film, various characters consistently refer to "England" rather than "Britain". In particular they talk of Sauvage being "King of England", even though that title was abolished in 1707, when the crowns of England and Scotland were unified.
** In any case, even were Elizabeth to abdicate, Prince Charles would be next in line. If she were to renounce the throne for her descendants as well, the next in line would be David Armstrong-Jones, 2nd Earl of Snowden.[[note]]Son of Princess Margaret, the Queen's sister.[[/note]]
* ''Film/BodyOfEvidence'':
** It would be next-to-impossible to prove that Rebecca intentionally screwed the guy to death, something cited by numerous people in the film, and reflected in her acquittal. Even arresting her would be highly unlikely.
** During the trial, when she reveals that she caught her ex in bed with another man, he simply stands up and nods to confirm her story. That would never happen in RealLife. He'd be called back to the stand to testify again.
** Rebecca testifies, when even the worst defense attorney knows that having a defendant testifying is a bad idea. That said, Frank and the judge explicitly warn her against this, as they're obligated to do.

to:

* ''Film/USMarshals'':
** Gerard gets
''Film/{{Kimi}}'': After Angela incapacitates the hitmen in trouble her apartment, she finishes each of them off with his boss a nail gun to the head. [[KickThemWhileTheyAreDown She doesn't face any legal repercussions for striking committing lethal force on people who were no longer a suspect threat, and in handcuffs to subdue him during the opening sequence because he was two cases, clearly helpless.]] Even though they are in her home, attacking someone on the arresting Marshals, ground and bit one. She acts like this was a breach of protocol which he has helpless (let alone ''murdering them'') voids self-defence.
* ''Film/TheLimehouseGolem'': Lizzie is sentenced
to apologize for publicly. hang the every next day after she's convicted, necessitating then that Kildare race to get her pardoned. However, what he did was completely appropriate in those circumstances.
hangings could not be carried out until three weeks had passed, giving the defendant time to appeal (although this rarely worked).
* ''Film/LastOunceOfCourage'':
** It's ignored here for RuleOfCool, Hammerschmidt is implied to be either a civil rights lawyer or at the very least have some knowledge of the law, but in his accusations against Bob are ridiculously flimsy, and are limited to very broad claims like "breaking the law" or "violating the Constitution", without ever mentioning any specific law, article or amendment.
** Bob, who is also the Mayor of his town, is stated to have been "fired by the city council" following Hammerschmidt's revelation of his wartime snafu. In
real life, there is no such thing. Being elected officials, Mayors can only be removed via impeachment or a recall election.
** The church community center's cross got taken down sometime prior to
the FAA says film's present-day events because "it offended somebody," when in reality, no such incident would occur due to being an obvious violation of the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment.
** The film claims
that prisoners are government property is not allowed to be chained put up Christmas decorations (not even secular Christmas lights) because they're public property. In actuality, however, many cities both big and small put on Christmas decorations even including Nativity scenes. In fact as ''WebVideo/CinematicExcrement'' pointed out, this includes the city of San Jose, a major metropolitan city located in the San Francisco Bay Area region of northern California, which is one of the most stereotypically liberal states/regions one could possibly think of. The caveat is simply they have to allow for non-Christian displays too if someone wants them.
* ''Film/TheManFromEarth'': Will repeatedly threatens to have John involuntarily committed for a psychiatric evaluation if he doesn't admit he's making the whole story up. He'd have a lot of trouble convincing a judge to sign an order for involuntary commitment based on being told a story he doesn't like. John hasn't threatened anyone, committed
any part acts of an airplane.
** Also, when
violence, displayed any symptoms of mental illness, John isn't his patient, and he doesn't have any valid reason for having John committed. All John would have to do is look at the Chinese assassin asks to use the toilet the guard says to hold it judge and say it was just a story, and it probably wouldn't even get to that they will be landing in 20 minutes, but in reality guards are not allowed to tell any prisoner point. Basically, Will is an asshole.
* ''Film/MinorityReport'': There's no mention of
the time frame of any transport especially when it is a federal prisoner transport.
* ''Film/HarrysWar'': More than one example.
** During his speech after breaking into the talk show in a tank, Harry says that the
US Constitution doesn't authorize having changed to allow {{precrime arrest}}s and detentions. However, while it was authorized in Washington D.C. and a proposal for extending this further is scheduled to be voted on during the IRS. Oh really, Harry? How about Article 1, Section 8, Clause 1: "The Congress shall film, a constitutional amendment indeed would be necessary. Otherwise, arresting a person for something they have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay not yet done, let alone detaining the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall person afterward indefinitely, would be uniform throughout the United States"
** And if that wasn't blatant enough, how about Amendment 16: "The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration."
** While it's true the Constitution doesn't specifically authorize an ''Internal Revenue Service'' to collect taxes, it's pretty blatant about the (nearly unlimited) taxing power it gives the federal government, and every court in the land agrees that an agency to enforce the federal tax laws is well within the rights of the Executive branch.
** Aunt Beverly claims that the Tax Court judges are all in the hip pockets of the IRS, since it's the IRS that pays their salaries (and can hit them with severe audits if they don't toe the line the IRS wants). In RealLife, many neutral parties have criticized the Tax Courts for being ''too soft'' on tax cheats out of judicial dislike for the IRS. Also their salaries are set by the Congress and paid by the taxpayer like all federal officials, which doesn't differ in amount from other judges. Punitive audits from the IRS of judges
completely unconstitutional. This would also get them in a lot of trouble.
* ''Film/ShockCorridor'': The movie acts like
be necessary to have the murderer has been nailed when Johnny beats him into a confession. In reality, that would be inadmissible in court. The only witness is also a delusional mental patient precogs, who thinks he's a little boy too most of are slaves (even if not called by the time. So it's likely name) and mass surveillance/searches which we see (the film does at least hang a lampshade on the murderer would go free.
* ''Film/AMurderOfCrows'': The killer's family was killed by
constitutionality or lack thereof of {{precrime arrest}}s: there's a drunk driver, who got off because police didn't read his {{Miranda rights}} correctly. However, drunk driving cases heavily involve physical evidence (breathalyzer, blood tests, etc.). It's thus very unlikely the whole case would hinge on any statement he made (which is all that Miranda applies to).
* ''Film/JohnnyEnglish'': With respect
brief reference to the (albeit unwritten) Constitution ACLU making trouble for the D.C. pilot program, and the power process is overseen by a pair of the Crown. In RealLife, you could ''not'' get the Queen to abdicate with the stroke of a pen,[[note]]it requires an Act of all Parliaments in nations where she is head of state[[/note]] and whilst the bit where [[spoiler: all land in the country is technically the possession of the Crown and can be confiscated at will]] needs clarification,[[note]]and it would probably violate human rights law/treaties[[/note]] the monarch has very little actual power, which is ''de facto'' exercised by their government. It also ignores historical precedent concerning [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Execution_of_Charles_I what happens to monarchs who try to exercise too much personal power]]. Of course all of this is (thankfully?) ignored in favor of RuleOfFunny and a good story (see below).
** There's also the notion that Mr. Sauvage only becomes King Pascal at the moment the crown touches his head, when actually (assuming that Elizabeth II's abdication and Pascal's claim to the throne are recognized), he would be monarch as soon as the abdication form was signed and Parliament has given consent. The coronation is just a ceremony.
** Furthermore, in real life a coronation takes more than a year to organise, rather than just days as this film suggests. Also, it seems unlikely that a monarch would be allowed to quietly slip away to a castle in France so soon before getting crowned.[[note]]It is traditional for the monarch to spend the night before in the Speaker's apartment of the Palace of Westminster.[[/note]]
** Oh, and throughout the film, various characters consistently refer to "England" rather than "Britain". In particular they talk of Sauvage being "King of England", even though that title was abolished in 1707, when the crowns of England and Scotland were unified.
** In any case, even were Elizabeth to abdicate, Prince Charles would be next in line. If she were to renounce the throne for her descendants as well, the next in line would be David Armstrong-Jones, 2nd Earl of Snowden.[[note]]Son of Princess Margaret, the Queen's sister.[[/note]]
* ''Film/BodyOfEvidence'':
** It would be next-to-impossible to prove that Rebecca intentionally screwed the guy to death, something cited by numerous people in the film, and reflected in her acquittal. Even arresting her would be highly unlikely.
** During the trial, when she reveals that she caught her ex in bed with another man, he simply stands up and nods to confirm her story. That would never happen in RealLife. He'd be called back to the stand to testify again.
** Rebecca testifies, when even the worst defense attorney knows that having a defendant testifying is a bad idea. That said, Frank and the judge explicitly warn her against this, as they're obligated to do.
judges).



