Breaks my NCDC - educated heart. From CrimProf Blog:
The Neon Sign Reads: REVERSIBLE ERROR
A Michigan lawyer was held in contempt and fined for phrasing his cross examination questions as declarative statements, a perfectly legitimate technique. (See Pozner & Dodd...). Now he's being forced to appeal...
Read on for transcribed judicial gems such as:
THE COURT: It's not acceptable in my courtroom. If you don't like it you can appeal me after I'm done fining you. Is that clear?
September 29, 2006
September 27, 2006
How not to interview prospective public defenders
Scoplaw (via The Imbroglio) had a needlessly awful interview with some awfully self-impressed public defenders, and in the process of blogging about it, gave me the most awful flashback.
(from left to right: the Arbiter of Succession, p.d. job applicant, self-impressed p.d.)
Update: Fantastica's p.d. job interview wasn't fun either.
(from left to right: the Arbiter of Succession, p.d. job applicant, self-impressed p.d.)
Update: Fantastica's p.d. job interview wasn't fun either.
ID: enter the ex - Jesuit
From Blaine County's Idaho Mountain Express:
Jury acquits Harrison of kidnapping charge - Guilty verdict rendered on lesser, misdemeanor charge
A Blaine County jury on Monday found Robert Joe Harrison Jr. not guilty of second-degree kidnapping, but convicted the former airport security guard of a lesser misdemeanor count of child enticement.
In finding Harrison not guilty of the more serious felony, the jury was in accord with a recommendation from 5th District Court Judge Robert Elgee, who exercised a rarely used courtroom procedure and advised the jury to acquit Harrison of the charge...
Elgee's non-binding advisement to the jury to acquit Harrison of the kidnap charge came at the request of Harrison's public defender, Kevin Cassidy...
Kevin was my father confessor in Twin and has my life-long respect. From the priesthood to the AG's Office to the magistrates bench to his current gig, he's always delivered.
The county commissioners may be sending his firm more clients.
Jury acquits Harrison of kidnapping charge - Guilty verdict rendered on lesser, misdemeanor charge
A Blaine County jury on Monday found Robert Joe Harrison Jr. not guilty of second-degree kidnapping, but convicted the former airport security guard of a lesser misdemeanor count of child enticement.
In finding Harrison not guilty of the more serious felony, the jury was in accord with a recommendation from 5th District Court Judge Robert Elgee, who exercised a rarely used courtroom procedure and advised the jury to acquit Harrison of the charge...
Elgee's non-binding advisement to the jury to acquit Harrison of the kidnap charge came at the request of Harrison's public defender, Kevin Cassidy...
Kevin was my father confessor in Twin and has my life-long respect. From the priesthood to the AG's Office to the magistrates bench to his current gig, he's always delivered.
The county commissioners may be sending his firm more clients.
So much for the afterglow
I'm still feeling good about representing the kids. However, I was brought back to earth today by one line in discovery, words to the effect of, "(Juvenile's mother) was asked if she would be hiring a lawyer - she replied that (Juvenile) would probably have to settle for a court appointed lawyer..."
This is for a client I've been representing on all his cases and PV's since April. Got to work more on customer satisfaction, less on getting repeat business.
This is for a client I've been representing on all his cases and PV's since April. Got to work more on customer satisfaction, less on getting repeat business.
WA: pom poko
I was preoccupied, and forgot to share the latest news about this suspect.
From the Olympian: Raccoons ready for their close-up - National Geographic in town filming for 'Nuisance Wildlife'
Up in Sno Co., humans are striking back at the raccoon menace with their most powerful weapon - urban sprawl. Luckily, there are some kind people there who tend to displaced and wounded creatures.
From the Olympian: Raccoons ready for their close-up - National Geographic in town filming for 'Nuisance Wildlife'
Up in Sno Co., humans are striking back at the raccoon menace with their most powerful weapon - urban sprawl. Luckily, there are some kind people there who tend to displaced and wounded creatures.
September 26, 2006
Juvy is generally awesome
The juvenile public defender who runs Injustice Anywhere is channelling for me again:
I really, really like what I'm doing. I can't even express all the reasons why. I just feel great about it. I truly like my clients... I may not feel the same way in a year or two, but for now, I would actually be really disappointed if they wanted to take me out of juvie...
Likewise: liking the job, liking the kids.
I really, really like what I'm doing. I can't even express all the reasons why. I just feel great about it. I truly like my clients... I may not feel the same way in a year or two, but for now, I would actually be really disappointed if they wanted to take me out of juvie...
Likewise: liking the job, liking the kids.
September 25, 2006
WA: taking indigent defense in-house
Via e-mail from Public Defender Stuff, this article from the Daily News, down Longview - Kelso way:
County to hire public defenders after independent lawyer steps down
For the first time in its history, Cowlitz County will have a public defender's office by the end of the year, officials said last week. Historically, the county has contracted with independent attorneys to provide legal services to those who can't afford a lawyer...
Officials decided to bring the job in-house... "We feel this is going to be a better system," County Commissioner Jeff Rasmussen said. "These attorneys, their sole purpose is going to be meeting with their clients. They're not going to have to wonder whether their business is coming in the door..."
This could be a good thing. Cowlitz County put up a help-wanted ad earlier this month, and they might still be hiring; check the county website or call Personnel at (360) 577-3065.
County to hire public defenders after independent lawyer steps down
For the first time in its history, Cowlitz County will have a public defender's office by the end of the year, officials said last week. Historically, the county has contracted with independent attorneys to provide legal services to those who can't afford a lawyer...
Officials decided to bring the job in-house... "We feel this is going to be a better system," County Commissioner Jeff Rasmussen said. "These attorneys, their sole purpose is going to be meeting with their clients. They're not going to have to wonder whether their business is coming in the door..."
