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January 20, 2014 in
Harris County DA Devon Anderson, in response to President Obama's comment that marijuana isn't more dangerous than alcohol, "in terms of its impact on the individual consumer," issued a press release. She begins: I adamantly disagree with the President. Whether and how she disagrees with the President has nothing to do with whether he is correct. Let's see her argument. She continues: According to a 2012 Drug
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January 6, 2014 in
Today in the UK, criminal barristers stopped work for the morning. (Don't call it a strike.) The non-strike was prompted by the government, falsely representing the criminal bar as well-paid fat cats (the Minister of Justice says "average £100,000…I mean, £84,000"; the truth is closer to £37,000, and criminal barristers' fees are already down 40% from the late 90s), proposing to cut £220 million from the indigent
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January 6, 2014 in
Following on my last two posts… The complicated problem is that the Gideon decision created attorney-client relationships barely worthy of the name, between lawyers with conflicting incentives and clients without choices. Now a judge in Washington State and a county in Texas are trying to address that deeper problem in ways that have never been tried in the United States. Their proposed solutions reflect competing schools of
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January 5, 2014 in
In The Practice of Law as a Confidence Game: Organizational Cooptation of a Profession, Abraham S. Blumberg's major thesis is that criminal-defense lawyers are turned from their duties to the client by the system to get their clients to plead guilty. This is a fair characterization overall, but not universally. Most criminal-defense lawyers put the client first—before personal and professional relationships and "clients"—to some extent. Those at
Posted on
January 5, 2014 in
In Casual cruelty–part two Judge Kopf mentioned "Abraham S. Blumberg’s 1967 classic entitled The Practice of Law as a Confidence Game: Organizational Cooptation of a Profession." Confidence games, law, and the cooptation of the profession? That sounded right up my alley. I found a copy in the wild. After reading it a couple of times, I am convinced that it is something that everyone needing to hire a criminal-defense lawyer
Posted on
December 22, 2013 in
Most Western European and North American social and medical systems operate under the primary ethical principle of autonomy. This principle allows the individual to determine the degree to which he or she will participate, or not, in any specific activity, including health care. For the patient to exercise autonomy, he or she must have a degree of understanding of his or her choices. Hence, medical providers have
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December 22, 2013 in
Over at Simple Justice, Scott Greenfield is taking nominations for the 5th Annual Jdog Memorial Best Criminal Law Blawg Post: It’s that time of year again! Time to recognize the effort and thoughtfulness of criminal law blawgers with our annual Best Criminal Law Blawg Post, which has been dedicated to the memory of our dear friend Joel Rosenberg. Unlike the other Beauty Pageants in the blawgosphere, the
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December 20, 2013 in
From the Plaintiff's Complaint in Jane Doe vs. El Paso County Hospital District, No. 3-13-CV-406-DB, in the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas, El Paso Division: 9. Defendant Michael Parsa is a medical doctor employed by the University Medical Center of El Paso. At all times relevant to this Complaint, he was acting in the course and within the scope of his employment.
Posted on
December 20, 2013 in
I feel for Michael Busby. According to him, he was having marital trouble, so he went to a professional. He paid good money—$530—for a solution to his problem. And things went wrong. The professional took another $2,700 from him, which he says he put in a box for the professional to cleanse and return to him. Ten days later she had not returned it. So he sued
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December 13, 2013 in
A sixteen-year-old kid gets a bunch of buddies in his truck. They steal a couple cases of beer and go speeding down a dark road with lots of blind corners. Suppose that he gets pulled over at mile marker 20 and is taken into custody for DWI. It's his first brush with the law. Should he go to prison? I suspect that the answer is "no." Prison