Let $C$ be a smooth projective curve over $\mathbb{Q}$. Its associated L-function is defined by
$$ L(C, s)=\prod_{p \text{ prime}} L_p(C, s), $$
where, if $p$ is a prime of good reduction, $L_p(C, s)=Q_p(p^{-s})^{-1}$ for $Q_p$ the polynomial appearing in the numerator of the zeta function of the reduction of $C$ over $\mathbb{F}_p$.
I would like to prove the statement
$L(C, s)$ converges absolutely for $\mathrm{Re}(s)>3/2$
I guess one should combine two ingredients:
1) the control of the zeros of $Q_p(p^{-s})$ which, by the Riemann hypothesis, have real part $\mathrm{Re}(s)=1/2$
2) some knowledge about the bad factors, i.e. that they do not introduce poles in the region $\mathrm{Re}(s)>3/2$
I have two questions:
1) can somebody isolate the analytic statement behind the convergence of the product over good primes (this should be something like I have a Dirichlet series with an Euler product, I know the real part of the zeros, then the convergence is...)
2) is it known or conjectural that the bad factors do not introduced poles?
Thanks!