Defending People

the tao of criminal defense trial lawyering

Internet Marketers and Other Scoundrels

Mark Bennett | January 30, 2010

I wrote a couple of posts over at Social Media Tyro about the ethics of ghostblawging (something I’d scribbled about here before). One ghostblawger’s response raised broader issues that fit better here at Defending People.
In an email, Jenni Buchanan of LegalGhostblogger.com invited private discussion of the ethics of ghostblogging, and asked that I remove my [...]

Call this “Notice”

Mark Bennett | January 6, 2010

Mitchell Sassower is doing it. Marc J. Chase is doing it. Myron Kahn is doing it. Many others are doing it too, but those three are at the top of the list.
What are they doing?
They’re funding FindLaw’s crappy little rip-off (all above links are nofollow) of the name of Eric Turkewitz’s excellent New York Personal [...]

Does Daniel Barrera Want To Ruin Defendants’ Lives?

Mark Bennett | December 15, 2009

If he does, the State Bar doesn’t mind.
First, a story: the Texas Legislature amended section 38.12 of the Texas Penal Code, entitled, “Barratry and Solicitation of Professional Employment,” in September. The former statute had been held unconstitutional by Judge David Hittner in Moore v. Morales, John Cornyn had opined formally as Texas AG that the [...]

Outsource Your Marketing, 3000 Words Edition

Mark Bennett | November 25, 2009

Houston’s own Lindeman, Alvarado, and Frye has made ATL with four of its website pictures tastelessly illustrating “Child Sexual Assault & Internet Solicitiation [sic] of a Minor” (shown below), “Rape & Sexual Assault,” and “Family Violence.” (H/T Gideon, whose post is entitled “Why people think criminal defense lawyers are scum.”)
I know Jim Lindeman, Gil [...]

In Favor of Lawyer Exceptionalism

Mark Bennett | November 8, 2009

Avvo’s general counsel Josh King proposes this rule for the regulation of lawyer marketing:
Ultimately, in the absence of consumer harm – and, indeed, a crystal-clear fit within the law’s prohibitions – states should never find that lawyer marketing practices violate their rules.
Josh’s reasoning is Constitutional—I gather from his post that the First Amendment allows lawyers [...]

Waaaahhhh. Mine Hurts Too!

Mark Bennett | November 7, 2009

Carolyn Elefant details the defense of three of the “persecuted” Connecticut Total Bankruptcy lawyers.
I don’t know that “persecuted” is the right word to use to describe people who face possible punishment for something they did—let’s be blunt—out of avarice. But okay.

Lessons in Media Relations and Blogging, from Tyler Flood [Updated, and Again]

Mark Bennett | November 7, 2009

Tyler Flood (one of the smartest lawyers Tyler Flood has ever met!) says of his recent debacle in the Houston Press:
During the course of this process I praised so many of my colleagues and even told Mike who to talk to, including Jed [Silverman], Gary [Trichter], Troy [McKinney], [Mark] Thiessen, Murph [Doug Murphy], Jim Medley [...]

Disbar the Connecticut 5

Mark Bennett | November 6, 2009

No, not really. I don’t care whether they get disbarred or let off.
A lawyer can’t pay a nonlawyer for a referral. This is an uncontroversial proposition. In Connecticut, paying a nonlawyer for a referral can even be a felony. So when five Connecticut lawyers signed on to pay totalbankruptcy.com $65 per referral, they shouldn’t [...]

Andy Nolen, Move Over!

Mark Bennett | November 5, 2009

From a Houston Press article about Houston DWI lawyer Tyler Flood:
Flood pays someone to keep up his Google search rankings. . . . He has reviewed himself on Yahoo (five out of five stars): “Tyler Flood is one of the smartest lawyers I have ever met…reasonably priced also!”
(Here’s the profile giving Tyler that review.)

Coming Soon: Windshield Flyers

Mark Bennett | October 28, 2009

I got this in the mail:And no, it wasn’t addressed to me:How embarrassing for David E. A., whose mail was delivered to my office, for the whole world to learn that he’s facing a criminal charge. There ought to be a rule against lawyers sending out solicitations like this.