Archive for February, 2009
Following the crumbs
Feb 13th
I haven’t done this in a few months, so on this Friday the 13th let’s take a look at what brought you psychotic internet readers to my blog. As always, act your age.
- Of all the searches, the top non law related search was for “naked pictures”. Unfortunately, all they got was this lousy post.
- “me naked” was also popular. Presumably, these people have no mirrors.
- “is law school for me” is also a surprisingly common phrase used in search engines, just behind “what is my name”.
- “shame on you”. yes, shame on me indeed.
- “stachatory rape laws”
- quite a few visitors admonished me to “learn law” or, in the case of the more articulate ones “learn the law”.
- I like the simplicity of this one: “beer”. Yes, please.
- “Eye of the beholder porn”. That’s a new fetish.
- my personal favorite: “gravity defender”. Now if only they meant gravitas defender.
- “let me see you naked”, to which I say “buy me a drink first”.
- “humorous porn”. Porn is serious business.
- “Is it ethical for a public defender to refuse to represent a person believed to be guilty?” I get this one a lot, so let me say this once and for all: No.
- “halp”. bai, thx.
- “purple heart trees”. And they say you have to earn one.
- “asleep”. Okay, I get the hint.
Ban the box, save the ex-felon
Feb 12th
I have long complained about the failure of governments to engage in any sort of meaningful re-entry for inmates. For a vast majority of released felons, prison is a revolving door. Without any training, education or skills, job prospects are dismal. With no job, there is no money and where there is no money, there is the lure of crime to make some quickly.
Which is why I was pleasantly surprised this morning, while listening to Where We Live on NPR. The guest was John DeStefano, mayor of New Haven, and he was discussing the policy he seeks to implement in the city: ban the box. No, this is not some traffic related policy, as I first thought, but a clever scheme aimed at integrating ex-felons back into the community.
Ban the box refers to banning employment applications from listing a “box” that asks applicants whether they are ex-felons. This allows ex-felons to be on the same footing as any other applicant, by preventing would-be employers from discarding them at the get-go. I’m embarrassed that this story has escaped my attention for three months now, but the wonderful New Haven Independent is all over it:
The Nordstrom fiasco
Feb 11th
Some days are agonizing
Feb 11th
In this line of work, I don’t think there’s anything more heart wrenching that sitting across from a likely innocent client and having to tell him that there’s no way to prove that innocence and then watching him hold back tears and decide between two morbid choices: accepting the plea offer and spend the next 15 years locked up or go to trial and risk 60 years.
Sometimes I feel overwhelmed.
The plea jury: a mirror unto ourselves
Feb 10th
The Plea Jury is the title and subject of a new (draft) paper by Laura Appleman, a professor of law at Willamette and blogger at The Faculty Lounge, which goes into some length about the failure of the plea bargaining system and how it should be replaced by this innovation.
The plea jury, essentially, would be a jury of lay persons who would “preside” over the plea bargaining process. It would make the determination of the voluntariness of the plea, decide whether to accept the plea and listen to the defendant’s allocution, ultimately settling on the punishment to be imposed, if the recommended sentence is unsatisfactory.
This, according to Appleman, while not being a pancea, would substantially reduce the problems with the plea bargaining process as they currently stand.
I spot some problems with this right at the outset, but I’m not willing to completely dismiss it out of hand. The problems, of course, are the greater participation of the “public” into a mechanism where their encroachment is already great. The plea bargain is essentially a contract between the State and the defendant. Her proposal of the plea jury would inject a section of the public into that contract, as an ultimate arbiter. The rights of the defendant would yet again take second place to this retributive theory and the primacy of the public.
She also makes much of the jury’s ability to discern whether the defendant is showing honest remorse, does accept responsibility and so on.
Gideon’s suggestions for reducing the budget deficit in CT
Feb 9th
I know no one asked, but I am nothing if not a bloviator, so these are my suggestions for reducing (even in small part) the current budget deficit that CT faces. In the style of a letter to our Governor.
Dear Governor Rell,
You and I haven’t always gotten along. In fact, it’s no secret that I don’t like your views on criminal justice and your disregard for the “rule of law”. But these are strange times and strange times make strange bedfellows – or in our case, strange letter writers and recipients.
So, in the spirit of bi-partisanship so convincingly advocated for by our C-in-C, I propose the following changes that could save the State some money, even if it isn’t much. Perhaps it can save a job or two.
Judge Cofield suspended for 240 days
Feb 9th
The Judicial Review Council has just handed down its punishment of Judge Cofield: a 240 day suspension. All said and done, this isn’t the worst outcome. Meanwhile, some other judges are still on the bench…
If the budget deficit exceeds $1bn, it must be bizarro-world
Feb 6th
Ever since the Governor announced her proposed budget earlier this week, the cost-cutting proposals have received a lot of scrutiny both in the press and on the web. So it is only in this troublesome climate that eliminating a measure that would reduce incarceration costs can be considered a cost-saving measure.
One of the things she mentioned in her speech was that, in order to save money, 130 “obsolete” laws would be repealed. An interesting idea, to be sure, until you look at one of the statutes on that list. That would be Conn. Gen. Stat. 54-125d. If you’re too lazy to click on the link, I’ll tell you what it is: the deportation parole statute.
CT public defenders not immune to cuts either
Feb 4th
Not much to say here, since this is just the Gov’s proposed budget [pdf], but we’d be taking hits too (and might end up closing/merging two courthouses). I want to know what “remove or limit inflation” means. Page 719 onwards.
Down the judicial rabbit hole
Feb 4th
CT is in the midst of judicial renominations, as I wrote about recently. So judges naturally are the center of attention, both in the legislature and the media. But perhaps no judge in recent months has received the scrutiny that Judge Curtissa Cofield, who is not up for renomination, has.
Judge Cofield was arrested several months ago for driving while intoxicated and hitting a parked cruiser. As if that wasn’t enough, stories started to circulate in the media that Judge Cofield had gone on a rant while being booked, using racial slurs and asserting her status as a judge.
Many articles were written, pillorying her and calling for her resignation. Inexcusable, her behavior was called. A stain on the judicial system, the incident was declared. There were a few articles written about her tremendous work in Hartford’s Community Court, but those were few and far between.
Just last week, the police department released portions of the booking video, which you can view below.



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