This could be a good thing. Cowlitz County put up a help-wanted ad earlier this month, and they might still be hiring; check the county website or call Personnel at (360) 577-3065.
September 24, 2006
September 23, 2006
CO: lawyer's drug client turns narc's confidential informant
From the Colorado Springs Gazette:
Attorney accused of taking meth as payment - May lose license if he is convicted
A Colorado Springs attorney was arrested on suspicion of drug possession last week after allegedly taking methamphetamine as payment from a client. Criminal defense attorney Terrence McGannon, 49, faces four to 12 years in prison and the loss of his license to practice law if convicted...
According to a police affidavit, an informant that day told a detective... that McGannon, his attorney in a drug case, had asked him for meth as payment for his legal fees.
Attorney accused of taking meth as payment - May lose license if he is convicted
A Colorado Springs attorney was arrested on suspicion of drug possession last week after allegedly taking methamphetamine as payment from a client. Criminal defense attorney Terrence McGannon, 49, faces four to 12 years in prison and the loss of his license to practice law if convicted...
According to a police affidavit, an informant that day told a detective... that McGannon, his attorney in a drug case, had asked him for meth as payment for his legal fees.
September 22, 2006
LA: SOS
Will the last public defender leaving New Orleans please turn out the courtroom lights? From the Times - Picayune, via Lexis One and The Legal Reader:
Trapped in the courtroom - As indigent defense lawyers vanish, one attorney is left
The Orleans Parish public defender situation is beyond crisis. And it is far past time that the Louisiana Supreme Court intervened.
This summer, changes at the public defender's office resulted in the resignation of a number of attorneys, including two of the three remaining attorneys who handled death penalty cases. Five lawyers had been handling 27 capital cases pre-Katrina... that insufferable caseload then devolved upon the remaining three.
Of the three remaining attorneys, one resigned... Another was reassigned to non-death-penalty cases. That left me...
Trapped in the courtroom - As indigent defense lawyers vanish, one attorney is left
The Orleans Parish public defender situation is beyond crisis. And it is far past time that the Louisiana Supreme Court intervened.
This summer, changes at the public defender's office resulted in the resignation of a number of attorneys, including two of the three remaining attorneys who handled death penalty cases. Five lawyers had been handling 27 capital cases pre-Katrina... that insufferable caseload then devolved upon the remaining three.
Of the three remaining attorneys, one resigned... Another was reassigned to non-death-penalty cases. That left me...
GA: fallen-ness
From the Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
Public defender falls from grace - English faces 2 years in prison, likely disbarment
Arthur English's short legal career was punctuated by a quick rise — and a mighty fall.
English was only 28 when the state named him the public defender in the Griffin Judicial Circuit, which takes in four counties, including Fayette. But now, just 21 months after his office opened, English's career is in ruins. He was convicted of having stolen property and probably will be disbarred after being sentenced Friday in Lamar County Superior Court, a block from his house in Barnesville.
English was ordered to spend two years in prison despite testimony from 23 witnesses — most fellow lawyers — that he was a splendid attorney, boss and person... "It was given to me very fast — and it was taken away very fast," English said in an interview earlier in the week. "It's been a humbling and disheartening experience."
His is the story of a life that quickly unraveled. A fatal car wreck, a troubled brother and even a murder-for-hire plot all played a part in English's demise... In Barnesville... townspeople can't seem to agree:
Was English blinded by family bonds? Or did he knowingly help his brother, John "Mac" English, a thief who wanted two wildlife rangers killed? Karen Martin, a lifelong Barnesville resident and attorney, said Arthur English's mistake was he didn't distance himself from his only sibling.
"I begged him not to get involved, but he said, 'He's my brother,' " Martin recalled. "He has a helluva brain. If he had used it he could have done a lot of good. Never will I understand throwing away what he had."
Now, both... will be in prison...
Public defender falls from grace - English faces 2 years in prison, likely disbarment
Arthur English's short legal career was punctuated by a quick rise — and a mighty fall.
English was only 28 when the state named him the public defender in the Griffin Judicial Circuit, which takes in four counties, including Fayette. But now, just 21 months after his office opened, English's career is in ruins. He was convicted of having stolen property and probably will be disbarred after being sentenced Friday in Lamar County Superior Court, a block from his house in Barnesville.
English was ordered to spend two years in prison despite testimony from 23 witnesses — most fellow lawyers — that he was a splendid attorney, boss and person... "It was given to me very fast — and it was taken away very fast," English said in an interview earlier in the week. "It's been a humbling and disheartening experience."
His is the story of a life that quickly unraveled. A fatal car wreck, a troubled brother and even a murder-for-hire plot all played a part in English's demise... In Barnesville... townspeople can't seem to agree:
Was English blinded by family bonds? Or did he knowingly help his brother, John "Mac" English, a thief who wanted two wildlife rangers killed? Karen Martin, a lifelong Barnesville resident and attorney, said Arthur English's mistake was he didn't distance himself from his only sibling.
"I begged him not to get involved, but he said, 'He's my brother,' " Martin recalled. "He has a helluva brain. If he had used it he could have done a lot of good. Never will I understand throwing away what he had."
Now, both... will be in prison...
WA: $40 K for self-defense acquittal
From the Olympian:
Man to get $40,000 to cover costs from court - Jury rules soldier acted in self-defense
A man accused, then acquitted, of second-degree assault with a firearm is now entitled to $40,000 from the state in legal fees and expenses...
Soldier Matthew Young's journey from defendant in a felony case to having his attorney's fees paid by the state was made possible by a Washington law. In some cases where a jury finds a defendant acted in self-defense, the jury is allowed to determine whether the defendant also is entitled to legal costs.
