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Birmingham Capital Murder Conviction, Death Sentence, Overturned

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A Birmingham man will get a second shot at trial, after his 2010 Jefferson County conviction for capital murder was recently overturned by the Alabama Court of Appeals. Our Birmingham murder defense attorneys know that this is a rare opportunity for a defendant in such a case. Most don't get this kind of second chance. That is why it is critical for anyone facing criminal charges for a loss of human life - regardless of the circumstances - to invest in the services of an experienced legal defense team. Your goal should be to avoid a conviction altogether the first time. Here's the history on this case: Back in 2008, the 38-year-old defendant and his 40-year-old estranged girlfriend, the mother of his child and mother to two older girls, had been at odds since she began dating another man. One night, shortly after 2 a.m., prosecutors contend the defendant reportedly entered the victim's home, kicked in the bedroom door and shot her four times in the head as she slept. He then returned to his parent's home. One of the woman's older daughters called 911. The woman was pronounced dead at the scene. The defendant called 911 a short time later to indicate he wanted to surrender. He was then arrested without incident and charged with capital murder. Per Alabama Code 13A-5-40, there are a total of 18 possible capital offenses, meaning 18 charges that could result in the death penalty for the defendant. The only other option for punishment in these situations is life in prison. One of those is murder by a defendant during a burglary in the first or second-degree, which would apply in this case. The jury had convicted this defendant of the charge, and then subsequently chose to sentence him to life in prison by a vote of 10-2. However, the judge overruled this and instead sentenced the defendant to death, after considering the following aggravating circumstances: The victim was reportedly asleep in bed, with no possible means to flee or defend herself; The large size of the handgun; The victim had previously been threatened by the defendant. But now, the appellate court has overruled that verdict, finding that the court failed to accurately inform the jury on the issue of "provoked heat of passion" as it would have pertained to this capital case. In a statement that the defendant gave to police shortly after the homicide, he indicated that he had kicked open her apartment door, followed her into her bedroom and then shot her. He said that she was not sleeping, but rather was in the midst of an argument with him at the time of the killing. She reportedly slammed the door in his face, caused him to suffer a blow to the head. He also told investigators that he believed she was holding a knife and was about to stab him when he shot her. The appellate court, while not necessarily agreeing with his version of events, found that the lower court had erred in failing to include any comment at all on the state's burden to prove whether the defendant was acting unprovoked and not in the heat of passion. The latter would have applied to a lesser charge of provocation manslaughter, which would not have necessarily warranted a life sentence, let alone the death penalty. The appellate court found that the defendant's earlier statement was significant enough to at least raise the issue. The Jefferson County District Attorney's Office has said it will wait for direction from the state attorney general before determining how it will proceed. Capital litigation appeals go before the attorney general's capital litigation division.Contact Birmingham Criminal Defense Attorney Steven Eversole at (866) 831-5292. Additional Resources: State appeals court overturns capital murder conviction, death sentence in 2008 shooting in Center Point, May 3, 2013, By Kelsey Stein, AL.com More Blog Entries: Wanted on a Birmingham Warrant? Call a Lawyer First. March 10, 2013, Birmingham Criminal Defense Lawyer Blog

CA - Audio from an anonymous person about Coalinga State Hospital

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The following audio file was sent to use via email and posted with the users permission.WARNING: ADULT LANGUAGE, DISCRETION IS ADVISED!Audio Description: I would like to stay anonymous. I have a recording that I would like to share on your page with the world about Coalinga State Hospital how they are violating patients rights inside of the hospital.Update: Pretty much the staff had searched the patient room twice before this recording without documenting it and now this would be a total of three time in a week that he had been searched. So as you listen to this recording carefully the patient is pretty upset do to the fact that his first and second room search had cost him injury to his leg leaving multiple bruises and some of his personal belonging were missing. There are witnesses there who stated in this recording that the staff members and police who had searched his room all had their badges turned backward to were the patient can not identify who they are and the staff member had also cursed at the patient and that would be the women in the background.© 2006-2013 | Sex Offender Issues

