Posted on

 December 10, 2010 in 

I wrote about John C. Osborne here:

 The lawyer who promises to get the accused in a federal cocaine conspiracy case out on conditions of release is unethical and a liar.

. . . .

What happens next? My bet is that once the lawyer has been paid and four weeks have passed and the client is still incarcerated, the lawyer will “discover” some reason that the accused cannot get out on bond.

A little over four weeks later, I was proven prescient:

Today the lawyer I described in this post called me …. He wanted to know why his client (my former client) had been detained. I probably should have made like Matlock and flipped him off. But instead, I explained to him the presumption of detention in a federal drug conspiracy case with a possible sentence over ten years. I also explained that the particular magistrate who heard the detention hearing will most likely never grant an accused release over the Government’s objection. Why I had to educate was beyond me; he is the one who made the client promises that nobody could possibly keep, and now he’s talking like I somehow dropped the ball.

Six weeks later, he popped up again:

From a brief telephone conversation with him I was able easily to learn that he knew next-to-nothing about federal criminal defense. Now four people have hired him to represent them in serious federal criminal cases in the last eight months.

. . . .
[T]his guy exemplifies the problem of declining standards of representation in federal criminal cases.

A few months later, the first overpromised client was still in jail—and still represented by John C. Osborne, Texas Bar Number 15333200.

I didn’t use Osborne’s name in any of those four posts because he was still representing people whom I had represented, and I didn’t trust him not to treat them worse. I planned to get back to it someday.

Well, it’s someday now. The State Bar of Texas tells us that attorney John C. Osborne. who in my opinion got cases that he was not competent to handle by making promises that he could not keep, is under a probated suspension until December 2013. I’ve ordered the papers on that; until I receive them, there’s this:
John C. Osborne Disbarment Petition

The Texas Commission for Lawyer Discipline is trying to disbar John C. Osborne—not for making false representations to get people to hire him for cases beyond his competency, but for mishandling a client’s $130,000. It’ll have to do. And it might just: John C. Osborne is representing himself in his disbarment proceeding, which should in itself be grounds for disbarment under the “fools shouldn’t practice law” rule. It couldn’t happen to a nicer guy.

Share This Post, Choose Your Platform!

19 Comments

  1. Paul Key December 11, 2010 at 9:15 am - Reply

    That was great.

  2. nancy knox-bierman December 11, 2010 at 10:51 am - Reply

    Yes, we are lawyers not magicians (I have yet to make 20 lbs. of weed disappear) and lawyers who promise the impossible to their clients make it damn hard on those of us who tell the often unpleasant truth

    • Mark Bennett December 11, 2010 at 1:16 pm - Reply

      I’ve made lots of dope disappear (metaphorically speaking), but part of being a great magician is giving the audience more magic than they expect.

      • Mrs. Richard June 27, 2017 at 6:00 pm - Reply

        I found your story very interesting. I’m reaching out in hopes that someone can provide me with an answer. Atty. Steven J Rozan was my Federal atty that stemmed from a case in 2003-04. To make a long story short, he mandated he was paid in cash, $20,000.00, I’d never in my life been in trouble, this was me living with someone who was doing shady business, Steven never appeared in court which was out of state and reset MULTIPLE times (at least a year), until sentencing time, we never went thru evidence or talked to the prosecutor together. I have a masters degree, have always worked and was working at the time, and had a small child. I continue to want something done about this man.. He was such a con artist and I was too young and afraid to understand what was going on. I now have a felony and spent 4 months in the federal detention center. Multiple tries to then contact him to get my records or see if it. Oils be expunged have been unsuccessful. A misprision of. Felony, for what…. If you’re able to advise, it would be greatly appreciated…

  3. Lee Stonum December 11, 2010 at 12:15 pm - Reply

    You can be the worst CDL in the world. Treat your client’s like shit, lie to them, fuck their defense up. You will keep your bar card forever. Just don’t misappropriate funds. The few times I’ve really tried to go after someone on behalf of a client, I always do it by way of asking for an accounting and refund of unearned fees because saying you promised X, Y, Z and either didn’t do it or fucked it all up just doesn’t bother the Bar.

    • Mark Bennett December 11, 2010 at 1:17 pm - Reply

      That’s the conventional wisdom, but check out the case of another Houston lawyer who specialized in running clients from the Federal Detention Center, Steven Jay Rozan.

