Why do lawyers and cops talk so obliquely?
Instead of saying “Car A hit car B,” they say, “Car A impacted car B.”
Instead of saying, “They saw cocaine on the seat,” they say “They observed cocaine on the seat.”
I’m a fan Judge Judy, and I notice that sometimes the plaintiffs/defendants try to talk the same way, I guess in an effort to sound intelligent, but to me it sounds stilted and pretentious.
Is there some reasonable explanation for this convoluted way of speaking in the legal world?
Observing members:
0
Composing members: 0
Composing members: 0