That's what happened to Young after his jury found he acted in self-defense when he wielded a gun to ward off a group of people who accosted him and his girlfriend...
Man to get $40,000 to cover costs from court - Jury rules soldier acted in self-defense
A man accused, then acquitted, of second-degree assault with a firearm is now entitled to $40,000 from the state in legal fees and expenses...
Soldier Matthew Young's journey from defendant in a felony case to having his attorney's fees paid by the state was made possible by a Washington law. In some cases where a jury finds a defendant acted in self-defense, the jury is allowed to determine whether the defendant also is entitled to legal costs.
That's what happened to Young after his jury found he acted in self-defense when he wielded a gun to ward off a group of people who accosted him and his girlfriend...
ID: judge - "criminal justice system flawed"
From the Twin Falls Times-News:
'System is flawed' - judge says legal process failed victim's family
The judge, prosecutor, even the defendant, made profound apologies to a heavy-hearted courtroom. The criminal justice system had taken an accidental tragedy and made it worse. Few, if any, disturbing the peace sentencings amass so much public attention or frustration.
Yet, the lackluster conviction Thursday morning of Richard D. Openshaw began boldly 18 months ago with the prosecutor charging him with involuntary manslaughter in a 2004 fight outside a Jerome bar that ended in the death of 24-year-old Kevin Gaver. A hung jury prompted the prosecutor to reduce his charge despite the objections of Gaver’s family.
The sobs from the victim’s family and dozens of friends dropped to silence as 5th District Court Judge Mark Ingram spoke these words:
“The criminal justice system is flawed without a doubt,” he said. “This case is probably one of the most difficult cases I’ve ever encountered. It’s painfully obvious friends and family feel victimized by a system they believe did not do for them what it should...”
I admire Judge Ingram, but I'm uneasy with this sort of pronouncement from the bench.
'System is flawed' - judge says legal process failed victim's family
The judge, prosecutor, even the defendant, made profound apologies to a heavy-hearted courtroom. The criminal justice system had taken an accidental tragedy and made it worse. Few, if any, disturbing the peace sentencings amass so much public attention or frustration.
Yet, the lackluster conviction Thursday morning of Richard D. Openshaw began boldly 18 months ago with the prosecutor charging him with involuntary manslaughter in a 2004 fight outside a Jerome bar that ended in the death of 24-year-old Kevin Gaver. A hung jury prompted the prosecutor to reduce his charge despite the objections of Gaver’s family.
The sobs from the victim’s family and dozens of friends dropped to silence as 5th District Court Judge Mark Ingram spoke these words:
“The criminal justice system is flawed without a doubt,” he said. “This case is probably one of the most difficult cases I’ve ever encountered. It’s painfully obvious friends and family feel victimized by a system they believe did not do for them what it should...”
I admire Judge Ingram, but I'm uneasy with this sort of pronouncement from the bench.
A decent day at juvy
This afternoon in court, I had the sort of client who keeps me doing the job: someone who's turned his or her life around. This client had been an angry and self-defeating kid for too long. Today it was great to see the confident young adult my client has become.
(That's about as much detail as I'm going to give. Even though juvenile proceedings are open to the public in my state, I figure that my kids deserve to deal with their mistakes without any additional publicity from me and my blog. Perhaps you've been noticing the decline in "you are there" posts from the courtroom since I went out to Juvy.)
(That's about as much detail as I'm going to give. Even though juvenile proceedings are open to the public in my state, I figure that my kids deserve to deal with their mistakes without any additional publicity from me and my blog. Perhaps you've been noticing the decline in "you are there" posts from the courtroom since I went out to Juvy.)
September 20, 2006
"This 'jail calendar sucks' wherever it is"
From Public Pretender, a place we've all been one time or another, at two minutes per client:
"Today will not be the day to fight your case. Today is the day I am going to try to get you out of jail. What I ask you is what I have to know in order to make the best possible argument to get you out of jail."
I wish there was a better way to do it too.
"Today will not be the day to fight your case. Today is the day I am going to try to get you out of jail. What I ask you is what I have to know in order to make the best possible argument to get you out of jail."
I wish there was a better way to do it too.
TN: say amen, somebody
From the Tennessean:
DA's letters to inmate improper, some legal experts say - References to religion in correspondence questioned
Religion has long had its place in the criminal justice system, where witnesses swear on the Bible and some courtrooms convene with prayer, where prisoners undergo jailhouse conversions and victims turn to faith for solace and answers.
But when a Midstate district attorney embarked on a deeply personal, deeply religious two-year correspondence with a murderer he helped prosecute — offering his prayers, quoting Scriptures and telling him that God was speaking to him against a plea bargain in the case — did he cross a line?
Wait, I think I know the answer to this one...
DA's letters to inmate improper, some legal experts say - References to religion in correspondence questioned
Religion has long had its place in the criminal justice system, where witnesses swear on the Bible and some courtrooms convene with prayer, where prisoners undergo jailhouse conversions and victims turn to faith for solace and answers.
But when a Midstate district attorney embarked on a deeply personal, deeply religious two-year correspondence with a murderer he helped prosecute — offering his prayers, quoting Scriptures and telling him that God was speaking to him against a plea bargain in the case — did he cross a line?
Wait, I think I know the answer to this one...
ID: go, Vandals!
From the Spokane paper:
Federal judge allows ex-Vandal's lawsuit to proceed
A federal judge has said a lawsuit brought by a former University of Idaho football player against U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, the Department of Homeland Security and others can move forward...
Abdullah al-Kidd, who played for the Vandals under the name Lavoni Kidd, contends that in 2003 the government wrongfully arrested him as a material witness in its unsuccessful computer terrorism case against a fellow student, Sami Omar Al-Hussayen...