* ''Film/IAmSam'': In reality it's unlikely Sam would lose custody entirely, since he is neither abusing or neglecting Lucy, though he might be required to have supervision from a social worker. Also these proceedings are generally much more informal. The state attorney verbally attacking Sam on the stand is also inappropriate and a judge likely would not permit it, particularly given his mental disability (it's akin to him dressing down a child).
* ''{{Film/Watchmen}}'': Like in the original comic book, Rorschach was sent to Sing Sing before even being tried for his crimes, while in reality he would be held at Riker's Island until trial. He also would likely be kept isolated from other inmates as a notorious vigilante crime fighter, which is not only for his protection but to avoid an incident like in the cafeteria.

to:

* ''Film/IAmSam'': ''Film/MostWanted'': US Army General Woodward takes over the investigation into the murder of the First Lady by the President's order. No one mentions the Posse Comitatus Act that prevents the military from law enforcement absent exceptions that don't apply here, and the LAPD meekly complies in this (when real life civilian/state police would be up in arms if this happened). Interestingly, it was accurate until then with showing that the murder is under LAPD jurisdiction, since "First Lady" isn't a federal position, just the honorary title a President's wife is given and so the crime is covered by California state law (whereas murdering federal officials is covered by the US Code).
* ''Film/AMurderOfCrows'': The killer's family was killed by a drunk driver, who got off because police didn't read his MirandaRights correctly. However, drunk driving cases heavily involve physical evidence (breathalyzer, blood tests, etc.). It's thus very unlikely the whole case would hinge on any statement he made (which is all that Miranda applies to).
* ''Film/MyDaysOfMercy'': The first prisoner executed (who killed Mercy's dad's partner) is said to have been mentally disabled. However, the US Supreme Court has ruled that such prisoners cannot be executed.
* ''Film/NationalLampoonsVacation'' and ''Film/NationalLampoonsChristmasVacation'' both showcase a pitch-perfect example of the "charges dropped, get-out-of-jail-free" bullet point, even with the fact Clark Griswold twice (deliberately in the first film, accidentally in the second… [[RhetoricalQuestionBlunder at least by Clark]]) took someone hostage and required a SWATTeam intervention, a fact that neither the states of California ([[MrAltDisney Roy Walley notwithstanding]]) or Illinois would take lightly.
* ''Film/NineLives'': Executives can't be summarily fired, since their employment is under contract and they will have clauses that restrict this. A majority shareholder also can't do things which damage the minority shareholders' stake in the company, as continuing the tower construction would.
* ''Film/{{Peppermint}}'': Let's just say that the hearing Riley takes place in where her family's killers get off bears absolutely zero resemblance to how an actual hearing would go. But without it [[RuleOfDrama we wouldn't have a plot]]. It's also somewhat justified as the judge is in their pocket. It's also implied that the prosecutor is too, along with the police, or are at least afraid of opposing the cartel.
* ''Film/{{Prisoners}}'': Loki not working with a partner and walking into dangerous situations without calling for backup first is not in line with actual police procedure. But it does make for good drama.
* ''Film/Rampage2009'':
In reality one of his political rants, Bill claims that firearms purchases do not mandate background checks, and cites this as proof of the gun industry's greed making mass murderers such as himself possible. In truth, this gets complicated. Licensed firearms businesses (where, obviously, the overwhelming majority of gun sales take place) or "[=FFLs=]" are obligated under federal law to perform background checks on ALL their customers. No matter the location--there is no such thing as an internet or gun show "loophole" for any lawful purchase. ''Private'' purchases, where one person might decide to sell a gun to one of their friends living in the same state, do not. If it's unlikely Sam would lose custody entirely, since he is neither abusing or neglecting Lucy, though he might be required to have supervision from a social worker. Also these proceedings are generally much more informal. The across state attorney verbally attacking Sam lines, an FFL will have to act as a middleman. Oft-repeated talking points such as "universal background checks" effectively just amounts to taxing private individuals who probably cannot afford such a burden, in addition to possibly trespassing on the stand is also inappropriate and a judge likely would not permit it, particularly given his mental disability (it's akin to him dressing down a child).
* ''{{Film/Watchmen}}'': Like in the original comic book, Rorschach was sent to Sing Sing before even being tried for his crimes, while in reality he would be held at Riker's Island until trial. He also would likely be kept isolated from
privacy rights. In other inmates as a notorious vigilante crime fighter, which words, Bill's statement is not only for his protection ''technically'' (kind of) correct, but to avoid an incident like in the cafeteria.[[MetaphoricallyTrue highly misleading]].



* ''Film/GodsNotDeadALightInDarkness'':
** The film acknowledges that there's no basis for subpoenaing sermons, as Dave is quickly released after the order's ruled unconstitutional. However, it's never explained just ''why'' they were subpoenaed in the first place-you need a reason for this. Further, although eminent domain can be used on a church, there is no way they could legally obtain a demolition order on the property before it was actually confiscated. If this had gone through, the university would have had huge liability.
** There's no evidence for Adam's arrest either-anonymous accusations or mere suspicion won't cut it. Without that to begin with, even a later confession wouldn't be admissible. Assuming they had evidence though, it wouldn't be under Dave's control whether the charges got dropped-that is a decision for the prosecutor. Given that a man died, it's also very unlikely they would if a case existed (Adam could be facing FelonyMurder, or at least manslaughter).
** When a church on the grounds of a college burns down, the college attempts to use eminent domain to seize it and tear it down. Only a city or state government would have that power, not a school (the film claims it was given to the university, but that wouldn't happen). Plus, it was on their grounds to begin with, meaning they technically already owned the building and thus have no need to seize it.
* ''Film/TheManFromEarth'': Will repeatedly threatens to have John involuntarily committed for a psychiatric evaluation if he doesn't admit he's making the whole story up. He'd have a lot of trouble convincing a judge to sign an order for involuntary commitment based on being told a story he doesn't like. John hasn't threatened anyone, committed any acts of violence, displayed any symptoms of mental illness, John isn't his patient, and he doesn't have any valid reason for having John committed. All John would have to do is look at the judge and say it was just a story, and it probably wouldn't even get to that point. Basically, Will is an asshole.
* ''{{Film/Fargo}}'': Since it involved the death of a state trooper, the Minnesota State Police should have been investigating the murders.[[note]]Though the State Police ''do'' get involved, as it's implied Marge and Lou are simply first responders — though they're mostly out of the picture until the later half of the film.[[/note]]
* ''Film/NationalLampoonsVacation'' and ''Film/NationalLampoonsChristmasVacation'' both showcase a pitch-perfect example of the "charges dropped, get-out-of-jail-free" bullet point, even with the fact Clark Griswold twice (deliberately in the first film, accidentally in the second… [[RhetoricalQuestionBlunder at least by Clark]]) took someone hostage and required a SWATTeam intervention, a fact that neither the states of California ([[MrAltDisney Roy Walley notwithstanding]]) or Illinois would take lightly.
* ''Film/NineLives'': Executives can't be summarily fired, since their employment is under contract and they will have clauses that restrict this. A majority shareholder also can't do things which damage the minority shareholders' stake in the company, as continuing the tower construction would.
* ''Film/GrossePointeBlank'': The NSA does not have field agents. Also, they're not even supposed to do anything domestically. Their job is to monitor foreign communications. FBI agents would be the ones after hitmen like Martin here.
* The premise of the comedy ''Serving Sara'' is that Sara will be massively disadvantaged if her soon-to-be-ex-husband Gordon manages to initiate their divorce in Texas, as opposed to her having it heard in New York. While it would take an actual lawyer to evaluate which state's law would be more beneficial to her in this specific instance, the movie's assertion that Texas divorce laws were written by "good old boys" to screw over ex-wives isn't true. Texas is a community property state, giving Sara automatic ownership of half the property accumulated during the marriage - there's a very good chance that she'd be better off there.
* ''Film/DarkPhoenix'': Magneto's right-the US military can't simply come into Genosha without permission. If it's in the US, they're forbidden to carry out police functions by the Posse Comitatus Act, plus they would need a search warrant. Assuming it's not (though the land was "given to them by the US government", which makes it unclear) this would be a violation of their sovereignty that could be taken as an act of war.
* ''Film/BeyondReAnimator'': A prison warden does not have the ability to increase an inmate's sentence.
* ''Film/TheWickerMan2006'': Malus is operating outside of his jurisdiction, as he is a member of the California Highway Patrol and Summersisle is just a short distance away from {{UsefulNotes/Seattle}}.
* ''Film/EyeForAnEye'': The undercover agent who threatens Karen with life in prison if she kills Doob. In reality, Karen would probably get off completely or lightly, courtesy of an endless range of potential jurors -- and even some law enforcement -- who'd sympathize with her. Justified as the agent is attempting to intimidate her into giving up the idea and correctly states the punishment, rather than likelihood of it actually happening.
* ''Film/MyDaysOfMercy'': The first prisoner executed (who killed Mercy's dad's partner) is said to have been mentally disabled. However, the US Supreme Court has ruled that such prisoners cannot be executed.
* ''Film/ASimpleFavor'': In reality, [[spoiler:Emily]] almost definitely would get life without parole if she had been convicted of two premeditated murders plus attempted murder, not simply twenty years.
* ''Film/DayOfDefense'': Everything about the Mormon elders' prosecution is completely illegal, grossly violating the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. The film at first treats it like the Christian Town Council (CTC) is just illegally running missionaries from religions they don't approve of out, which is plausible. However, when no one brings up that fact (including the Mormon defendants and judge who's semi-sympathetic to them) it beggars belief. In reality, if a town's government did this in the US, they would be quickly sued and possibly federally prosecuted. The kind of laws that it portrays were abolished in the early 1800s. A ''lot'' of the film reviews note this. There are also some CourtroomAntics and other common tropes, but that's fairly standard in films with court scenes.
* ''Film/MinorityReport'': There's no mention of the US Constitution having changed to allow {{precrime arrest}}s and detentions. However, while it was authorized in Washington D.C. and a proposal for extending this further is scheduled to be voted on during the film, a constitutional amendment indeed would be necessary. Otherwise, arresting a person for something they have not yet done, let alone detaining the person afterward indefinitely, would be completely unconstitutional. This would also be necessary to have the precogs, who are slaves (even if not called by the name) and mass surveillance/searches which we see (the film does at least hang a lampshade on the constitutionality or lack thereof of {{precrime arrest}}s: there's a brief reference to the ACLU making trouble for the D.C. pilot program, and the process is overseen by a pair of judges).
* ''Film/Rampage2009'': In one of his political rants, Bill claims that firearms purchases do not mandate background checks, and cites this as proof of the gun industry's greed making mass murderers such as himself possible. In truth, this gets complicated. Licensed firearms businesses (where, obviously, the overwhelming majority of gun sales take place) or "[=FFLs=]" are obligated under federal law to perform background checks on ALL their customers. No matter the location--there is no such thing as an internet or gun show "loophole" for any lawful purchase. ''Private'' purchases, where one person might decide to sell a gun to one of their friends living in the same state, do not. If it's across state lines, an FFL will have to act as a middleman. Oft-repeated talking points such as "universal background checks" effectively just amounts to taxing private individuals who probably cannot afford such a burden, in addition to possibly trespassing on privacy rights. In other words, Bill's statement is ''technically'' (kind of) correct, but [[MetaphoricallyTrue highly misleading]].
* ''Film/GoldThroughTheFire'': The film claims US law bars ''any'' preaching or even expressing religious beliefs in public schools, with Peter being disciplined for this. However, that isn't the case. Only the teachers are forbidden to do this. The students are free to, provided this doesn't rise to disruption or harassment. While of course violations such as the film shows occur, this isn't in compliance with the law: the case thus wouldn't set a precedent as is portrayed. It's also stated separation of church and state isn't from the Founding Fathers or a legitimate part of the law. UsefulNotes/ThomasJefferson, a Founding Father, in fact coined it, and it's also been a well-established legal doctrine for years, very often because ''Christians'' brought cases over things such as being taught a version of the Bible or doctrines they disagreed with by a public school, not just anti-religious people (unlike what the film implies).