  4. Ken December 13, 2010 at 6:08 pm - Reply

    Detention is definitely a pitfall. But man, it’s nothing compared to sentencing.

    Back when the USSG were “mandatory”, absent a departure, the problems with defense attorneys showing up without knowing their ass from the guidelines was a constant problem. I was an AUSA in the 90s. Now and then a state practitioner who thought he was smart enough to “go federal” would show up. He’d be incensed if I wouldn’t negotiate a deal with him the way you would in state court, would say he’d just convince the judge to give him what he wanted, and generally wouldn’t know anything about the rather complex guideline structure. And at the sentencing itself, he’d stand there like a poleaxed steer and gape at the judge if she asked rather straightforward questions about guideline analysis.

    I once took what some might characterize as a dive in such a case — I made the defendant’s criminal-history-is-overrepresented argument for him, then argued against it. Afterwards, I was as rude as I have ever been to another human being to the guy in the hallway. It was infuriating.

  5. Matt Baldridge December 14, 2010 at 6:43 pm - Reply

    Got lucky and had bond granted in a federal conspiracy case yesterday involving at least 10,000kg of Marijuana involving our client who is a government designated “key” player. Magistrate initially denied bond by finding we did not rebut presumption (surprise surprise). District judge granted it after we appealed Had one heck of a happy client in our office this morning! While miracles do happen (and I chalk this up as one) we certaintly did not promise the client bond in the beginning. Made it abundantly clear odds were stacked against us given presumption status and his alleged role in the consp.

    Have never had bond granted in cocaine consp case.

  6. Carl Selesky October 19, 2011 at 3:43 pm - Reply

    That’s too bad. I worked for him as a young lawyer and he never seemed that bad.

    • Diane Mosley January 2, 2016 at 9:36 pm - Reply

      Carl….I was a client of John Osborne in approx. 1995 while you where working for him and with my and several other ladies’ harassment cases. I know for an absolute fact that you knew what John was doing including getting drunk the night before my settlement, and oh yes…. the best… he went on retainer as a lawyer for the “high profile” man we’d made suit against… talking about conflict. And yet we could not even get one single lawyer to represent us in trying to go up against Mr. Osborne. No way were you blind to all the corrupt stuff he was doing.

    • Angie Ditta August 31, 2016 at 7:41 pm - Reply

      By the way Thomas Alfrey contacted your wife years ago and you submitted a untrue statement about me. Ask next time. Notary was a lawyer. Hope life is good for you now.

    • Angie Ditta October 26, 2016 at 1:10 pm - Reply

      You told me you were always cleaning up his mess.

  7. Myke Glenn October 27, 2013 at 1:27 pm - Reply

    I was just informed that he was disbarred, this will go into effect January 1, 2014. It couldn’t happen to a finer person!!

    • Mark Bennett October 27, 2013 at 1:47 pm - Reply

      You are misinformed. He’s been suspended for a year. Judgment here. He was found to have violated “Rule 1.06(V)” (there is no such rule) and Rules 1.14(a)–(c).

  8. R. N. Heal April 2, 2016 at 9:55 pm - Reply

    This was justice and long overdue. This was an answer to my prayers.

    • lou June 14, 2016 at 12:08 am - Reply

      John Osborne -took post divorce case on referral. He didnt have the ability or knowledge to handle it-it was way out of his league.He proceeded directly backwards and i am still trying to get it straight after many years.
      Lou Gilpin

  9. Angie Ditta August 30, 2016 at 2:13 pm - Reply

    Mafia crime at work here?
    Did some research.
    Not my business lol!
    Why do you run this blog? Just wondering what the goal is here.
    Best of luck.

    • Mark Bennett September 2, 2016 at 11:48 am - Reply

      Why do I run this blog?

      Writers gotta write.

      Thanks for asking.

  10. ukitena June 14, 2018 at 10:27 am - Reply

    We hired John during the mortage meltdown for Statutatory Fraud, wrongfful foreclosure against Flagstar Bank and Queens Park Oval assets. That was in 2012. Three cases later with tthe last one beginning in 2013, deffault judgment was given in 2014. The last time we heard from him was in 2013 and his partner William Robertson. They did not put any damages in the case and yet we won nothing. The case has been reopened in March of 2017. WE knew nothing about it until a threatning phone call from John on May 30th, 2018 with one month until trial. Jody and i topped the cotton. This is wrong as is the action of the judge vacating his default judgmdent.

Leave A Comment

Recent Blog Posts

Categories

Archive