Yes, the place where I went to law school (cheap!) has the worst - named mascot in the Northwest.
Federal judge allows ex-Vandal's lawsuit to proceed
A federal judge has said a lawsuit brought by a former University of Idaho football player against U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, the Department of Homeland Security and others can move forward...
Abdullah al-Kidd, who played for the Vandals under the name Lavoni Kidd, contends that in 2003 the government wrongfully arrested him as a material witness in its unsuccessful computer terrorism case against a fellow student, Sami Omar Al-Hussayen...
Yes, the place where I went to law school (cheap!) has the worst - named mascot in the Northwest.
September 19, 2006
WA: ex- p.d. sues ACLU
From the Columbia Basin Herald:
ACLU sued by former public defender - Grant County attorneys named as being blacklisted
A former Grant County Superior Court public defender is suing the American Civil Liberties Union of Washington, claiming the organization publicly targeted him late last year as a poor performer.
The lawsuit was filed Tuesday... by Moses Lake attorney Randy Smith... alleging "defamation," "invasion of privacy" and "disclosure of private facts," according to court documents... Smith's lawsuit comes 10 months after the ACLU and Columbia Legal Services won a highly publicized $500,000 settlement agreement in a class-action lawsuit the two nonprofit organizations brought against Grant County, alleging an inadequate public defense system.
As part of the settlement agreement, the ACLU insisted the county deny Smith and Moses Lake attorney Ted Mahr... future contracts. The county agreed, but the two names were to be kept secret in a sealed court document.
But the ACLU revealed the two names, attaching the sealed document to copies of the settlement agreement the organization e-mailed to media outlets...
ACLU sued by former public defender - Grant County attorneys named as being blacklisted
A former Grant County Superior Court public defender is suing the American Civil Liberties Union of Washington, claiming the organization publicly targeted him late last year as a poor performer.
The lawsuit was filed Tuesday... by Moses Lake attorney Randy Smith... alleging "defamation," "invasion of privacy" and "disclosure of private facts," according to court documents... Smith's lawsuit comes 10 months after the ACLU and Columbia Legal Services won a highly publicized $500,000 settlement agreement in a class-action lawsuit the two nonprofit organizations brought against Grant County, alleging an inadequate public defense system.
As part of the settlement agreement, the ACLU insisted the county deny Smith and Moses Lake attorney Ted Mahr... future contracts. The county agreed, but the two names were to be kept secret in a sealed court document.
But the ACLU revealed the two names, attaching the sealed document to copies of the settlement agreement the organization e-mailed to media outlets...
September 18, 2006
"You don’t even know you’re on the edge of a cliff"
From Borenstein's Law, a gripping tale of a young man about to break his parents' heart:
Intervention: what friends are for
And yet here he was. Sitting across from me, smiling a benign smile, seeming oblivious to the decision he was contemplating that might lead him on a disastrous path...
Read all the way for the startling conclusion.
Intervention: what friends are for
And yet here he was. Sitting across from me, smiling a benign smile, seeming oblivious to the decision he was contemplating that might lead him on a disastrous path...
Read all the way for the startling conclusion.
New p.d. blog, same old dogs
Live from Farmington, New Mexico, it's Of a Public Defender's Life:
I am a public defender because I care about Truth, Justice, the Constitution (and fuzzy puppies).
(and it's an excuse for posting pictures of my fuzzy puppies)
I am a public defender because I care about Truth, Justice, the Constitution (and fuzzy puppies).
(and it's an excuse for posting pictures of my fuzzy puppies)
September 16, 2006
FL: "it's time for me to get out of my current job"
With all the hype over lack of privacy of MySpace accounts and private posts going public, you can still find the occasional public defender on MySpace venting like nobody's business:
A few simple rules to keep from pissing off your assistant public defender...
Getting angry at your APD when your last plea offer is withdrawn and the offer has gone higher accomplishes nothing. You were the one who refused the offer. You were the one who was told previously (in some cases, two to three times previously) that, when the offer expired, it would be going up. Who's to blame? Look in the mirror...
Begging your APD to ask for lower offers from the State Attorney after previous counteroffers have been rejected is like teaching a pig to sing. It's a total waste of time, and it annoys the pig. If the State's not going lower, then they're not going lower. Man up and take the offer, or go to trial...
A few simple rules to keep from pissing off your assistant public defender...
Getting angry at your APD when your last plea offer is withdrawn and the offer has gone higher accomplishes nothing. You were the one who refused the offer. You were the one who was told previously (in some cases, two to three times previously) that, when the offer expired, it would be going up. Who's to blame? Look in the mirror...
Begging your APD to ask for lower offers from the State Attorney after previous counteroffers have been rejected is like teaching a pig to sing. It's a total waste of time, and it annoys the pig. If the State's not going lower, then they're not going lower. Man up and take the offer, or go to trial...
WA: this week's news from Yakima
From the Yakima Herald - Republic:
Rape conviction overturned
In a first for the state of Washington, DNA testing not available 10 years ago convinced a Yakima County judge Wednesday to overturn a 1996 rape conviction... The ruling by Superior Court Judge Robert Hackett drew loud gasps from supporters of Ted Bradford, 33, who served nine years in prison...
Bradford's conviction was the first in Washington that was overturned solely on the basis of new DNA evidence, according to one of his lawyers, University of Washington law professor Jackie McMurtrie, who leads the Innocence Northwest Project in Seattle.
"Thank goodness for advances in science," she said. A few feet away, Bradford huddled with friends and family...
Convicted killer will be re-charged
The man convicted of killing Yakima community activist Toni Gardner 10 years ago is back in court. A decade ago, Robert Eugene Langford pleaded guilty to second-degree murder for the stabbing death of Gardner...