* ''Film/TheAssignment2016'': Dr. Rachel Jane is said to have been ruled incompetent to stand trial, so she's put into a mental institution instead, where a psychiatrist evaluates her to see if she's become competent (he decides she's not after attacking him). We see no indication she would be incompetent though, which simply means that they are able to understand the proceedings and aid in their defense. Jane is quite intelligent, so there's every indication she could do both of those things. Being ruled incompetent usually requires that a defendant be severely mentally impaired from disability, a mental illness, brain damage or senility.

to:

* ''Film/TheAssignment2016'': Dr. Rachel Jane The premise of the comedy ‘’Film/ServingSara’’ is said to have been ruled incompetent to stand trial, so she's put into a mental institution instead, where a psychiatrist evaluates that Sara will be massively disadvantaged if her soon-to-be-ex-husband Gordon manages to see if she's become competent (he decides she's not after attacking him). We see no indication she initiate their divorce in Texas, as opposed to her having it heard in New York. While it would take an actual lawyer to evaluate which state's law would be incompetent though, which simply means more beneficial to her in this specific instance, the movie's assertion that they are able Texas divorce laws were written by "good old boys" to understand screw over ex-wives isn't true. Texas is a community property state, giving Sara automatic ownership of half the proceedings and aid in their defense. Jane is quite intelligent, so property accumulated during the marriage - there's every indication she could do both of those things. Being ruled incompetent usually requires a very good chance that a defendant she'd be severely mentally impaired from disability, better off there.
* ''Film/ShockCorridor'': The movie acts like the murderer has been nailed when Johnny beats him into
a confession. In reality, that would be inadmissible in court. The only witness is also a delusional mental illness, brain damage patient who thinks he's a little boy too most of the time. So it's likely the murderer would go free.
* ''Film/ShotCaller'': While Jacob might have been given a 16-month sentence for what he did, it is extremely implausible for somebody with his profile (stockbroker, family man, and first-time offender with a DUI manslaughter conviction) to immediately be placed in a maximum-security prison like the one Jacob goes to. He might even get probation
or senility.a suspended sentence, especially as he'd be able to get a good defense lawyer. Even if sentenced to prison, this would almost certainly be minimum or medium security, and he'd only get in maximum for breaking rules. Then [[RuleOfDrama there would be no plot of course]], but they could have had a more plausible scenario for this.
* ''Film/ASimpleFavor'': In reality, [[spoiler:Emily]] almost definitely would get life without parole if she had been convicted of two premeditated murders plus attempted murder, not simply twenty years.
* ''Film/TangoAndCash'': The protagonists are prosecuted on a charge of murdering an undercover FBI agent, a federal crime. However, it was explicitly done by the LA county District Attorney, who only has jurisdiction over state crimes. Later though it's said they're sent to a federal prison.
* ''Film/ThreeBillboardsOutsideEbbingMissouri'':
** At one point Dixon [[spoiler:beats Red to a pulp and throws him out of ''a second story window'']] in front of a street full of witnesses, including [[spoiler:the new chief of police.]] His only punishment is [[spoiler:getting fired]] instead of, you know, [[spoiler:being immediately arrested for assault and attempted murder.]]
** When the [[spoiler: new chief]] walks in and introduces himself to the assembled Ebbing Police, the desk sergeant asks him to prove who he is. The [[spoiler: chief]] acts like this an absurd request and doesn't even bother to show them his badge. Somewhat justified in that he had just seen [[spoiler: Dixon violently assault two people, and wasn't particularly impressed with the other cops, [[PoliceAreUseless who were actively ignoring it.]]]]



