Posted on
June 4, 2014 in
I have tried a bunch of cases, and pled more. Win or lose, clients whose cases I've tried have almost universally been happy afterwards. Clients whose cases I've pled are often unhappy afterwards. The client who pleaded guilty has chosen a plea over a trial, and has agreed to the result; he should be happy. The client who went to trial may have been forced to trial
Posted on
May 20, 2014 in
A caller today said, "I heard that you got part of the Online Solicitation of a Minor statute held unconstitutional, but I know that decision doesn't apply to distributing sexually explicit material to minors." I asked him where he got that idea, and he pointed me to this on Dallas lawyer Everett Newton's website: Notably, two other sections of the online solicitation of a minor statute remain
Posted on
May 20, 2014 in
Five years ago, in February 2009 I filed an application for writ of habeas corpus on behalf of a guy—we'll call him Mr. Doe—who had been on probation since 2006 for online solicitation of a child under Section 33.021(b) of the Texas Penal Code, the "explicit communication" statute. I hadn't represented Mr. Doe at trial, and his trial counsel hadn't argued that the statute was unconstitutional. (This
Posted on
May 12, 2014 in
Emanuel Dominguez's fiancée, Jessica Cavender—a Marine like Emmanuel—was nowhere near when, according to this account, "Emmanuel Dominguez began backing away with his hands in the air when [Christopher Ernest] Braughton opened fire, shooting him once in the torso." Now Christopher Ernest Braughton is charged with murdering Emmanuel Dominguez (Indictment—PDF), and is set for trial August 11, 2014. So why is Christopher Ernest Braughton suing Jessica Cavender, the
Posted on
May 12, 2014 in
Ronald Thompson was arrested last September for taking photographs of swimsuit-clad children at Sea World in San Antonio. He was charged with violating Texas's improper photography statute: A person commits an offense if the person: (1) photographs or by videotape or other electronic means records, broadcasts, or transmits a visual image of another at a location that is not a bathroom or private dressing room: (A) without
Posted on
May 6, 2014 in
From the San Antonio Court of Appeals' opinion in Ex Parte Thompson (PDF), which is before the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals on discretionary review (and will be argued tomorrow morning by Don Flanary III of San Antonio and Eugene Volokh of L.A.): [W]e hold the plain language of the subsection 21.15(b)(1) does not “limit” or “restrict” the substantive content of photographs—in other words, it does
Posted on
March 31, 2014 in
I couldn't find the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure online in HTML format—only in PDF format—so I created them. You're welcome.
Posted on
March 26, 2014 in
From Scott Ehlers at the Harris County Public Defender's Office: The Harris County Public Defender’s Office received a grant from the Department of Justice to establish the Future Appointed Counsel Training Program (FACT) for new lawyers committed to representing indigent defendants in Harris County. The training includes a 14-day “boot camp” this summer , and 2 weekend follow-up trainings next year, all provided by Gideon’s Promise (online
Posted on
March 25, 2014 in
My Three Commandments of Criminal-Defense Ethics: I. Thou shalt not break the law. II. Thou shalt put thine client's interests above all else. III. There will be times when (I) and (II) seem to clash; at those times thou shalt consult ethics counsel. From Judge Richard Kopf, who has recommenced blogging at Hercules and the Umpire, in regard to lawyers wearing short skirts and low-cut blouses in