Langford's case, however, is the latest and probably the last of 15 Yakima County murder cases invalidated as a result of a controversial 2002 state Supreme Court ruling... Prosecutors have until Sept. 29 to arraign Langford on a new charge. The paperwork was already filled out by day's end: first-degree murder.
That's the same charge Langford originally faced for Gardner's death. Instead, he pleaded guilty to a variation of second-degree murder known as felony murder. It was that very variation... that the Supreme Court tossed out in 2002. (In) Andress v. State of Washington, the court reasoned that assault without proof of intent to kill was too similar to manslaughter and could not serve as the basis for a felony murder conviction...
Known simply as Andress, the dual rulings jeopardized roughly 300 felony murder convictions statewide...
Rape conviction overturned
In a first for the state of Washington, DNA testing not available 10 years ago convinced a Yakima County judge Wednesday to overturn a 1996 rape conviction... The ruling by Superior Court Judge Robert Hackett drew loud gasps from supporters of Ted Bradford, 33, who served nine years in prison...
Bradford's conviction was the first in Washington that was overturned solely on the basis of new DNA evidence, according to one of his lawyers, University of Washington law professor Jackie McMurtrie, who leads the Innocence Northwest Project in Seattle.
"Thank goodness for advances in science," she said. A few feet away, Bradford huddled with friends and family...
Convicted killer will be re-charged
The man convicted of killing Yakima community activist Toni Gardner 10 years ago is back in court. A decade ago, Robert Eugene Langford pleaded guilty to second-degree murder for the stabbing death of Gardner...
Langford's case, however, is the latest and probably the last of 15 Yakima County murder cases invalidated as a result of a controversial 2002 state Supreme Court ruling... Prosecutors have until Sept. 29 to arraign Langford on a new charge. The paperwork was already filled out by day's end: first-degree murder.
That's the same charge Langford originally faced for Gardner's death. Instead, he pleaded guilty to a variation of second-degree murder known as felony murder. It was that very variation... that the Supreme Court tossed out in 2002. (In) Andress v. State of Washington, the court reasoned that assault without proof of intent to kill was too similar to manslaughter and could not serve as the basis for a felony murder conviction...
Known simply as Andress, the dual rulings jeopardized roughly 300 felony murder convictions statewide...
WA: juvy arrests down
Positive news from DSHS:
2005 Washington State Juvenile Arrest Rate drops again
The 2005 statewide number and rate of juvenile arrests are the lowest since 1982...
Additionally, the 2005 arrest rates (per 1,000 youth) for the major categories of crime (violent, property, and drug / alcohol offenses) are at an all-time low...
If this keeps up, I'll be out of a job.
2005 Washington State Juvenile Arrest Rate drops again
The 2005 statewide number and rate of juvenile arrests are the lowest since 1982...
Additionally, the 2005 arrest rates (per 1,000 youth) for the major categories of crime (violent, property, and drug / alcohol offenses) are at an all-time low...
If this keeps up, I'll be out of a job.
September 15, 2006
ID: "he will die in prison"
From the Twin Falls Times-News:
Nice pleads guilty - Killer of three children agrees to three life terms
Guilty. Guilty. Guilty.
Jim Junior Nice pleaded guilty three times in court this morning to three counts of first-degree murder; one for poisoning each of his three children with a lethal dose of sleeping medicine and rat poison... Nice pleaded guilty to three counts of first-degree murder in the Dec. 20 deaths of 6-year-old twins Spencer and Justin Nice and 2-year-old Raquel Nice.
"I am sure I don't want a jury trial," Nice said.
By pleading guilty, Nice will serve three consecutive life terms with no parole or right to appeal his conviction, but he will not face the death penalty...
Credit should go to two lawyers of uncommon integrity: county prosecutor Grant Loebs and county public defender Marilyn Paul. Imagine the pressure they were under.
Nice pleads guilty - Killer of three children agrees to three life terms
Guilty. Guilty. Guilty.
Jim Junior Nice pleaded guilty three times in court this morning to three counts of first-degree murder; one for poisoning each of his three children with a lethal dose of sleeping medicine and rat poison... Nice pleaded guilty to three counts of first-degree murder in the Dec. 20 deaths of 6-year-old twins Spencer and Justin Nice and 2-year-old Raquel Nice.
"I am sure I don't want a jury trial," Nice said.
By pleading guilty, Nice will serve three consecutive life terms with no parole or right to appeal his conviction, but he will not face the death penalty...
Credit should go to two lawyers of uncommon integrity: county prosecutor Grant Loebs and county public defender Marilyn Paul. Imagine the pressure they were under.
September 14, 2006
ID: 13 more felony charges against pistol-packing prosecutor
Jail clothes are never flattering, particularly when you're an ex-prosecutor. From KIFI:
Kimball Mason Appears in Court
Thursday we're getting our first look at former Idaho Falls City Prosecutor Kimball Mason since he was sent to Cottonwood Correctional Facility three months ago. He made his first appearance in court Thursday for 13 entirely new charges. This is on top of the three felony charges he's already been sentenced for...
In total, there are 13 new felony charges: six forgery and seven grand theft charges...
Update: from Assuming Arguendo - "Did I shave my head for this?"
Kimball Mason Appears in Court
Thursday we're getting our first look at former Idaho Falls City Prosecutor Kimball Mason since he was sent to Cottonwood Correctional Facility three months ago. He made his first appearance in court Thursday for 13 entirely new charges. This is on top of the three felony charges he's already been sentenced for...
In total, there are 13 new felony charges: six forgery and seven grand theft charges...
Update: from Assuming Arguendo - "Did I shave my head for this?"
September 13, 2006
Ah, clinic!
From Scoplaw:
A Day in the Life of the Criminal Justice Clinic Student
Today I met my first client. But we have to back up a bit...