FL - Today, An Accusation Gets You Life (in Prison)

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Original Article05/25/2013By Joseph SnookEscambia - Most professionals would agree that children lie. Young children often have a creative and vivid imagination. Learning the implications of a lie can be difficult without proper guidance. When a child lies, adults often laugh hysterically because it is so blatantly obvious. As a parent, I can relate to a child's fib and the humorous aspect of such. Despite the humor of lies told by children, the implications of certain un-truths can have serious effects. How can someone believe a child who clearly displays deceitful traits? How does a parent or an adult make the determination whether a lie is acceptable or not, regardless of its nature? How can you tell the difference between a lie and truth when a child who has admittedly lied to authorities, makes a statement that indicates a crime has been committed to that same authority?“An even more sophisticated level of lying emerges between the ages of 6 and 8... At this stage, it's not just the content of the lie, but the motive or attitude...” - Scholastic.comAllegations of a 7 Year Old Girl Places Zane Crowder in Prison for Life, Plus 25 Years Shyane Ellis, then 7 years old was playing outside her babysitter's house with another young girl. As the two young children continued to talk and play, Shyane told the older child that she had been touched by someone in her private area. The babysitter, Terrie Webb was then informed by the older child. The parents of Shyane, Abe and Danielle Levi, along with the authorities were subsequently contacted. Later, while describing the alleged sexual assault to authorities, Shyane claimed to have been told by a friend of hers that the same thing had also happened to her. According to video evidence, there were no questions from authorities to determine the validity of the statement by Shyane's friend or the probability of this comment by another young child possibly contributing to Shyane's similar accusation. Based on Shyane’s statement alone, 22 year old [name withheld] was arrested on June 6, 2010. Zane was ordered to be under electronic monitoring by the police and was charged with sexual battery and lewd or lascivious molestation upon a child under 12 years of age. Shyane Ellis had claimed that [name withheld] penetrated her private area with his finger. [name withheld] was a close friend of Shyane's step-father Abe Levi at the time of her accusation. Although he denied the allegations, he was labeled a child molester by many in his community, including many friends, neighbors and the local mainstream media.Read the entire article© 2006-2013 | Sex Offender Issues

S.1037: "A bill to ensure adequate protection of the rights under the Fourth Amendment" is presently MIA

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Sen. Rand Paul's bill to ensure adequate protection of the rights under the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States is not available on the Library of Congress website, perhaps until Tuesday. A lot of hype in the news and press releases. Too bad their keeping it from us until they want us to see it.

Lege slowly but surely plowing through Tim Cole Advisory Panel recommendations

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One has to give the Texas Legislature credit where it's due. The Timothy Cole Advisory Panel on Wrongful Convictions was a one-time task force charged with making recommendations to reduce false convictions in the wake of the posthumous exoneration of Tim Cole as well as dozens of other Texas men declared innocent of serious felonies after post-conviction DNA testing. See their report (pdf). One often hears that panel made eleven recommendations, but really it was fewer than that. For example, five of them related to eyewitness identification standards, all of which were addressed in just one bill. Consolidated, the group effectively proposed six different legislative solutions:Eyewitness ID reformRecording custodial interrogationsDiscovery reformExpand access to post-conviction DNA testingClarify standard for adjudicating junk-science habeas claimsFund staff at law-school innocence clinics instead of an innocence commissionRemarkably, with the passage of discovery reform and Sen. Whitmire's legislation allowing habeas relief in junk-science cases, after this session, to its credit, the Texas Legislature will have approved five of the six major recommendations of the Tim Cole Advisory Panel. Some may have been in more watered down forms than Grits might have preferred but still, that's not a bad record.Assuming Governor Perry approves these latest bills - and he's been supportive of past legislation based on Tim Cole Advisory Panel recommendations - the final major unresolved item from the list for next session will be requiring police to record interrogations in the most serious offenses. This year a bill to that effect was voted out of the House Criminal Jurisprudence Committee but, like a great deal of criminal-justice reform legislation, never received a vote on the House floor. The police chiefs' association says smaller departments can't afford it and until now my response has been that if they can't afford a recording device the department isn't big enough to handle rape and murder investigations. But that argument hasn't moved the needle so next session I've got my eye on a pot of untapped money that could perhaps be used for one-time recording equipment purchases, in much the same way the state used bond money to pay for dashcams in local police cars back in 2001. Recording equipment is cheap these days, it wouldn't take much.Still, considering the Legislature created the Tim Cole Advisory Panel in 2009, the same year it increased compensation for exonerees to become the most generous in the nation, and this is only the second session since its recommendations came out, five out of six isn't a bad ratio. There's more to be done, no doubt, and these measures represent modest first steps toward reform, not its culmination. But to outline half a dozen significant legislative suggestions and see five of them enacted in just two sessions is pretty darn impressive.