* ''Film/AugustRush'':
** Lyla's father presumably paid a lawyer a large sum of money in order to forge Lyla's signature on the adoption paperwork, but for a lawyer to go along with this plan would be highly unethical and could get them disbarred (not that such a thing is unknown, it just would be less likely).
** It's unlikely that Evan, a healthy newborn, would be placed in a group home.
* ''Film/HolmesAndWatson'': Moriarty's trial resembles nothing that has ever happened in a British courtroom. The judge wielding a gavel is just the beginning of the problems. Later, Dr. Watson is arrested and then sentenced to hang without any trial occurring in between.
* ''Film/DeathWish2018'': Due to the Firearm Owners Protection Act, passed in 1986, it would have been very difficult and expensive for Kersey to legally obtain a fully automatic rifle.
* ''{{Film/Abduction}}'': Nathan's birth certificate says "State of Pennsylvania", but Pennsylvania is a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commonwealth#U.S._states Commonwealth]]. Also, Nathan rides around on his motorcycle without a helmet - but PA laws say you ''must'' wear one until you are 21 years of age. Looking that young, he would be stopped for sure.
* ''Film/CharliesAngels2019'': Brok's corporate security forces in his Hamburg facility carry handguns. Given Germany's very restrictive gun laws, it's unlikely that a privately owned company like his would've been given permission to arm its personnel in real life.
* ''Film/TangoAndCash'': The protagonists are prosecuted on a charge of murdering an undercover FBI agent, a federal crime. However, it was explicitly done by the LA county District Attorney, who only has jurisdiction over state crimes. Later though it's said they're sent to a federal prison.
* ''Film/ThreeBillboardsOutsideEbbingMissouri'':
** At one point Dixon [[spoiler:beats Red to a pulp and throws him out of ''a second story window'']] in front of a street full of witnesses, including [[spoiler:the new chief of police.]] His only punishment is [[spoiler:getting fired]] instead of, you know, [[spoiler:being immediately arrested for assault and attempted murder.]]
** When the [[spoiler: new chief]] walks in and introduces himself to the assembled Ebbing Police, the desk sergeant asks him to prove who he is. The [[spoiler: chief]] acts like this an absurd request and doesn't even bother to show them his badge. Somewhat justified in that he had just seen [[spoiler: Dixon violently assault two people, and wasn't particularly impressed with the other cops, [[PoliceAreUseless who were actively ignoring it.]]]]
* ''Film/Glass2019'':
** Dr. Staple leads the police to the Overseer and the Horde, has them stunned unconscious and dragged off to an insane asylum under her care with absolutely no trial or lawyers or any due process, and not even the Overseer's son (who, granted, might be worried about being labeled an accomplice) seeks any legal recourse other than going to the doctor and pleading her to let his dad go. [[spoiler:Granted, the existence of the Shamrock conspiracy might help explain this, as any judges or lawyers might be in on it, but given that "David Dunn" is a local hero even outside his secret identity and nobody seems to even think about the plainly criminal lengths Dr. Staple went to capture and detain him, it still fits this trope.]]
** [[spoiler: Her decision to give Mr. Glass a lobotomy is completely unethical and illegal as well, but again the Shamrock conspiracy would mean that legality wasn't high on her list of priorities; the bigger issue is that nobody else, including the seemingly ignorant staff at the hospital, call her out on this.]]
* ''Film/TheEigerSanction'': Hemlock says the germ warfare formula is against the Geneva Convention, which covers the treatment of prisoners of war. Presumably he's referring to the 1925 Geneva Protocol, but that only bans the use of such weapons in warfare, not their development or stockpiling.
* ''Film/TheHitman'': It would not be legal for a police officer to work undercover as a ''contract killer'', no matter how much of a CowboyCop he may be. Even if he went rogue, he'd be arrested as soon as he got in contact with his bosses again.
* ''Film/TheLimehouseGolem'': Lizzie is sentenced to hang the every next day after she's convicted, necessitating then that Kildare race to get her pardoned. However, hangings could not be carried out until three weeks had passed, giving the defendant time to appeal (although this rarely worked).
* ''Film/LastOunceOfCourage'':
** Hammerschmidt is implied to be either a civil rights lawyer or at the very least have some knowledge of the law, but his accusations against Bob are ridiculously flimsy, and are limited to very broad claims like "breaking the law" or "violating the Constitution", without ever mentioning any specific law, article or amendment.
** Bob, who is also the Mayor of his town, is stated to have been "fired by the city council" following Hammerschmidt's revelation of his wartime snafu. In real life, there is no such thing. Being elected officials, Mayors can only be removed via impeachment or a recall election.
** The church community center's cross got taken down sometime prior to the film's present-day events because "it offended somebody," when in reality, no such incident would occur due to being an obvious violation of the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment.
** The film claims that government property is not allowed to put up Christmas decorations (not even secular Christmas lights) because they're public property. In actuality, however, many cities both big and small put on Christmas decorations even including Nativity scenes. In fact as ''WebVideo/CinematicExcrement'' pointed out, this includes the city of San Jose, a major metropolitan city located in the San Francisco Bay Area region of northern California, which is one of the most stereotypically liberal states/regions one could possibly think of. The caveat is simply they have to allow for non-Christian displays too if someone wants them.
* ''Film/{{Peppermint}}'': Let's just say that the hearing Riley takes place in where her family's killers get off bears absolutely zero resemblance to how an actual hearing would go. But without it [[RuleOfDrama we wouldn't have a plot]]. It's also somewhat justified as the judge is in their pocket. It's also implied that the prosecutor is too, along with the police, or are at least afraid of opposing the cartel.
* ''Film/AdamsRib'': The judge makes Lance Ito look like a stern model of jurisprudence, with his decision to tolerate Amanda's ridiculous defense of calling in random women to demonstrate how women are equal to men. It's also not very likely that married couples would be allowed to represent opposite sides of a criminal case. Further, pointing out the hypocrisy regarding men getting off for shooting their cheating wives vs the opposite not being true, while a valid point, is not really a defense to attempted murder. Her client did it, even if sympathetic, and she's essentially trying to get jury nullification. This isn't allowed to argue for.
* ''Film/{{Gothika}}'': The end of the film shows that [[spoiler: both Miranda and Chloe are free, despite Chloe murdering her stepfather and Miranda murdering her husband ''and'' the local police chief. Even if their targets were [[AssholeVictim assholes]], the courts '''''really''''' frown on vigilante justice. At least in the chief's case, Miranda could argue self-defense, and there's a plausible InsanityDefense as well (a rarity in fiction) for both his and Doug's murder given that she actually HAS been institutionalized in a BedlamHouse already and diagnosed as psychotic... which, if successful, would mean she goes right back to the asylum she just escaped from.]]
* ''Film/InTheLineOfFire'': Despite the Secret Service consultation, some errors show up:
** Lilly's gown during the party scene would be inappropriate for a female Secret Service agent, as it would prevent her from performing her duties should there be an attempt on the President's life. In those situations female agents instead wear dress pants and more practical shoes. (With the gown, there is also the problem of where to hide the service weapon.)
** In the scene where the Secret Service counter-snipers attempt to get a sight on Leary, it is reported that it is too dark for them to see inside the elevator. In modern times (and certainly in the year the movie was released in and is set), Secret Service counter-snipers are equipped with night-vision goggles to allow them to see targets through darkness.
** Also, in the climatic scene where Leary is getting ready to shoot the President and Horrigan has figured out he's in the room, there's a drawn-out scene where Horrigan is trying to figure out what table he's at in order to apprehend him before he shoots the President. In reality, a scenario where there's a gunman in the area but their identity and location are unknown is something the Secret Service trains for. Upon entering the room, Horrigan would have yelled out the code phrase for this scenario, whereupon all the agents would have swarmed the President to shield him with their bodies while the rest ordered everyone to hit the floor.
*** In the same scene, after Leary assembles and loads his gun, he holds it in his hand with a napkin draped over it for concealment, then stands up to shake the President's hand. ''No one'' is allowed to approach or be near the President with their hands concealed. Period. As soon as he stood up, the Secret Service would have had their eyes on him. Seeing that he had his hands concealed would have meant at least two agents would be immediately in his face, hands on their pistols and ordering him to show his hands right now.
*** There's also no way Watts would have dismissed Frank telling him point blank that the very assassin who's been stalking the President for weeks is present, no matter what personal or professional animosity there was.
* ''Film/InTheBedroom'': The prosecutor tells Matt and Ruth that because Natalie did not explicitly ''see'' Richard shoot Frank, he'll only get charged with manslaughter, nor murder, and serve five to ten years at most. This is pretty ridiculous, as she'd seen plenty, like Richard breaking in, then having the murder weapon right in his hand with Frank dead on the ground. People have been convicted of murder without an eyewitness many times, or even a body sometimes-this would be far more than enough to prove the case along with his clear motive. Unless there was some problem with her testimony or the forensic evidence from the gun (none's mentioned) this would be open and shut. He might still have a plea deal, but it would likely be to second degree murder, with a much longer sentence than is mentioned. Instead, this inspires Matt to go vigilante on Richard so he won't get off so easily, which ends in Richard's murder.
* ''Film/{{Prisoners}}'': Loki not working with a partner and walking into dangerous situations without calling for backup first is not in line with actual police procedure. But it does make for good drama.
* ''Film/IdentityThief'':
** In real life, even if a criminal escapes to another state the police can just call that state's police and get them to arrest them. And since Diana's crimes (identity theft and wire fraud) are federal it should be a job for the FBI anyway.
** Sandy would also have a pretty easy wrongful dismissal claim against his employer if they truly let him go because of a police mix-up.
* ''Film/ShotCaller'': While Jacob might have been given a 16-month sentence for what he did, it is extremely implausible for somebody with his profile (stockbroker, family man, and first-time offender with a DUI manslaughter conviction) to immediately be placed in a maximum-security prison like the one Jacob goes to. He might even get probation or a suspended sentence, especially as he'd be able to get a good defense lawyer. Even if sentenced to prison, this would almost certainly be minimum or medium security, and he'd only get in maximum for breaking rules. Then [[RuleOfDrama there would be no plot of course]], but they could have had a more plausible scenario for this.
* ''Film/MostWanted'': US Army General Woodward takes over the investigation into the murder of the First Lady by the President's order. No one mentions the Posse Comitatus Act that prevents the military from law enforcement absent exceptions that don't apply here, and the LAPD meekly complies in this (when real life civilian/state police would be up in arms if this happened). Interestingly, it was accurate until then with showing that the murder is under LAPD jurisdiction, since "First Lady" isn't a federal position, just the honorary title a President's wife is given and so the crime is covered by California state law (whereas murdering federal officials is covered by the US Code).

to:

* ''Film/AugustRush'':
''Film/USMarshals'':
** Lyla's father presumably paid a lawyer a large sum of money Gerard gets in order to forge Lyla's signature on the adoption paperwork, but for a lawyer to go along trouble with his boss for striking a suspect in handcuffs to subdue him during the opening sequence because he was attacking the arresting Marshals, and bit one. She acts like this plan would be highly unethical and could get them disbarred (not was a breach of protocol which he has to apologize for publicly. However, what he did was completely appropriate in those circumstances.
** It's ignored here for RuleOfCool, but in real life, the FAA says
that such a thing is unknown, it just would prisoners are not allowed to be less likely).chained to any part of an airplane.
** It's unlikely Also, when the Chinese assassin asks to use the toilet the guard says to hold it and that Evan, they will be landing in 20 minutes, but in reality guards are not allowed to tell any prisoner the time frame of any transport especially when it is a healthy newborn, federal prisoner transport.
* ''Film/TheVerdict'':
** Galvin could have been sanctioned by the court for failing to communicate the settlement offer to the family, and could have additionally been held liable for malpractice. Courts have consistently held that lawyers have a duty to communicate all settlement offers to their clients before accepting or declining such offers. Galvin was not disciplined in this case, although he was confronted by his clients for not telling them about the offer of $210,000 that the Archdiocese had made.
** The defense should have been able to win at the close of Galvin's case by making a motion for "judgment as a matter of law" (i.e. the judge ruling in their favor as no rational jury could find against them). However that doesn't happen.
** Judge Hoyle incorrectly rules that Nurse Kaitlin Price's testimony is inadmissible hearsay, though it falls under the "admissions" exception. Topping it off, the "best evidence" rule (that when witnesses testify to the content of a document, it must be produced) gets utterly bungled. The document is a photocopy that Nurse Price brings in showing that she altered an admissions form at Towler's order to cover up his negligence. To explain, the form is a ''photocopy'' of the original, and the best evidence rule requires that the original document must be what's entered into evidence. The real problem is that the best evidence rule allows the exclusion of a copy of a writing; it does not bar a witness from testifying about what she wrote in the original document. Galvin does not even attempt to offer the document into evidence. Rather, he just asks the witness what she wrote in the document. Furthermore, there is an exception to the best evidence rule: when the original is unavailable owing to a bad act by the party against whom the copy
would be placed in a group home.
* ''Film/HolmesAndWatson'': Moriarty's trial resembles nothing
offered. Here, the witness is claiming that has ever happened in a British courtroom. The judge wielding a gavel is just she altered the beginning original document under the threat of the problems. Later, defendant, but made a photocopy of the original before she did so. So in real life, the copy would almost certainly be admissible. As for the hearsay issue, while the admissions exception would apply to Towler's out-of-court statement to Price, the statement was not hearsay to begin with, because it was not being offered to prove the content of the statement; whether Dr. Watson is arrested and then sentenced to hang without any trial occurring in between.
* ''Film/DeathWish2018'': Due to the Firearm Owners Protection Act, passed in 1986, it
Towler would have been very difficult and expensive actually had Nurse Price fired for Kersey refusing to legally obtain a fully automatic rifle.
* ''{{Film/Abduction}}'': Nathan's birth certificate says "State
alter the admissions form is completely irrelevant to Galvin's case. It is only hearsay when the out-of-court statement is offered as evidence for the truth of Pennsylvania", but Pennsylvania is the statement.
** Judge Hoyle, who was obviously in the defense's pocket, could have issued
a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commonwealth#U.S._states Commonwealth]]. Also, Nathan rides around on his motorcycle without a helmet - but PA laws say you ''must'' wear one until you are 21 years of age. Looking that young, he would be stopped for sure.
* ''Film/CharliesAngels2019'': Brok's corporate security forces in his Hamburg facility carry handguns. Given Germany's very restrictive gun laws, it's unlikely that a privately owned company like his would've been given permission to arm its personnel in real life.
* ''Film/TangoAndCash'': The protagonists are prosecuted on a charge of murdering an undercover FBI agent, a federal crime. However, it was explicitly done by
org/wiki/Judgment_notwithstanding_verdict judgment notwithstanding verdict]] nullifying the LA county District Attorney, who jury's decision, if only has jurisdiction over state crimes. Later though it's said they're sent to a federal prison.
* ''Film/ThreeBillboardsOutsideEbbingMissouri'':
** At one point Dixon [[spoiler:beats Red to a pulp and throws him out of ''a second story window'']] in front of a street full of witnesses, including [[spoiler:the new chief of police.]] His only punishment is [[spoiler:getting fired]] instead of, you know, [[spoiler:being immediately arrested
Concannon had asked for assault and attempted murder.]]
** When the [[spoiler: new chief]] walks in and introduces himself to the assembled Ebbing Police, the desk sergeant asks him to prove who he is. The [[spoiler: chief]] acts like this an absurd request and doesn't even bother to show them his badge. Somewhat justified in that he had just seen [[spoiler: Dixon violently assault two people, and wasn't particularly impressed with the other cops, [[PoliceAreUseless who were actively ignoring
it.]]]]
* ''Film/Glass2019'':
** Dr. Staple leads the police to the Overseer and the Horde, has them stunned unconscious and dragged off to an insane asylum under her care with absolutely no trial or lawyers or any due process, and not even the Overseer's son (who, granted, might be worried about being labeled an accomplice) seeks any legal recourse other than going to the doctor and pleading her to let his dad go. [[spoiler:Granted, the existence of the Shamrock conspiracy might help explain this, as any judges or lawyers might be in on it, but given that "David Dunn" is a local hero even outside his secret identity and nobody seems to even think about the plainly criminal lengths Dr. Staple went to capture and detain him, it still fits this trope.]]
** [[spoiler: Her decision to give Mr. Glass a lobotomy is completely unethical and illegal as well, but again the Shamrock conspiracy would mean that legality wasn't high on her list of priorities; the bigger issue is that nobody else, including the seemingly ignorant staff at the hospital, call her out on this.]]
* ''Film/TheEigerSanction'': Hemlock says the germ warfare formula is against the Geneva Convention, which covers the treatment of prisoners of war. Presumably he's referring to the 1925 Geneva Protocol, but that only bans the use of such weapons in warfare, not their development or stockpiling.
* ''Film/TheHitman'': It would not be legal for a police officer to work undercover as a ''contract killer'', no matter how much of a CowboyCop he may be. Even if he went rogue, he'd be arrested as soon as he got in contact with his bosses again.
* ''Film/TheLimehouseGolem'': Lizzie is sentenced to hang the every next day after she's convicted, necessitating then that Kildare race to get her pardoned. However, hangings could not be carried out until three weeks had passed, giving the defendant time to appeal (although this rarely worked).
* ''Film/LastOunceOfCourage'':
** Hammerschmidt is implied to be either a civil rights lawyer or at the very least have some knowledge of the law, but his accusations against Bob are ridiculously flimsy, and are limited to very broad claims like "breaking the law" or "violating the Constitution", without ever mentioning any specific law, article or amendment.
** Bob, who is also the Mayor of his town, is stated to have been "fired by the city council" following Hammerschmidt's revelation of his wartime snafu. In real life, there is no such thing. Being elected officials, Mayors can only be removed via impeachment or a recall election.
** The church community center's cross got taken down sometime prior to the film's present-day events because "it offended somebody," when in reality, no such incident would occur due to being an obvious violation of the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment.
** The film claims that government property is not allowed to put up Christmas decorations (not even secular Christmas lights) because they're public property. In actuality, however, many cities both big and small put on Christmas decorations even including Nativity scenes. In fact as ''WebVideo/CinematicExcrement'' pointed out, this includes the city of San Jose, a major metropolitan city located in the San Francisco Bay Area region of northern California, which is one of the most stereotypically liberal states/regions one could possibly think of. The caveat is simply they have to allow for non-Christian displays too if someone wants them.
* ''Film/{{Peppermint}}'': Let's just say that the hearing Riley takes place in where her family's killers get off bears absolutely zero resemblance to how an actual hearing would go. But without it [[RuleOfDrama we wouldn't have a plot]]. It's also somewhat justified as the judge is in their pocket. It's also implied that the prosecutor is too, along with the police, or are at least afraid of opposing the cartel.
* ''Film/AdamsRib'': The judge makes Lance Ito look like a stern model of jurisprudence, with his decision to tolerate Amanda's ridiculous defense of calling in random women to demonstrate how women are equal to men. It's also not very likely that married couples would be allowed to represent opposite sides of a criminal case. Further, pointing out the hypocrisy regarding men getting off for shooting their cheating wives vs the opposite not being true, while a valid point, is not really a defense to attempted murder. Her client did it, even if sympathetic, and she's essentially trying to get jury nullification. This isn't allowed to argue for.
* ''Film/{{Gothika}}'': The end of the film shows that [[spoiler: both Miranda and Chloe are free, despite Chloe murdering her stepfather and Miranda murdering her husband ''and'' the local police chief. Even if their targets were [[AssholeVictim assholes]], the courts '''''really''''' frown on vigilante justice. At least in the chief's case, Miranda could argue self-defense, and there's a plausible InsanityDefense as well (a rarity in fiction) for both his and Doug's murder given that she actually HAS been institutionalized in a BedlamHouse already and diagnosed as psychotic... which, if successful, would mean she goes right back to the asylum she just escaped from.]]
* ''Film/InTheLineOfFire'': Despite the Secret Service consultation, some errors show up:
** Lilly's gown during the party scene would be inappropriate for a female Secret Service agent, as it would prevent her from performing her duties should there be an attempt on the President's life. In those situations female agents instead wear dress pants and more practical shoes. (With the gown, there is also the problem of where to hide the service weapon.)
** In the scene where the Secret Service counter-snipers attempt to get a sight on Leary, it is reported that it is too dark for them to see inside the elevator. In modern times (and certainly in the year the movie was released in and is set), Secret Service counter-snipers are equipped with night-vision goggles to allow them to see targets through darkness.

** Also, in the climatic scene where Leary is getting ready to shoot the President and Horrigan has figured out he's in the room, there's a drawn-out scene where Horrigan is trying to figure out what table he's at in order to apprehend him before he shoots the President. In reality, a scenario where there's a gunman in the area but their identity and location are unknown is something the Secret Service trains for. Upon entering the room, Horrigan would have yelled out the code phrase for this scenario, whereupon all the agents would have swarmed the President to shield him with their bodies while the rest ordered everyone to hit the floor.
*** In the same scene, after Leary assembles and loads his gun, he holds it in his hand with a napkin draped over it for concealment, then stands up to shake the President's hand. ''No one'' is allowed to approach or be near the President with their hands concealed. Period. As soon as he stood up, the Secret Service would have had their eyes on him. Seeing that he had his hands concealed would have meant at least two agents would be immediately in his face, hands on their pistols and ordering him to show his hands right now.
*** There's also no way Watts would have dismissed Frank telling him point blank that the very assassin who's been stalking the President for weeks is present, no matter what personal or professional animosity there was.
* ''Film/InTheBedroom'': The prosecutor tells Matt and Ruth that because Natalie did not explicitly ''see'' Richard shoot Frank, he'll only get charged with manslaughter, nor murder, and serve five to ten years at most. This is pretty ridiculous, as she'd seen plenty, like Richard breaking in, then having the murder weapon right in his hand with Frank dead on the ground. People have been convicted of murder without an eyewitness many times, or even a body sometimes-this would be far more than enough to prove the case along with his clear motive. Unless there was some problem with her testimony or the forensic evidence from the gun (none's mentioned) this would be open and shut. He might still have a plea deal, but it would likely be to second degree murder, with a much longer sentence than is mentioned. Instead, this inspires Matt to go vigilante on Richard so he won't get off so easily, which ends in Richard's murder.
* ''Film/{{Prisoners}}'': Loki not working with a partner and walking into dangerous situations without calling for backup first is not in line with actual police procedure. But it does make for good drama.
* ''Film/IdentityThief'':
** In real life, even if a criminal escapes to another state the police can just call that state's police and get them to arrest them.
And since Diana's crimes (identity theft and wire fraud) are federal it should be a job for the FBI anyway.
** Sandy would also have a pretty easy wrongful dismissal claim against his employer if they truly let him go because
of a police mix-up.
* ''Film/ShotCaller'': While Jacob might have been given a 16-month sentence for what he did, it is extremely implausible for somebody with his profile (stockbroker, family man, and first-time offender with a DUI manslaughter conviction) to immediately be placed in a maximum-security prison like the one Jacob goes to. He might even get probation or a suspended sentence, especially as he'd be able to get a good defense lawyer. Even if sentenced to prison, this would almost certainly be minimum or medium security, and he'd only get in maximum for breaking rules. Then [[RuleOfDrama there would be no plot of course]], but they
course Galvin could have had appealed and gotten a more plausible scenario for this.
* ''Film/MostWanted'': US Army General Woodward takes over
new trial based on the investigation into the murder of the First Lady by the President's order. No one mentions the Posse Comitatus Act that prevents the military from law enforcement absent exceptions that don't apply here, and the LAPD meekly complies defense's misconduct in this (when real life civilian/state police would be up placing a mole in arms if this happened). Interestingly, it was accurate until then with showing that the murder is under LAPD jurisdiction, since "First Lady" isn't a federal position, just the honorary title a President's wife is given and so the crime is covered by California state law (whereas murdering federal officials is covered by the US Code).his office.