The Imbroglio is right - it's a great read.
A Day in the Life of the Criminal Justice Clinic Student
Today I met my first client. But we have to back up a bit...
The Imbroglio is right - it's a great read.
"Today we are in a struggle..."
Some days I would lay into a remark like this one from AOL Journals:
Lord knows we are thankful for (name of private criminal defense lawyer) as a public defender would let my brother rot in prison forever, and this I know for sure...
Today I don't feel like it. This post doesn't leave me snarky, it just makes me sad. For desperate people on either side of the jail bars, hope comes wherever they can find it, sometimes including the hope that might come from spending money on a private lawyer:
(T)he money for the attorney is overwhelming...
I have lost faith in Johnny's attonrey (private lawyer A) and am in the process of hiring the top defense attorney in our county...(private lawyer B). And to say the least, he is a FORTUNE!
My brother has really been his own attorney and findng so much case law on his own, I joke now that he is Johnny, Esq...
May Johnny make it safely through his coming trial.
Lord knows we are thankful for (name of private criminal defense lawyer) as a public defender would let my brother rot in prison forever, and this I know for sure...
Today I don't feel like it. This post doesn't leave me snarky, it just makes me sad. For desperate people on either side of the jail bars, hope comes wherever they can find it, sometimes including the hope that might come from spending money on a private lawyer:
(T)he money for the attorney is overwhelming...
I have lost faith in Johnny's attonrey (private lawyer A) and am in the process of hiring the top defense attorney in our county...(private lawyer B). And to say the least, he is a FORTUNE!
My brother has really been his own attorney and findng so much case law on his own, I joke now that he is Johnny, Esq...
May Johnny make it safely through his coming trial.
ID: search warrants required, even in Clearwater County
A good slice of north central Idaho life, and a law school classmate of mine mentioned, too - from the Lewiston Morning Tribune by way of the Seattle P-I:
Charges dropped in north Idaho backwoods vandalism case
Charges have been dropped in a backcountry vandalism, burglary and theft case that authorities thought they had cracked by installing a homing device in a coffee can. Clearwater County sheriff's deputies failed to obtain a search warrant before seizing evidence to support 19 felony and 14 misdemeanor charges of burglary, theft and vandalism against David Pruss... Pruss, 35, whose trial had been set for next Monday, immediately left on a bus to rejoin his family in Tacoma, Wash., defense lawyer John R. "Jack" Hathaway said.
"I'm out. I'm free. I don't want to talk to anybody," Pruss told the Lewiston Tribune by cellular telephone. Facing a maximum prison term of more than 100 years, Pruss underwent a psychological evaluation during more than a year in custody and "he's on his meds, he's coherent, he's happy," Hathaway said...
...(I)nvestigators had been trying to catch Pruss for weeks and learned where he was hiding by placing an electronic signaling device in the bottom of a plastic can of coffee and left (sic) it in a building that had been burglarized several times. "We knew he liked coffee," the sheriff said...
Charges dropped in north Idaho backwoods vandalism case
Charges have been dropped in a backcountry vandalism, burglary and theft case that authorities thought they had cracked by installing a homing device in a coffee can. Clearwater County sheriff's deputies failed to obtain a search warrant before seizing evidence to support 19 felony and 14 misdemeanor charges of burglary, theft and vandalism against David Pruss... Pruss, 35, whose trial had been set for next Monday, immediately left on a bus to rejoin his family in Tacoma, Wash., defense lawyer John R. "Jack" Hathaway said.
"I'm out. I'm free. I don't want to talk to anybody," Pruss told the Lewiston Tribune by cellular telephone. Facing a maximum prison term of more than 100 years, Pruss underwent a psychological evaluation during more than a year in custody and "he's on his meds, he's coherent, he's happy," Hathaway said...
...(I)nvestigators had been trying to catch Pruss for weeks and learned where he was hiding by placing an electronic signaling device in the bottom of a plastic can of coffee and left (sic) it in a building that had been burglarized several times. "We knew he liked coffee," the sheriff said...
September 12, 2006
UT: dose of reality
In Provo, a kind-hearted woman goes to court to watch her son's case, and has compassion to spare for the other souls on the docket:
As each one stood with their public defender at the mercy of the court, my heart went out to them... What would become of them? Some would get it. Some would, after time away from society, make the decision that they didn’t want to be there again. Others would never get it...
I like her comments. Also, coming from the same cultural orbit as I do, she understands the importance of having a really big refillable mug.
As each one stood with their public defender at the mercy of the court, my heart went out to them... What would become of them? Some would get it. Some would, after time away from society, make the decision that they didn’t want to be there again. Others would never get it...
I like her comments. Also, coming from the same cultural orbit as I do, she understands the importance of having a really big refillable mug.
Goodbye Joe, me gotta go
Somebody on MySpace is pretty excited about her new p.d. job:
phase one of my plan to take over the world is in effect.
the government has allowed me to join its ranks as an "insider".
yes, ladies and gentlemen, i have officially been hired at the Marion County Public Defender's Office...
Now, about that thinking - that - becoming - a - p.d. - makes - you - an - "insider" stuff... Congratulations, new colleague!
(warning - clicking on link above launches a real peppy "Jambalaya" by Hank Williams - turn speakers down (or up) accordingly)
phase one of my plan to take over the world is in effect.
the government has allowed me to join its ranks as an "insider".
yes, ladies and gentlemen, i have officially been hired at the Marion County Public Defender's Office...
Now, about that thinking - that - becoming - a - p.d. - makes - you - an - "insider" stuff... Congratulations, new colleague!
(warning - clicking on link above launches a real peppy "Jambalaya" by Hank Williams - turn speakers down (or up) accordingly)
Alaskablawg and CrimLaw return
Alaskablawg is back online! Steve explains where he's been.