Happy Memorial Day - Thank You Troops and Veterans!

Kaufman County Court at Law- New Rules

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Clients of mine who have experienced the criminal justice system in multiple Texas counties are often surprised by how different the process is in each locality. The Penal Code and the Code of Criminal Procedure are the same across the State. However, judges still have a lot of discretion in how they run their docket. For example, how many resets do you get in a court before you must plea or set the case for trial? What time does docket start? What forms do you need to get a plea done? Does the client have to show up at each hearing? It's important for lawyers and defendants to know what they are getting into before they arrive. Recently, Dennis Jones was appointed as Judge in the Kaufman County Court at Law. Judge Jones published a short list of protocols for his court that you should know. 1. Defendants must be present at all court settings. 2. Only two resets may be obtained through the coordinator, thereafter see the judge. 3. No resets for plea settings, unless seen by judge. 4. Court costs shall be paid in full at the time of plea. 5. Defendants must turn off all electronic devices. 6. No food or beverages. 7. No shorts, flip flops, or tank tops. Also, the CCL courtroom is now in the space where the CCL2 courtroom used to be. So the County Court at Law is upstairs, and CCL2 is downstairs. The CCL courtroom is small, and there will not always be room for all the defendants to sit in their during docket call. So you may have to sit in the hall while your lawyer works on your case in the courtroom. Defendants should still check in with the bailiff, even if they can not sit in the courtroom.

How do I get an ignition interlock license?

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Assuming you are otherwise eligible - the following are brief instructions on how to obtain your Ignition Interlock license (IIL): 1. File the application & Pay the $100 application fee. Take your application to a local department of licensing driver's...

Sheppard on Jury, Liberty, and Decay

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Steve Sheppard (University of Arkansas) has posted Jury, Liberty, and Decay on SSRN. Here is the abstract: The jury is an ancient institution for the protection of an individuals’ liberty against wrongful accusation or punishment by the state. There are...

Great Job Arnold & Wadsworth

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I just wanted to congratulate Brian Arnold and Kara Nally for their recent trial wins. It isn’t always easy to fight over custody, parent time, alimony and child support. I feel blessed to work with such great trial attorneys that know they stuff when it comes to domestic litigation in Utah. Brian Arnold and Kara [...]

McBride on Probability in Court

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Ennis McBride (Institute for the Interdisciplinary Study of the Law) has posted The Practical Application of Probability in Court: Advancing Science or Timeless Art? on SSRN. Here is the abstract: The application of probability to issues of proof and evidence...

Effective ProPublica reports on the problems of prosecutorial misconduct

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The investigative journalism website ProPublica has now published another installment in its notable series of pieces concerning the problems of prosecutorial misconduct. The series is titled "Out of Order: When Prosecutors Cross the Line," and here are links to all...

"Humane Punishment for Seriously Disordered Offenders: Sentencing Departures and Judicial Control Over Conditions of Confinement"

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The title of this post is the title of this new paper by E. Lea Johnston now available on SSRN. Here is the abstract: At sentencing, a judge may foresee that an individual with a major mental disorder will experience...

