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 July 9, 2010 in 

I am sorely tempted today to write about The Clown and The Snake—the incompetent, biased judge and the lying prosecutor—and use their names, creating a permanent googleable record.

There would be good in it. The voters should know about The Clown, and if he knew that his hijinks might be published, it's not unimaginable that he would back off a bit. As for naming The Snake, I know there's no changing her—her malevolent dishonesty is the habit of more than 20 years—but it would just feel good, and that's worth something. Besides, one way or another the sunlight might do some disinfecting.

In the larger picture, prosecutors and judges are public servants, and should enjoy no impunity at all. There are some who have for decades broken the rules in the Harris County Courthouse, knowing that the mainstream media see tales of cheating in the courthouse as inside baseball, and would never bother with a story about a deceitful prosecutor or a judge prejudiced against the defense. Lying prosecutors like The Snake (I haven't met many, but there are some) rise to high levels in the District Attorney's Office; partisan judges—"prosecutors in black robes"—are reelected term after term by voters who don't give any thought to the criminal courthouse until they are invited down there as jurors or defendants.

The Clown and The Snake and Judge Biggs and all the others should never count on me keeping their identities even thinly disguised.

But I haven't made a habit of naming transgressing courthouse regulars here, and I don't know whether now—while courthouse equilibrium favors my clients—is the time to start. I'm not unwilling to cross that particular Rubicon, but neither am I in a hurry to explore the unintended consequences.

Dans ce pay-ci, il est bon de tuer de temps en temps un amiral pour encourager les autres.

I'm in this for the long haul. I'll start naming names someday, when the balance has shifted and the others need encouraging. But not today.

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3 Comments

  1. Michael Parr July 9, 2010 at 4:40 pm - Reply

    Bravo! If I ever need an attorney I hope I have the funds necessary to hire you. Few attorneys are afraid to speak out about the corruption that is Harris County’s Criminal Justice System. I applaud your bravery..

  2. Cynthia Henley July 9, 2010 at 5:12 pm - Reply

    Okay – so you won’t name names for now. But detail the deeds these two pulled in trial. I wrote a series on the BS I went through in a sexual assault trial. Like you, I didn’t name names but when I got finished, I didn’t really need to for those in the know.

    Tell us what these guys did during the trial that was so dirty so we can watch out for them. (I know who the judge is – and have heard tales on him. But, I don’t know who the prosecutor is.)

    • Mark Bennett July 9, 2010 at 6:44 pm - Reply

      The prosecutor was not the prosecutor in my recent trial. Check the HCCLA list to see who she is.

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