* Near the end of ''Film/IAmWrath'' it's said Stanley will be held in federal prison until he gets tried by a FISA court on the charges against him. FISA (Federal Intelligence Surveillance) Court only has any jurisdiction over requests for surveillance warrants against foreign intelligence agents in the US or Americans connected with them. It doesn't try cases of any kind. Further, none of the crimes he committed are in federal jurisdiction (and the state would scream bloody murder here especially, since he killed the governor). It's supposedly because of his government black ops background making this into a "national security issue" but that's legally nonsense. Why this was even added is a mystery as it has no further effect on the plot, since Stanley promptly escapes before the transfer.
* ''Film/TheHitmansBodyguard'':
** Massive liberties are taken to make Kincaid's testimony the only thing that can bring down Dukhovich. A victim whose family was killed in front of him and was put in a work camp for three years has his ''entire'' testimony dismissed out of hand, with the implications that all of the other witnesses so far have had the same. Such testimony would not simply be declared "hearsay" (which, by the way, is when a witness is asked what they were told happened by somebody else, not when they're asked what they themselves witnessed) and struck even if the defense claimed they were merely political opponents doing smear jobs. Somehow Kincaid was the only person to have [[spoiler:pictures]] as proof of Dukhovich's crimes despite this being set in the modern day, and that is the only kind of evidence that seems to work.
** Also, it is entirely possible to have witnesses testify from remote locations. Kincaid could easily have testified on a video chat from his cell [[spoiler:and given the website information from there]]. This is ''common practice'' when the witness might be endangered by coming to the trial.
** Even disregarding the above, you'd think the court would be a little more lax with the ExactTimeToFailure considering that ''someone racked up a massive body count of officers and agents trying to murder Kincaid en route to the Hague''.
* In ''Film/{{Dolittle}}'' the villain of the film, [[spoiler: Lord Bagley]]'s motivations for poisoning Queen Victoria were that he wanted to take the throne himself, but there were several problems with this plan.
** To start off, at that point in history, the royal succession was set; had Victoria died, she would have been succeeded by her eldest son, Edward VII. Even if something had happened to him, there'd still be Victoria's other children, not to mention various uncles, aunts and cousins besides. [[spoiler: Bagley]] could ''not'' have sidestepped the entire House of Hanover, no matter how ambitious he was for power or whatever arguments he could try to make to justify it.
** He attempts to justify this by claiming England could not be left in the hands of a child monarch, but there had been child monarchs in the past and there were already plans in place for a regency should Victoria die before her heir was considered of age.
*** Oddly, he seems to indicate Lady Rose when he says this, even though she would not have been the heir, even if she was somehow related to the Queen.
** Finally, it doesn't make any sense for him to want to become king, since Parliament holds the real power and as a senior member of the House of Lords, he could easily (and legally) become prime minister and have far more power than he would as king.

to:

* Near ''Film/WallStreet'':
** While several actions noted as bad would count as immoral,
the end of ''Film/IAmWrath'' it's said Stanley will be held in federal prison until he gets tried by a FISA court on fact that the charges against him. FISA (Federal Intelligence Surveillance) Court only has any jurisdiction over requests for surveillance warrants against foreign intelligence agents in the US or Americans connected with them. It doesn't try cases of any kind. Further, none movie takes place a couple years before it was filmed means that several of the crimes he committed are in federal jurisdiction (and the state would scream bloody murder here especially, since he killed the governor). It's supposedly because of his government black ops background making this into a "national security issue" but that's legally nonsense. Why this was even added is a mystery as it has no further effect on the plot, since Stanley promptly escapes before the transfer.
* ''Film/TheHitmansBodyguard'':
** Massive liberties are taken to make Kincaid's testimony the only thing that can bring down Dukhovich. A victim whose family was killed in front of him and was put in a work camp for three years has his ''entire'' testimony dismissed out of hand, with the implications that all of the other witnesses so far have had the same. Such testimony would not simply be declared "hearsay" (which, by the way, is when a witness is asked what they
actions shown were told happened by somebody else, [[ArtisticLicenseHistory not when they're asked what they themselves witnessed) and struck even if actually illegal during the defense claimed they were merely political opponents doing smear jobs. Somehow Kincaid was the only person to have [[spoiler:pictures]] as proof of Dukhovich's crimes film's time frame,]] despite this being set in Bud Fox's fears of losing his license or worse. In fact, Gordon Gekko most likely didn't break the modern day, and that is law at all, but Bud Fox definitely broke the only kind of evidence that seems to work.
** Also, it is entirely possible to have witnesses testify from remote locations. Kincaid could easily have testified on a video chat from his cell [[spoiler:and given the website
law by disclosing confidential information from there]]. This his client (Gekko) to a competitor (Wildman) and using that information to cost his client millions.
** It's a bit of a stretch for this trope perhaps, but in the final shot Bud
is ''common practice'' shown walking up the courthouse steps in Lower Manhattan's Foley Square, presumably to his sentencing. However, he's walking up the steps of the New York County Supreme Court building—i.e., ''state'' court, when the witness might be endangered by coming to the trial.
** Even disregarding the above, you'd think the court
insider-trading charges he would be a little more lax with the ExactTimeToFailure considering that ''someone racked up a massive body count of officers allocuting to within are strictly ''federal'', and agents trying to murder Kincaid en route to the Hague''.
* In ''Film/{{Dolittle}}'' the villain of the film, [[spoiler: Lord Bagley]]'s motivations for poisoning Queen Victoria were that
so he wanted to take the throne himself, but there were several problems with this plan.
** To start off, at that point in history, the royal succession was set; had Victoria died, she would
should have been succeeded by her eldest son, Edward VII. Even if something had happened walking up the steps of the Thurgood Marshall U.S. Courthouse next door.
* ''{{Film/Watchmen}}'': Like in the original comic book, Rorschach was sent
to him, there'd still Sing Sing before even being tried for his crimes, while in reality he would be Victoria's held at Riker's Island until trial. He also would likely be kept isolated from other children, inmates as a notorious vigilante crime fighter, which is not only for his protection but to mention various uncles, aunts and cousins besides. [[spoiler: Bagley]] could ''not'' have sidestepped avoid an incident like in the entire House of Hanover, no matter how ambitious he was cafeteria.
* In the first ''Film/WaynesWorld'' movie, one police officer is infamous
for power or whatever arguments he could try to make to justify it.
** He
performing cavity searches on random motorists. This is a serious felony, when performed without a warrant; while the movie, as usual, attempts to justify this by claiming England could not be left in under RuleOfFunny, it qualifies under the hands law as rape.
* ''Film/TheWickerMan2006'': Malus is operating outside
of a child monarch, but there had been child monarchs in the past and there were already plans in place for a regency should Victoria die before her heir was considered of age.
*** Oddly,
his jurisdiction, as he seems to indicate Lady Rose when he says this, even though she would not have been the heir, even if she was somehow related to the Queen.
** Finally, it doesn't make any sense for him to want to become king, since Parliament holds the real power and as
is a senior member of the House of Lords, he could easily (and legally) become prime minister California Highway Patrol and have far more power than he would as king.Summersisle is just a short distance away from {{UsefulNotes/Seattle}}.



* ''Film/AMurderOfCrows'': The killer's family was killed by a drunk driver, who got off because police didn't read his MirandaRights correctly. However, drunk driving cases heavily involve physical evidence (breathalyzer, blood tests, etc.). It's thus very unlikely the whole case would hinge on any statement he made (which is all that Miranda applies to).
* ''Film/{{Copycat}}'': The ending implies that Callum will simply send another "disciple" after Helen to murder her where Foley had failed to. However, prisons screen the mail going in or out, and in his letter it's pretty obvious what he intends. This would likely get Callum barred from getting mail at all (except for from his attorneys) plus his fan investigated, perhaps even arrested. Helen would thus likely be safe (and indeed the original plot wouldn't be pulled off easily either, given this, for the same reasons with Callum having Foley go after her).
* ''Film/JohnDoeVigilante'': The judge in John Doe's trial is wearing a black robe and no wig, and the barristers are wearing business suits. At a trial in an Australian Supreme Court, the judge should be wearing a red robe and full wig, and the barristers black robes and horsehair wigs.
* ''Film/{{Kimi}}'': After Angela incapacitates the hitmen in her apartment, she finishes each of them off with a nail gun to the head. [[KickThemWhileTheyAreDown She doesn't face any legal repercussions for committing lethal force on people who were no longer a threat, and in two cases, clearly helpless.]] Even though they are in her home, attacking someone on the ground and helpless (let alone ''murdering them'') voids self-defence.