Is capital punishment uniquely unfair to jurors required to make life/death decision?

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The question in the title of this post is prompted by this new AP article headlined "Arias trial jury foreman says death decision unfair for 12 average people who aren't lawyers." Here are excerpts: They were 12 ordinary citizens who...

D.Neb.: Voluntarily returning home supported finding of consent

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Defendant who voluntarily returned to his home in his own car voluntarily consented to a search of the house. United States v. Rodas, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 72970 (D.S.C. May 23, 2013).* Officers learning of file sharing of child pornography at a particular IP address. Sharing the wireless router was someone not living in that house. There was no CP in the house. The car next door was registered to a person with the same first name as on the other computers accessing the router. The did a knock-and-talk and let him go to work and got a SW for the house. United States v. Keiter, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 73233 (D.Neb. April 29, 2013).* Defendant’s claim of a lack of particularity in the search warrant was not timely made before trial so it is waived. United States v. Kaplan, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 10549 (3d Cir. May 24, 2013).* Defendant was handcuffed and going to be searched, and the officer asked him if he had anything on him that would stab the officer. He said he had a gun. That was not a custodial interrogation designed to elicit an incriminating response about a gun. [Besides, the frisk was going to occur anyway.] United States v. Nagy, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 73197 (N.D. Ohio May 23, 2013).*

OH - Man fights Facebook accusations of rape and being a pedophile

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Original Article05/23/2013By Rob WiercinskiTOLEDO - [name withheld] says being threatened by a total stranger was his first clue something wasn't right. "I was walking at Highland Park yesterday, a guy comes up to me and said, ‘You shouldn't be around here, this is a kids' area, you're a rapist.' I'm like, ‘Excuse me, no I'm not.'" On Monday, someone posting as Nicole McCarthy posted on Facebook [name withheld]'s picture, saying, "He's wanted by Toledo Police for 4 counts of rape. He raped three little girls and his own son." It's a serious allegation which [name withheld] says isn't true. "My girlfriend told me it was on Facebook," he said. "I was like, ‘Okay, what's going on? Send me the link.' Then my friend told me about it, too, so I went to the link. I was like, ‘This is not true.'" While Toledo Police say [name withheld] is not wanted on rape charges, that one post has been shared more than 20,000 times. "This is crazy, I'm scared to even walk down the street now because all of the drama that's been going on," he said. According to [name withheld], Nicole McCarthy is a fake account set up by the mother of his son, and he's hoping to clear his name and put this in the past. "It's getting aggravating because I'm trying to live my life, I'm not trying to do anything bad, I've changed my life around."© 2006-2013 | Sex Offender Issues

Man fights Facebook accusations of rape

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5-26-2013 Ohio: TOLEDO, OH (Toledo News Now) - Chad Lesko says being threatened by a total stranger was his first clue something wasn't right. "I was walking at Highland Park yesterday, a guy... [[This,an article summary.Please visit my website for complete article, and more.]]

The Register's Editorial: Farm bill should benefit everyone

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5-26-2013 Washington DC: The farm bill that died in the last Congress has come back to life. It might actually pass this time. Two versions of the bill being debated in the Senate and House... [[This,an article summary.Please visit my website for complete article, and more.]]

How Courts Punish You For Going To Trial

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Video Description: Courts are set up to minimize their own work load and punish people who are convicted of wasting the court's time by going to trial and being found guilty. Defense attorney and drug law specialist Victor Sherman speaks about the criminal justice system and the way the prison industrial complex it incentives pleading out of court with Crime Time in this clip.Video LinkFull Interview:Video Link© 2006-2013 | Sex Offender Issues

David Vitter’s hypocritical, punitive, horrible new amendment

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5-26-2013 Washington DC: Senator's new measure denies food stamps for life to certain classes of ex-convicts In a sleepy moment on the Senate floor Wednesday, Senate Democrats accepted an... [[This,an article summary.Please visit my website for complete article, and more.]]
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