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Custodial Interviews By Child Protective Workers and Miranda

Posted by on 2:34 am in Blog | 0 comments

    A common practice after the arrest after an arrest for child sex crimes is for a Child Protective Services (CPS) Investigator to go the jail to interview the suspect regarding a CPS investigation of the same incident underlying the suspect’s arrest. In many cases the  CPS Investigator does not read the suspect Miranda warnings or obtain a Miranda waiver before conducting these custodial interrogations. The ostensible rationale is that the CPS Investigators are...

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New York State’s Affirmative Defenses: Legitimate Tools for the Defense or Traps for the Unwary?

Posted by on 6:23 pm in Blog | 0 comments

Last month, one of our clients had his murder conviction reversed by the Appellate Division, Fourth Department, after the trial court belatedly charged the affirmative defense of renunciation over objection (People v Brewer, 2014 WL 2782143, __ AD3d __ [4th Dept June 20, 2014]).  The court recognized the general rule that a court may not charge an affirmative defense over a defendant’s objection, and acknowledged that the Third Department had adopted a rule that...

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The People’s failure to disclose civil allegations against a police witness may still constitute a Brady violation under circumstances different than those in People v. Garrett.

Posted by on 1:50 am in Blog | 0 comments

by Danielle Wild, 2015 J.D. Candidate at Syracuse University College of Law and Intern at Easton Thompson Kasperek Shiffrin LLP Yesterday, the New York Court of Appeals decided People v. Garrett, holding the People did not commit a Brady violation when they failed to disclose that a federal civil action had been brought against one of their police witnesses. Mark Garrett was convicted after a trial by jury of two counts of murder in the...

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Ipads and apps in your legal practice

Posted by on 9:43 pm in Blog | 0 comments

by Jill Paperno, author of Representing the Accused: A Practical Guide to Criminal Defense As the Supreme Court recognized this week in Riley v. California, 2014 WL 2864483, technology is an inescapable component of our daily lives.  In Riley, the Court answered the question of whether warrants are required before police can search cell phones – and the answer was yes (with exceptions for exigent circumstances).  Justice Roberts, who wrote for the majority, stated,...

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Change of Circumstances Is Not a Prequisite for an Applicaition to Reconsider Bail

Posted by on 1:36 am in Blog | 0 comments

by Jill Paperno, author of Representing the Accused: A Practical Guide to Criminal DefenseThere have been a number of recent occasions on which prosecutors have argued during bail applications that there is no change in circumstances, seemingly implying that a court cannot reconsider bail.  Occasionally, this is argued in Part I during a bail review.  Increasingly, it is argued at arraignments on indictment.   Although a prosecutor may certainly make the argument in suggesting...

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The Court of Appeals Addresses The Use of Powerpoint in Summation

Posted by on 1:30 am in Blog | 0 comments

by Jill Paperno, author of Representing the Accused: A Practical Guide to Criminal DefenseIn People v. Cheryl Santiago, 2014 N.Y. Slip Op. 01261 (2/25/14)  the Court of Appeals  addressed several issues, including sufficiency of the corroboration of defendant’s confession, admissibility of letters (with sexual content) written by the defendant to another inmate who testified about alleged admissions she made to him and the use of a Powerpoint presentation by the prosecution during summation. The...

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