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The Glass is 5/62 full – The New York Hurrell-Harring Settlement

Posted by on October 23, 2014 in Blog | 0 comments

by Jill Paperno, Esq.,author of  Representing the Accused: A Practical Guide to Criminal Defense As criminal defense lawyers, and especially as public defenders, we are often a unique combination of optimism and pessimism. We become convinced that we will prevail at trial under impossible circumstances – and often we do. We are certain that the judge is out to get us, the prosecutor is holding back, or the police are not being truthful –...

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Motion to dismiss the indictment based on denial of the defendant’s right to testify before the grand jury; revisited

Posted by on October 22, 2014 in Blog | 1 comment

The October 17th News Picks email update to New York State Defender Association members (a great organization and valuable source for criminal law developments, $75/year for attorneys, $15/year for students, a bargain at twice the price) included a summary of People v Chappelle, 2014 WL 5285479 [3rd Dept 10/16/14], an important case from the Third Department. Mr. Chappelle was arraigned without counsel.  The next day, the prosecution’s notice of the right to testify before...

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Is sum and substance good enough for Grand Jury testimony?

Posted by on October 21, 2014 in Blog | 0 comments

The prosecution’s new penchant for videotaping confessions/interrogations raises the following issue. The facts are generally straight forward. The defendant is arrested, detained and interrogated by police investigators. The entire interrogation is video and audio recorded. He starts off denying everything then gradually lets some information slip out, then before you know it he cracks like an egg and admits everything. The tapes vary in length, but generally are 6 – 10 hours long. Lots...

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Overcriminalized: America’s use of incarceration as a response to mental illness, substance abuse, and homelessness

Posted by on October 18, 2014 in Blog | 0 comments

This series of short YouTube videos by Brave New Films examines the overuse of incarceration and, in the case of the mentally ill, force – too often deadly physical force – as a means to control those who are unable to toe the imaginary line of the social compact, thereby frightening the rule-bound and risk-averse.  The first video, for example, examines the social and economic benefits to utilizing officers and agencies trained in crisis...

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Family Court: An under utilized resource for the criminal defense attorney

Posted by on October 15, 2014 in Blog | 0 comments

Family court proceedings can be the ultimate source of discovery for the criminal defense attorney. Where a child neglect/abuse petition is filed in family court against a parent of a child or a “person legally responsible” for a child, there is often a companion criminal case.  The allegations in both venues are often identical.  Despite this, criminal defense attorneys (in my experience) seldom contact a client’s family court attorney or observe the family court...

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