Question: What
happens if I receive a subpoenae but will leave the state before the court date? I got a subpoena the other day. I immediately called the
lawyer who gave it to me and informed him that I am moving out of state before
the court date and there is no way with me being unemployed I will be able to
fly up for the court date. The incident this is regarding is a civil matter
which happened while I was working and was the one who spoke with the claimant
since I was a security supervisor. This incident happened almost 5 years ago.
Since then, just last may I have returned from Iraq and been dealing with a
multitude of psychological issues. Having to deal with this now on top of
everything else is just making things worse for me. In January I met with all
the lawyers and gave statements and answered questions on what little bit I
could recall, and since then for me psychologically in my everyday life things
have really gotten much more intense. I don't see this court thing as being
practical with my state of mind and moving as well. What can be done about this
seeing as I won't even be around during the date? Will I be in trouble if I do
not show? Should I get a letter from my doctors stating that I am being seeing
for several mental health issues?
Answer: Write a letter to the attorneys listed on the subpoena and save a copy. Unless the attorney provides you with travel expenses and lodging, he has the option of taking your deposition before you leave the jurisdiction and using that at trial.
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