Ken Lammers, original proprietor of CrimLaw, has resumed his blogging too.
Ken Lammers, original proprietor of CrimLaw, has resumed his blogging too.
September 10, 2006
LA: the first appearance project
Thanks to Ray Ward, this cover story from BestofNewOrleans.com:
Defenseless - Saddled with huge caseloads and low budgets, public defenders often have to give their clients -- the city's poorest citizens -- legal representation on the fly. It's just one part of a broken system.
Seventy percent of the people arrested on state or local charges in Orleans Parish are initially represented by Meghan Garvey, one of two public defenders assigned to Magistrate Court, the first stop in the local criminal justice system...
Arriving in New Orleans four years ago to begin Tulane Law School, Garvey read articles about problems in Municipal Court and became intent on trying to prevent mentally ill and drug-addicted people from entering the cycle of arrests that often begins with a minor offense such as "obstruction of a public passage."
"It made me want to take them out of the criminal justice system and put them in the mental health system," says Garvey, who has been practicing law less than one year... "It's a matter of pride in my city," she says. "I don't want to live in a place where the Constitution doesn't apply."
Defenseless - Saddled with huge caseloads and low budgets, public defenders often have to give their clients -- the city's poorest citizens -- legal representation on the fly. It's just one part of a broken system.
Seventy percent of the people arrested on state or local charges in Orleans Parish are initially represented by Meghan Garvey, one of two public defenders assigned to Magistrate Court, the first stop in the local criminal justice system...
Arriving in New Orleans four years ago to begin Tulane Law School, Garvey read articles about problems in Municipal Court and became intent on trying to prevent mentally ill and drug-addicted people from entering the cycle of arrests that often begins with a minor offense such as "obstruction of a public passage."
"It made me want to take them out of the criminal justice system and put them in the mental health system," says Garvey, who has been practicing law less than one year... "It's a matter of pride in my city," she says. "I don't want to live in a place where the Constitution doesn't apply."
September 07, 2006
WA: editorial on unconstitutional jail booking fees
The Olympian goes way out on a limb with this headline:
Inmates have their rights
... then commenters show up to debate the proposition.
Inmates have their rights
... then commenters show up to debate the proposition.
P.D. credo
For the Googler who got here looking for the "public defender oath," perhaps Gideon's Guardians has what you were seeking:
The Public Defender Creed
"I am a public defender. I am the guardian of the presumption of innocence, due process, and fair trial. To me is entrusted the preservation of those sacred principles. I will promulgate them with courtesy and respect but not with obsequiousness and not with fear for I am partisan; I am counsel for the defense. Let none who oppose me forget that with every fiber of my being I will fight for my clients. My clients are the indigent accused. They are the lonely, the friendless. There is no one to speak for them but me. My voice will be raised in their defense. I will resolve all doubt in their favor. This will be my credo; this and the Golden Rule. I will seek acclaim and approval only from my own conscience. And if upon my death there are a few lonely people who have benefited, my efforts will not have been in vain."
- Jim Doherty, Cook County, Illinois Public Defender
Learn it, live it, hang it above your desk, wear it on a t-shirt.
The Public Defender Creed
"I am a public defender. I am the guardian of the presumption of innocence, due process, and fair trial. To me is entrusted the preservation of those sacred principles. I will promulgate them with courtesy and respect but not with obsequiousness and not with fear for I am partisan; I am counsel for the defense. Let none who oppose me forget that with every fiber of my being I will fight for my clients. My clients are the indigent accused. They are the lonely, the friendless. There is no one to speak for them but me. My voice will be raised in their defense. I will resolve all doubt in their favor. This will be my credo; this and the Golden Rule. I will seek acclaim and approval only from my own conscience. And if upon my death there are a few lonely people who have benefited, my efforts will not have been in vain."
- Jim Doherty, Cook County, Illinois Public Defender
Learn it, live it, hang it above your desk, wear it on a t-shirt.
September 06, 2006
First ingredient: one lawyer...
From the unfailingly humane legal blog Minor Wisdom, which got it from Legal Sanity, which got it from Idealawg:
"A lawyer's recipe for depression"
Why, of all professions, does the legal profession have the highest rate of depression...?
I'd been meaning to pass this along earlier, but I'd been feeling a little, you know, down...
"A lawyer's recipe for depression"
Why, of all professions, does the legal profession have the highest rate of depression...?
I'd been meaning to pass this along earlier, but I'd been feeling a little, you know, down...
The sound of freedom
Here is a most excellent NPR story from Nina Totenberg on the lawyers who won Hamdan:
Navy Lt. Cmdr. Charles Swift, got a letter appointing him as counsel for... Salim Ahmed Hamdan... There was just one hitch to Swift's appointment... The letter told Swift that his access to his client was conditioned on his negotiating a guilty plea. Swift thought that was an unethical condition.
He immediately called Georgetown law professor Neal Katyal... Katyal, 33, had volunteered his services and been embraced by the defense team... Katyal had been an early academic critic of the Bush military tribunals. He had written, thought about, and testified on the issue. So, he was the perfect point man for developing a legal strategy aimed ultimately at Supreme Court review...
(Hamdan) was a stunning rebuke to the president. But Katyal doesn't see it that way. He commends both the military and the administration for letting him and Swift do their jobs. "In some other country," Katyal observes, "we might have been shot."
Navy Lt. Cmdr. Charles Swift, got a letter appointing him as counsel for... Salim Ahmed Hamdan... There was just one hitch to Swift's appointment... The letter told Swift that his access to his client was conditioned on his negotiating a guilty plea. Swift thought that was an unethical condition.