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* ''Film/AMurderOfCrows'': The killer's ''Film/WitnessForTheProsecution'': Surely a barrister of Sir Wilfred's experience could have gotten Christine's testimony for the prosecution disallowed by arguing that since Leonard Vole did not know she was already married, that would make her his putative spouse and thus spousal privilege would still apply.
* ''Film/TheWizardOfOz'': Dorothy's
family was killed by a drunk driver, who got off because police didn't read his MirandaRights correctly. However, drunk driving cases heavily involve physical evidence (breathalyzer, blood tests, etc.). It's thus very unlikely the whole case would hinge on is ordered to get rid of Toto without any statement he made (which is all that Miranda applies to).
* ''Film/{{Copycat}}'': The ending implies that Callum will simply send another "disciple" after Helen to murder her where Foley had failed to. However, prisons screen the mail going in
investigation or out, and in his letter it's pretty obvious what he intends. This would likely get Callum barred due process. Miss Gulch presents an order from getting mail the sheriff permitting her to take him to be put down, which is...not at all (except for from his attorneys) plus his fan investigated, perhaps even arrested. Helen how it works. A judge could give orders along those lines, but a sheriff couldn't, and again, there would thus likely be safe (and indeed an investigation. Also, Miss Gulch would not be the original plot one taking the dog; the sheriff would.
* ''{{Film/xXx}}'':
** Xander's stunt at the beginning couldn't trigger the Three Strikes law, as they cannot be three felonies from the same "transaction."[[note]]Unless he already has two, but that's not what Gibbons said.[[/note]] Also, they would be state crimes and he
wouldn't be pulled off easily either, given this, sent to Leavenworth (a federal prison). Of course, the chief could have just been saying that to pressure him into working for him.
** The NSA does ''not'' have agents in
the same reasons with Callum having Foley go after her).
* ''Film/JohnDoeVigilante'': The judge in John Doe's trial
field--they're strictly signals intelligence (phone calls, emails, that sort of thing). Non-military human intelligence is wearing a black robe and no wig, and the barristers are wearing business suits. At a trial in an Australian Supreme Court, the judge should be wearing a red robe and full wig, and the barristers black robes and horsehair wigs.
* ''Film/{{Kimi}}'': After Angela incapacitates the hitmen in her apartment, she finishes each of them off with a nail gun to the head. [[KickThemWhileTheyAreDown She doesn't face any legal repercussions for committing lethal force on people who were no longer a threat, and in two cases, clearly helpless.]] Even though they are in her home, attacking someone on the ground and helpless (let alone ''murdering them'') voids self-defence.
CIA's business.
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* ''Film/TheRoom'':

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* ''Film/TheRoom'': ''Film/TheRoom2003'':
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* ''Film/{{Kimi}}'': After Angela incapacitates the hitmen in her apartment, she finishes each of them off with a nail gun to the head. [[KickThemWhileTheyAreDown She doesn't face any legal repercussions for committing lethal force on people who were no longer a threat, and in two cases, clearly helpless.]] Even though they are in her home, attacking someone on the ground and helpless (let alone ''murdering them'') voids self-defence.
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* ''Film/{{Glass}}'':

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* ''Film/{{Glass}}'': ''Film/Glass2019'':

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** In Lorenzo's first scene, he tells John [=McClane=], "You're the asshole that's just broke seven FAA and five District of Columbia regulations, running around my airport with a gun, shooting at people. What do you call that shit?" Washington, D.C. law would not apply to Washington Dulles International Airport, as the airport is located in Loudon County, Virginia, a full 25 miles west of Washington D.C. So the laws actually broken would be based on local ordinances, Virginia state law, or whatever is stipulated by the MWAA.

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** In Lorenzo's first scene, he tells John [=McClane=], "You're the asshole that's just broke seven FAA and five District of Columbia regulations, running around my airport with a gun, shooting at people. What do you call that shit?" Washington, D.C. law would not apply to Washington Dulles International Airport, as the airport is located in Loudon Loudoun County, Virginia, a full 25 miles west of Washington D.C. So the laws actually broken would be based on local ordinances, Virginia state law, or whatever is stipulated by the MWAA.



** An [[http://www.cracked.com/article_18691_the-7-most-ridiculous-movie-character-overreactions.html#ixzz1EroYZ3NS article sums up the situation]] by claiming that the universe the film takes place in ''must'' be a CrapsackWorld by definition, as it breaks so many laws that the only explanation is either bribery or sheer incompetence. Notably, the producers are heard repeatedly trying to force Truman to conceive a child with his in-universe wife -- a FormerChildStar who's publicly said to be OnlyInItForTheMoney and finally [[RageQuit rage quits]] after she snaps and threatens him when his questioning becomes too much to bear.

to:

** An [[http://www.cracked.com/article_18691_the-7-most-ridiculous-movie-character-overreactions.html#ixzz1EroYZ3NS article sums up the situation]] by claiming that the universe the film takes place in ''must'' be a CrapsackWorld by definition, as it breaks so many laws that the only explanation is either bribery or sheer incompetence. Notably, the producers are heard repeatedly trying to force Truman to conceive a child with his in-universe wife -- a FormerChildStar who's publicly said to be OnlyInItForTheMoney and finally [[RageQuit rage quits]] {{rage quit}}s after she snaps and threatens him when his questioning becomes too much to bear.



** The Purge was passed by Constitutional Amendment (confirmed in [[AllThereInTheManual promotional materials]], plus no other means would be legally feasible). A Constitutional Amendment can only be repealed by another Constitutional Amendment, which requires control of Congress and a 2/3 majority of State Legislatures. The President, while having some ability to get creative with interpreting the law, has absolutely no power to repeal a Constitutional Amendment via a simple executive order, and attempting to do so would be the most blatant grounds for Impeachment in the history of the Republic. Of course, it's still possible that pragmatism (e.g., the economic and social cons of the Purge having vastly exceeded its pros) and self-preservation (e.g., fear of the resistance simply continuing to exploit the Purge to kill all of its remaining supporters) will persuade enough officials to support Roan's efforts -- regardless of party lines -- anyway. However, as we don't know the details of the amendment, it could be the president was given the power to unilaterally make something legal or illegal. This could be indicated by the fact the NFFA can remove the exemption of top government officials from the Purge (i.e. change the law) apparently all by themselves.

to:

** The Purge was passed by Constitutional Amendment (confirmed in [[AllThereInTheManual promotional materials]], plus no other means would be legally feasible). A Constitutional Amendment can only be repealed by another Constitutional Amendment, which requires control a 2/3 majority in both houses of Congress and a 2/3 3/4 majority of State Legislatures. The President, while having some ability to get creative with interpreting the law, has absolutely no power to repeal a Constitutional Amendment via a simple executive order, and attempting to do so would be the most blatant grounds for Impeachment in the history of the Republic. Of course, it's still possible that pragmatism (e.g., the economic and social cons of the Purge having vastly exceeded its pros) and self-preservation (e.g., fear of the resistance simply continuing to exploit the Purge to kill all of its remaining supporters) will persuade enough officials to support Roan's efforts -- regardless of party lines -- anyway. However, as we don't know the details of the amendment, it could be the president was given the power to unilaterally make something legal or illegal. This could be indicated by the fact the NFFA can remove the exemption of top government officials from the Purge (i.e. change the law) apparently all by themselves.



** While it's true the Constitution doesn't specificially authorize an ''Internal Revenue Service'' to collect taxes, it's pretty blatant about the (nearly unlimited) taxing power it gives the Federal government, and every court in the land agrees that an agency to enforce the Federal tax laws is well within the rights of the Executive branch.

to:

** While it's true the Constitution doesn't specificially specifically authorize an ''Internal Revenue Service'' to collect taxes, it's pretty blatant about the (nearly unlimited) taxing power it gives the Federal federal government, and every court in the land agrees that an agency to enforce the Federal federal tax laws is well within the rights of the Executive branch.



* ''Film/JohnnyEnglish'': With respect to the (albeit unwritten) Constitution and the power of the Crown. In RealLife, you could ''not'' get the Queen to abdicate with the stroke of a pen,[[note]]it requires an Act of all Parliaments in nations where she is head of state[[/note]] and whilst the bit where [[spoiler: all land in the country is technically the possession of the Crown and can be confiscated at will]] needs clarification,[[note]]and it would probably violate human rights law/treaties[[/note]] the monarch has very little actual power, which is ''de facto'' exercised by their government. It also ignores historical precedent concerning [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_I_of_England#Execution what happens to monarchs who try to exercise too much personal power]]. Of course all of this is (thankfully?) ignored in favor of RuleOfFunny and a good story (see below).

to:

* ''Film/JohnnyEnglish'': With respect to the (albeit unwritten) Constitution and the power of the Crown. In RealLife, you could ''not'' get the Queen to abdicate with the stroke of a pen,[[note]]it requires an Act of all Parliaments in nations where she is head of state[[/note]] and whilst the bit where [[spoiler: all land in the country is technically the possession of the Crown and can be confiscated at will]] needs clarification,[[note]]and it would probably violate human rights law/treaties[[/note]] the monarch has very little actual power, which is ''de facto'' exercised by their government. It also ignores historical precedent concerning [[http://en.[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_I_of_England#Execution org/wiki/Execution_of_Charles_I what happens to monarchs who try to exercise too much personal power]]. Of course all of this is (thankfully?) ignored in favor of RuleOfFunny and a good story (see below).



