Defending People

the tao of criminal-defense trial lawyering

Intellectual Property?

A friend who’s a great criminal-defense lawyer in Collin County (and a for­mer pub­lic defender and, before that, a for­mer pros­e­cu­tor) read my blog and asked me for per­mis­sion to “steal” some of my writ­ing for his website.

My first reac­tion was that my ideas aren’t my pro­tected prop­erty. After all, lawyers copy each other’s mate­r­ial all the time. When I write a brief or a motion that works, I expect that other lawyers will incor­po­rate my research and writ­ing into their own briefs and motions. When I have found, some­thing that will help my clients in a brief or motion that some­one else has writ­ten, I have had no qualms about incor­po­rat­ing it into my own work.

Then I hap­pened upon this arti­cle about Pham v. Jones. In that case, Michael Pham, a Hous­ton “let­ter lawyer” who gets about 15 new clients each week (95% of his new busi­ness) at between $100 and $300 per mis­de­meanor and $500 and $750 per felony, sued Ray­mond Jones, another let­ter lawyer with iden­ti­cal rates, for send­ing out a let­ter and brochure sub­stan­tially sim­i­lar to the let­ter and brochure that Mr. Pham would send to poten­tial clients.

(For those not famil­iar with let­ter lawyers: the term is not a one of appro­ba­tion. Mr. Pham and Mr. Jones used a sys­tem for solic­it­ing clients, wherein they would find prospec­tive clients through Har­ris County arrest records. They would then mail those arrested indi­vid­u­als who had been released from jail form let­ters and brochures inform­ing them of the legal ser­vices they pro­vided. Mr. Pham would charge his max­i­mum fee [$300 for mis­de­meanors, $750 for felonies] if a case were reset more than once.)

Here are Judge Hittner’s Find­ings of Fact and Con­clu­sions of Law from Pham v. Jones as well as the Attach­ments to Motion for Sum­mary Judg­ment, includ­ing copies of the two let­ter lawyers’ let­ters to accused peo­ple, filed in that case.

Law Pro­fes­sor Thomas G. Field, Jr., who wrote the arti­cle that brought this case to my atten­tion, wrote of the fact that lawyers copy each other’s mate­r­ial all the time: “Such prac­tices, even if wide­spread, are no more rel­e­vant than claims offered by peo­ple who jus­tify copy­ing soft­ware, music and other dig­i­tal con­tent on the basis that “every­body does it.” (That goes to show you how lit­tle I know about intel­lec­tual prop­erty law.)

So, as I under­stand it, I have an enforce­able copy­right on the things I pub­lish on the web. I could reg­is­ter the copy­right and sue peo­ple who use my blog­ging in their own web­sites. Would I? No.

I try to behave so that if every­one else believed the same way the world would be a bet­ter place; I try to write so that if every­body else wrote the same things the world would be a bet­ter place. I’m more inter­ested in my ideas prop­a­gat­ing than in get­ting credit for them. I’d hate to think that other lawyers were, to get more clients, cyn­i­cally pre­tend­ing to believe what I believe, but any­one who wants to adopt my ideas as his own is wel­come to them.

Attri­bu­tion would, of course, be nice.

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About The Author

Mark Bennett got his letter of marque from the Supreme Court of Texas in May 1995. He is famous for having no sense of humor when it comes to totalitarianism.

Comments

4 Responses to “Intellectual Property?”

  1. tom says:

    A hun­dred bucks for a mis­de­meanor?
    What’s that old say­ing about “You get what you pay for?”

  2. Mark Bennett says:

    You often get less than you pay for, but you rarely get more.

  3. […] Clearly he’s hav­ing fun with this one even though in his own blog he has pre­vi­ously writ­ten “That goes to show you how lit­tle I know about intel­lec­tual property […]

    • Mark Bennett says:

      Yeah, I know a lot more about IP law than I did five years ago when I wrote this post, and clearly much more than the igno­rant nutjob who wrote that post threat­en­ing to sue me.

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