He immediately called Georgetown law professor Neal Katyal... Katyal, 33, had volunteered his services and been embraced by the defense team... Katyal had been an early academic critic of the Bush military tribunals. He had written, thought about, and testified on the issue. So, he was the perfect point man for developing a legal strategy aimed ultimately at Supreme Court review...
(Hamdan) was a stunning rebuke to the president. But Katyal doesn't see it that way. He commends both the military and the administration for letting him and Swift do their jobs. "In some other country," Katyal observes, "we might have been shot."
September 05, 2006
City of angels
Thanks to Kathy A. for e-mailing me the link to this week's L.A. Times series following an average - and exemplary - p.d., Ramiro Cisneros, "a man with his heart in the clouds of idealism and his thoughts down in the daily rough-and-tumble.":
» Part One: Going to bat for those who have hit bottom.
» Part Two: Should the judicial system lock up a man if he hasn't broken the law?
» Wednesday: A retrial and a sweet victory for the public defender's office.
» Thursday: An extortionist is sentenced and a drug user returns to jail.
» Friday: The case of the one-eyed man comes to a conclusion.
Public Defender Dude and Indefensible like what they've read so far.
» Part One: Going to bat for those who have hit bottom.
» Part Two: Should the judicial system lock up a man if he hasn't broken the law?
» Wednesday: A retrial and a sweet victory for the public defender's office.
» Thursday: An extortionist is sentenced and a drug user returns to jail.
» Friday: The case of the one-eyed man comes to a conclusion.
Public Defender Dude and Indefensible like what they've read so far.
September 04, 2006
Look sharp!
Goblin's in a quandary: he's moving from insurance defense to criminal defense, and wants to get his new look just right:
After a short time in the insurance defense bar, it's become evident that neither the culture nor the work itself are for me, and I am taking a significant pay cut to move to the public defender's office... the bottom line is that I'll be afforded more freedom to dress the way I want to - this particular public defender's office, like many others, is significantly more tolerant of individual idiosyncrasies than are the local defense firms...
Like Goblin, I too might like to adopt the mod, "skinnier" style, and maybe I would if I didn't maintain such a consistent walrus-like shape. Every work day, I wear a tie (from my couturiers, Deseret Industries and Ross Dress for Less) with a white shirt, a blue shirt, or a gray shirt. I maybe suit up once or twice a week and go with a sportcoat the rest of the time. In my office, if you're not going to court, t-shirts and flip-flops are okay, but shorts are verboten. I can't pull off either look, so the tie stays on.
Any public defender fashion pointers out there?
(apparently the tiny word bubble below is for comments - will somebody please test this for me?)
After a short time in the insurance defense bar, it's become evident that neither the culture nor the work itself are for me, and I am taking a significant pay cut to move to the public defender's office... the bottom line is that I'll be afforded more freedom to dress the way I want to - this particular public defender's office, like many others, is significantly more tolerant of individual idiosyncrasies than are the local defense firms...
Like Goblin, I too might like to adopt the mod, "skinnier" style, and maybe I would if I didn't maintain such a consistent walrus-like shape. Every work day, I wear a tie (from my couturiers, Deseret Industries and Ross Dress for Less) with a white shirt, a blue shirt, or a gray shirt. I maybe suit up once or twice a week and go with a sportcoat the rest of the time. In my office, if you're not going to court, t-shirts and flip-flops are okay, but shorts are verboten. I can't pull off either look, so the tie stays on.
Any public defender fashion pointers out there?
(apparently the tiny word bubble below is for comments - will somebody please test this for me?)
Coach's corner
A couple of posts from a blog titled Coach Approach:
"A Day in the Life of a Public Defender"
I stop him cold in the middle of his rant and say this: " When this is over, however it turns out, I want you to promise me something. I want you to promise that you will get away from here, because if you stay here you will be dead..."
"It Is In Giving That We Receive"
My clients are generally grateful just to have a lawyer who will take the time to listen... I deal with them each individually, and do the best I can for them. I try not to think too often about the big picture: the permanent underclass that produced these souls, the poverty and hopelessness that pervades their lives...
"A Day in the Life of a Public Defender"
I stop him cold in the middle of his rant and say this: " When this is over, however it turns out, I want you to promise me something. I want you to promise that you will get away from here, because if you stay here you will be dead..."
"It Is In Giving That We Receive"
My clients are generally grateful just to have a lawyer who will take the time to listen... I deal with them each individually, and do the best I can for them. I try not to think too often about the big picture: the permanent underclass that produced these souls, the poverty and hopelessness that pervades their lives...
September 03, 2006
Sunday harbor seal blogging
The salmon have started returning to the Deschutes River by way of the Fifth Avenue bridge. For the local harbor seals, the living is easy. (here's video)
No river otters were seen using the crosswalk.
Meanwhile, all's quiet on the raccoon front.
No river otters were seen using the crosswalk.
Meanwhile, all's quiet on the raccoon front.
September 02, 2006
CA: smile now, cry later
From MySpace - Erin's a San Diegan, and a new intern in the dependency section of the public defenders office. She's smiling in her photo with her new colleagues and her new p.d. id, but she's also realistic:
I finished my first week...and it's been good so far (besides a few setbacks), but I know that working there is going to break my heart...
I can say that after reading a bunch of cases and talking with attorneys and other staff in the office...I haven't heard of a single happy ending for a child yet. I know I'll hear the happy stories eventually...but it seems like they'll be few and far between...
Best wishes, new colleague. Hang in there.
I finished my first week...and it's been good so far (besides a few setbacks), but I know that working there is going to break my heart...
I can say that after reading a bunch of cases and talking with attorneys and other staff in the office...I haven't heard of a single happy ending for a child yet. I know I'll hear the happy stories eventually...but it seems like they'll be few and far between...
Best wishes, new colleague. Hang in there.