** The film acknowledges that there's no basis for subpoenaing sermons, as Dave is quickly released after the order's ruled unconstitutional. However, it's never explained just ''why'' they were subpoenaed in the first place-you need a reason for this. Further, although eminent domain can be used on a church, there is no way they could legally obtain a demolition order on the property before it was actually confiscated. If this had gone through, the university would have had huge liability. ** There's no evidence for Adam's arrest either-anonymous accusations or mere suspicion won't cut it. Without that to begin with, even a later confession wouldn't be admissible. Assuming they had evidence though, it wouldn't be under Dave's control whether the charges got dropped-that is a decision for the prosecutor. Given that a man died, it's also very unlikely they would if a case existed (Adam could be facing FelonyMurder, or at least manslaughter).

to:

** The film acknowledges that there's no basis for subpoenaing sermons, as Dave is quickly released after the order's ruled unconstitutional. However, it's never explained just ''why'' they were subpoenaed in the first place-you need a reason for this. Further, although eminent domain can be used on a church, there is no way they could legally obtain a demolition order on the property before it was actually confiscated. If this had gone through, the university would have had huge liability. liability.
** There's no evidence for Adam's arrest either-anonymous accusations or mere suspicion won't cut it. Without that to begin with, even a later confession wouldn't be admissible. Assuming they had evidence though, it wouldn't be under Dave's control whether the charges got dropped-that is a decision for the prosecutor. Given that a man died, it's also very unlikely they would if a case existed (Adam could be facing FelonyMurder, or at least manslaughter).



* ''Film/Rampage2009'': In one of his political rants, Bill claims that firearms purchases do not mandate background checks, and cites this as proof of the gun industry's greed making mass murderers such as himself possible. In truth, this gets complicated. Licensed firearms businesses (where, obviously, the overwhelming majority of gun sales take place) or "[=FFLs=]" are obligated under federal law to perform background checks on ALL their customers. No matter the location--there is no such thing as an internet or gun show "loophole" for any lawful purchase. ''Private'' purchases, where one person might decide to sell a gun to one of their friends living in the same state, do not. If it's across state lines, an FFL will have to act as a middle-man. Oft-repeated talking points such as "universal background checks" effectively just amounts to taxing private individuals who probably cannot afford such a burden, in addition to possibly trespassing on privacy rights. In other words, Bill's statement is ''technically'' (kind of) correct, but [[MetaphoricallyTrue highly misleading]].

to:

* ''Film/Rampage2009'': In one of his political rants, Bill claims that firearms purchases do not mandate background checks, and cites this as proof of the gun industry's greed making mass murderers such as himself possible. In truth, this gets complicated. Licensed firearms businesses (where, obviously, the overwhelming majority of gun sales take place) or "[=FFLs=]" are obligated under federal law to perform background checks on ALL their customers. No matter the location--there is no such thing as an internet or gun show "loophole" for any lawful purchase. ''Private'' purchases, where one person might decide to sell a gun to one of their friends living in the same state, do not. If it's across state lines, an FFL will have to act as a middle-man.middleman. Oft-repeated talking points such as "universal background checks" effectively just amounts to taxing private individuals who probably cannot afford such a burden, in addition to possibly trespassing on privacy rights. In other words, Bill's statement is ''technically'' (kind of) correct, but [[MetaphoricallyTrue highly misleading]].
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* ''Film/JohnDoeVigilante'': The judge in John Doe's trial is wearing a black robe and no wig, and the barristers are wearing business suits. At a trial in an Australian Supreme Court, the judge should be wearing a red robe and full wig, and the barristers black robes and horsehair wigs.
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* ''Film/TheSiege'': A suspect is detained for carrying a large amount of currency in his luggage -- but a mere $20 under the $10,000 limit. This is ''[[http://www.snopes.com/business/money/10000.asp not]]'' illegal, and as the scene details, wouldn't work anyway; the arresting officer simply added some of his own cash to put the suspect over the limit.

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* ''Film/TheSiege'': A suspect is detained for carrying a large amount of currency in his luggage -- but a mere $20 under the $10,000 limit. This is ''[[http://www.snopes.com/business/money/10000.asp not]]'' illegal, and as the scene details, wouldn't work anyway; the arresting officer simply added some of his own cash to put the suspect over the limit.[[note]]The actual law in question regards cash deposits and withdrawals: any cash transaction to or from an account of $10,000 or more requires the bank to complete a Currency Transaction Report and send it to various government agencies for tracking. Simply ''having'' $10,000 in cash on you is not illegal. And if someone withdraws or deposits ''just less'' than $10,000 but the bank suspects that they're trying to avoid having a CTR completed, the bank is obligated to complete a Suspicious Activity Report, which includes the amount of the transaction and the belief that the person is trying to avoid having it reported (which is called "Stacking")[[/note]]
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** Lorenzo accuses [=McClane=] of violating five District of Columbia regulations. Washington Dulles International Airport is actually in Loudon County, Virginia, about 25 miles west of Washington D.C. So the laws actually broken would be based on local ordinances, or whatever is stipulated by the MWAA.
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* ''Film/{{Copycat}}'': The ending implies that Callum will simply send another "disciple" after Helen to murder her where Foley had failed to. However, prisons screen the mail going in or out, and in his letter it's pretty obvious what he intends. This would likely get Callum barred from getting mail at all (except for from his attorneys) plus his fan investigated, perhaps even arrested. Helen would thus likely be safe (and indeed the original plot wouldn't be pulled off easily either, given this, for the same reasons with Callum having Foley go after her).
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* ''Film/NationalLampoonsVacation'' and ''Film/NationalLampoonsChristmasVacation'' both showcase a pitch-perfect example of the "charges dropped, get-out-of-jail-free" bullet point, even with the fact Clark Griswold twice (deliberately in the first film, accidentally in the second… [[RhetoricalQuestionBlunder at least by Clark]]) took someone hostage and required a SWATTeam intervention, a fact that neither the states of California ([[MrAltDisney Roy Walley notwithstanding]]) or Illinois would take lightly.
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* ''Film/InsideMan'': After all is said and done, Detective Frasier is ordered to drop his investigation on the bank robbery because (allegedly) nothing was stolen and this there is no crime (that "allegedly" [[spoiler:is the millions in unreported diamonds the thieves did took which leads to [[JusticeByOtherLegalMeans the ruin]] of Mr. Case after [[KarmaHoudiniWarranty decades of hiding being a Nazi collaborator]], though]]). Even with the extremely heavy implication of political maneuvering [[spoiler:from Case and White]] trying to keep a lid on things, there is no way that a hostage situation in the middle of New York City would just be allowed to slide.

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* ''Film/GodsNotDeadALightInDarkness'': The film acknowledges that there's no basis for subpoenaing sermons, as Dave is quickly released after the order's ruled unconstitutional. However, it's never explained just why they were subpoenaed in the first place-you need a reason for this. Further, although eminent domain can be used on a church, there is no way they could obtain a demolition order on the property before it was actually confiscated. If this had gone through, the university would have had huge liability. There's no evidence for Adam's arrest either-anonymous accusations or mere suspicion won't cut it. Without that to begin with, even a later confession by him wouldn't be admissible. Assuming they had evidence though, it wouldn't be under Dave's control whether the charges got dropped-that is a decision for the prosecutor. Given that a man died, it's also very unlikely they would if a case existed (Adam could be facing FelonyMurder, or at least manslaughter).

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* ''Film/GodsNotDeadALightInDarkness'': ''Film/GodsNotDeadALightInDarkness'':
**
The film acknowledges that there's no basis for subpoenaing sermons, as Dave is quickly released after the order's ruled unconstitutional. However, it's never explained just why ''why'' they were subpoenaed in the first place-you need a reason for this. Further, although eminent domain can be used on a church, there is no way they could legally obtain a demolition order on the property before it was actually confiscated. If this had gone through, the university would have had huge liability. ** There's no evidence for Adam's arrest either-anonymous accusations or mere suspicion won't cut it. Without that to begin with, even a later confession by him wouldn't be admissible. Assuming they had evidence though, it wouldn't be under Dave's control whether the charges got dropped-that is a decision for the prosecutor. Given that a man died, it's also very unlikely they would if a case existed (Adam could be facing FelonyMurder, or at least manslaughter).manslaughter).
** When a church on the grounds of a college burns down, the college attempts to use eminent domain to seize it and tear it down. Only a city or state government would have that power, not a school (the film claims it was given to the university, but that wouldn't happen). Plus, it was on their grounds to begin with, meaning they technically already owned the building and thus have no need to seize it.

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* In ''Film/Dolittle'' the villain of the film, [[spoiler: Lord Bagley]]'s motivations for poisoning Queen Victoria were that he wanted to take the throne himself, but there were several problems with this plan.

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* In ''Film/Dolittle'' ''Film/{{Dolittle}}'' the villain of the film, [[spoiler: Lord Bagley]]'s motivations for poisoning Queen Victoria were that he wanted to take the throne himself, but there were several problems with this plan.


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* ''Film/AMurderOfCrows'': The killer's family was killed by a drunk driver, who got off because police didn't read his MirandaRights correctly. However, drunk driving cases heavily involve physical evidence (breathalyzer, blood tests, etc.). It's thus very unlikely the whole case would hinge on any statement he made (which is all that Miranda applies to).
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HollywoodLaw in {{Film}}s.
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* ''Film/WildRose'': Rose-Lynn would not have been able to enter the USA, let alone obtain a work permit (without which she has no chance of getting legal employment) due to her record of conviction and imprisonment for drug offences.

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* ''Film/WildRose'': ''Film/WildRose2018'': Rose-Lynn would not have been able to enter the USA, let alone obtain a work permit (without which she has no chance of getting legal employment) due to her record of conviction and imprisonment for drug offences.
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* ''Film/WildRose'': Rose-Lynn would not have been able to enter the USA, let alone obtain a work permit (without which she has no chance of getting legal employment) due to her record of conviction and imprisonment for drug offences.

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