Archive for December, 2008

Where’s Gideon?

carmen-3

Can you spot Gideon?

It’s been a while since there have been any new posts on this blog and for that, I take sole responsibility as the primary (and only) author. Gideon has been preoccupied with several things, including the holidays, work and snow. However, another round of days off are on the horizon and with that comes the promise of some fresh content.

So, sit back, grab a cup of coffee (actually, do that tomorrow and into the weekend. It’s a bit late for that now) and feast your eyes on the smorgasboard of posts that spring forth from this idle mind.

In other words, I’ll post soon, I promise!

Happy New Year to you and you.

For the music, I have provided a song with “New Year’s Day” in the title:

1 thing law school isn’t meant to teach you

How to be a lawyer.

My post “10 things I didn’t learn in law school” led to a bunch of comments here, and some links from other blogs. Most of the commenters and other bloggers got it. One person, in the comments at the Marquette law school blog apparently didn’t.

Now he’s back at it and writes this [scroll to comment 11]:

However, I strongly agree with Chris King’s sense of the proper relationship between legal education and the practice of law. We don’t want law school to be lawyer-training school. When we cave in to demands of that sort from the ABA and assorted study commissions, we actually invite alienation among law students and lawyers. Legal education should appreciate the depth of the legal discourse and explore its rich complexities. It should operate on a graduate-school level and graduate people truly learned in the law.

I don’t know whether to laugh or cry. Laugh at the arrogance and short-sightedness or cry for the students at Marquette.

Lawyer as magician

This does pose some rather interesting questions about the role of lawyers vis a vis magicians, but that’s not why I’m writing. I just want y’all to feast your eyes on this beauty. Best. Lawyer.Website.Ever.

New CT blawg

Stumbled across a new (to me) CT blawg: CT Sports Law. Looks interesting. Here’s a recent post on whether Donald Brown should remain at UCONN. Enjoy.

When does police coercion make a confession involuntary?

interrogation

We're gonna get what we want, see?

Here’s the quick answer: almost never. If you’re still interested, read the rest of the post. Be warned, though. It is long.

I realize this is a slightly heavy topic for Christmas Day, but such are the conversations I have over lunch. What precipitated this line of thought is this Kansas Supreme Court decision, up for cert. before SCOTUS in the coming weeks.

In Morton, the Kansas Supreme Court held that the [police officer]‘s deliberate misleading of the defendant led to her confession being involuntary. The officer lied to Morton about her need for an attorney during the interrogation and lead her to believe that all he had were clarifying questions. The KS Supreme Court held thusly (more on Morton and CT law after the jump):

Another Beatty Christmas

It’s been nearly 14 years now since H. Beatty Chadwick was first acquainted with the inside of a prison cell. Chadwick, a rich lawyer in PA, was jailed back in the ’90s for that most serious of crimes: contempt of court.

This wasn’t your run-of-the-mill contempt either, where he told a judge to stuff it. No, Chadwick is in jail for violating a civil court’s order of alimony. So what happened? From this 2005 ABC Primetime piece:

Depositions, Texas style

I’m sure this has been around the ‘net, but one more time, in honor of Xmas:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZIxmrvbMeKc[/youtube]

‘Twas the night before Christmas

and Santa needs some cash:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sxBl9BXLom4[/youtube]

Via Balko

Two jurors sitting in a tree, K-I-S-S-I-N-G

Okay so it wasn’t so much a tree as it was a hotel room and they weren’t kissing but rather “doin’ it”. Apparently, during the trial of Roberto Dunn, two jurors were “deliberating each other” (euphemisms solely mine) and two deputies who were charged with guarding the jurors were also “taking sexual liberties” (that’s a quote).

The strange part of the story is that this trial was in 2000 and the allegations were made by a fellow juror in a letter sent to the judge shortly after the trial. Dunn’s lawyers allegedly put the under seal and “didn’t do enough” to get a new trial. Now, Dunn’s new lawyer is seeking a new trial for him.

The Importance of Being Gideon (updated)

gideonrazzie2

Gideon gleefully accepting the award

Congrats to Gideon for being named by the CT Law Tribune one of the dozen who made a difference in 2008!  The article (“An Anonymous Voice With An Attitude”) isn’t up on the Trib’s website yet, but I will link to it when it becomes available online.  Gideon discusses the benefit of blogging, the success of apublicdefender.com, and the difficult task of remaining anonymous.

You definitely deserve the accolades, Gid!  Thanks for your hard work and dedication.  We are all better lawyers because of it!

[Edit: Hello, Gideon here. Welcome to all the Law Trib readers. If you're new, stick around and read some of the posts. Take the poll and let us know what you are! If you're not new here, then, well...why aren't you commenting? Anyway, readers old and new, leave a comment and start a discussion! If you know what an RSS reader is, subscribe to the feed, or else sign up for e-mail updates over there to the right. Some videos for your enjoyment after the jump. See, we're a full service blog.]

Monday Evening Meltdown

I wish the snow would melt, but doesn’t look like it’s going to happen for another two days or so. That means Gideon is lethargic and when Gideon is lethargic, Gideon makes lists.

Here, enjoy these fine posts from around the blogosphere:

What I want to know

Is what happened to the eyewitness ID blog? Anyone? Did they move and just not tell me?

The reasonable man goes to a public place

So in light of my previous post (and the police’s strange contention that a liquor license makes a closed bar a public place), I decided to look up the public indecency statute and figure out what a public place actually means.

Here’s the answer:

I don’t know what the hell the police are talking about.

The public indecency statute, C.G.S. 53a-186, defines public indecency as:

DNA Exoneration FTW

Following up on the DNA exoneration story from two weeks ago, I can happily point you to this report that Miguel Roman has been granted a new trial and was released from custody today, in time for the holidays.

Judge David P. Gold agreed after a brief hearing today to release Roman, 52, on a promise to appear in court. Roman’s lawyers, citing evidence that appears to exonerate Roman in the 1988 killing of 17-year-old Carmen Lopez, petitioned for a new trial for Roman.

Gold granted that motion today.

Prosecutor David Zagaja noted that the petition for a new trial stems from newly discovered evidence stemming from a technology that “simply didn’t exist” in 1988. It was not immediately clear whether the prosecution will proceed to a new trial or move for a dismissal of the case.

It would be remarkable if the State decided to prosecute him again, so  I don’t think that will happen. More likely than not, the charges will be dismissed.

The saddest part of this story is the 20 years of his life that Roman lost.

When the lobby’s a-rockin’

The police come knockin’. All I have to say about this story is that they were in a hotel. Think about it. What does a hotel have a lot of? (Yes, there’s the interesting question of whether a liquor license makes a place “public” even if it is closed, but I don’t care enough to research it.)

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