Defending People

the tao of criminal-defense trial lawyering

The Hired-Gun Prosecutor

Kelly Siegler, hav­ing left the Har­ris County DA’s Office, will be work­ing as a spe­cial pros­e­cu­tor on a cap­i­tal mur­der case in Whar­ton County.

My admit­tedly cur­sory legal research on the ques­tion hasn’t revealed legal author­ity for any­one other than an assis­tant attor­ney gen­eral to assist in the pros­e­cu­tion of crim­i­nal cases, unless the dis­trict attor­ney is unable to per­form his duties.

I sup­pose the sup­port­ing the­ory would be that the elected DA can hire whomever he wants to pros­e­cute crim­i­nal cases, on what­ever terms they agree to. So if Whar­ton County D.A. Josh McCown feels that he is out­classed by the defense team of Hous­ton criminal-defense lawyer (and for­mer HCCLA pres­i­dent) Stan­ley Schnei­der and Rich­mond criminal-defense lawyer Lee Cox, he can hire Kelly Siegler just to try the case on which they oppose him.

I don’t think this is really a “spe­cial pros­e­cu­tor” posi­tion — my read­ing of the law is that only a judge can appoint a spe­cial pros­e­cu­tor, and only when the dis­trict attor­ney is unable to act — but it raises an inter­est­ing ques­tion about pros­e­cu­tion in the 21st century:

Could Kelly Siegler make a busi­ness of trav­el­ing from county to county pros­e­cut­ing alleged evildoers?

Being a criminal-defense lawyer is in part being a busi­ness­man; I’m look­ing at this ques­tion not in terms of ethics or law, but only of busi­ness: could Kelly cre­ate a viable busi­ness plan based on pri­vate pro­vi­sion of pros­e­cu­to­r­ial services?

I antic­i­pate two likely hur­dles that will have to be over­come: ego and money.

The ego that will have to be over­come is not Kelly’s, but that of the pros­e­cu­tor in each case in which Kelly A would hope to be employed. Dis­trict attor­neys are not gen­er­ally known for their humil­ity. Indeed, humil­ity would make it dif­fi­cult for them to func­tion. Most Texas pros­e­cu­tors prob­a­bly think that they could do as good a job pros­e­cut­ing cases as Kelly Siegler. By all accounts, most of them would prob­a­bly be wrong. It is unlikely, how­ever, that they could eas­ily be con­vinced of this. So they would have to be per­suaded that hav­ing Kelly pros­e­cute a case on their behalf was some­how in their best interest.

The money hur­dle would arise only if Kelly wanted to get paid for her work. Mar­ried to a suc­cess­ful physi­cian, Kelly might not be inter­ested in this. If she doesn’t, the need­less­ness of pay­ing her may assuage the egos of the pros­e­cu­tors whom she would be sup­plant­ing, over­com­ing both hur­dles at once — they can per­suade both their vot­ers and them­selves that hir­ing Kelly to try a dif­fi­cult case is a wise fis­cal decision.

Even if Kelly needs to get paid to pros­e­cute, there might be a way for her to find work: patronage.

If a pri­vate cit­i­zen or group of pri­vate cit­i­zens found it impor­tant enough for a per­son to be well and thor­oughly pros­e­cuted, they might decide to hire Kelly to do the job. For exam­ple, the wealthy fam­ily of a mur­der vic­tim might hire Kelly to seek vengeance on their behalf (except that she would be ask­ing the jury for it on behalf of “the State”) or police offi­cers might take up a col­lec­tion to hire tally to pros­e­cute the per­son whom they believed to have killed one of their own.

With pri­vate back­ing, Kelly might over­come a small-county prosecutor’s ego by explain­ing how, with her expe­ri­enced help on that one big case, he can spend his time on his other cases; the DA can present the deci­sion to his con­stituents not as an admis­sion that he’s not up to the job, but as a way to save them money.

Only the small details remain:

How to get the busi­ness? Word of mouth and the inter­net, of course. Put up a web­site and the press will do all of your adver­tis­ing for you. Or cherry-pick your cases, find­ing news­pa­per accounts of crimes for which some­one might be both able to and inclined to hire you, and send­ing busi­ness cards, Pal­adin style, to the likely customers.

How much to charge? What­ever the mar­ket will bear. Remem­ber that this is a lux­ury prod­uct, not a neces­sity. How much is vengeance worth?

What if I lose? When you’re sell­ing vengeance, you’d bet­ter deliver. You’re only as good as your last ver­dict, and if that last ver­dict had the accused smil­ing on the steps of the cour­t­house, then you’re out of the vengeance busi­ness. For the hired-gun pros­e­cu­tor, los­ing is not an option.

The idea of Kelly Siegler rid­ing around Texas on a pale horse is an enter­tain­ing one. I’ve even thought of a slo­gan for her:

I get paid to make peo­ple afraid.

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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

5 Responses to “The Hired-Gun Prosecutor”

  1. AHCL says:

    I don’t know if I would read too much into Kelly assist­ing on this par­tic­u­lar case. I’m sure that she was glad to help out in Whar­ton County, but I can’t really see a sit­u­a­tion like this aris­ing too often. Although I’m sure Kelly would love the gig as being the legal equiv­a­lent of Pal­adin, I don’t see this hap­pen­ing too often.

    I just kind of look at the Whar­ton County job as being a type of methadone to help ease out of the pros­e­cu­tion addiction.

  2. anonymous says:

    The caselaw makes clear that a DA can ask any attor­ney to assist him as a “spe­cial pros­e­cu­tor” so long as the DA retains con­trol and man­age­ment of the case, and he need not get judi­cial approval to do so. So the Whar­ton Co. DA is com­pletely within the law in request­ing Kelly Siegler to assist him as a spe­cial prosecutor.

    Regard­ing your ques­tion of whether she will now go county to county to pros­e­cute alleged evil­do­ers, doubt­ful. The prob­lem for any­one who attempts to make pri­vate spe­cial pros­e­cu­tion a full time gig is money, espe­cially if that per­son is expect­ing to han­dle major crimes. Let’s face it, if a small county has a death penalty case, the county cof­fers are often drained by the expense of mul­ti­ple court appointed defense attor­neys and experts, along with the cost of the trial. Not many of those coun­ties can then afford to pay a spe­cial pros­e­cu­tor too.
    It is even more dif­fi­cult for a pri­vate spe­cial pros­e­cu­tor to get the job, when you con­sider that the AG’s Office has some pretty good attor­neys, along with their inves­ti­ga­tors and staff who go assist small coun­ties in cap­i­tal cases and other major crimes. But the kicker is, that they do it free of charge to the county.

  3. Mark Bennett says:

    AHCL, maybe you’re right, but if pros­e­cu­tion is as impor­tant to the sur­vivors as y’all seem to think it is, they’ll be clam­or­ing to pay Kelly to do the job (Anon — mak­ing it unnec­es­sary for the county to pay her).

  4. […] Ben­nett won­ders if there is a mar­ket for the hired-gun […]

  5. skip coronado says:

    Let’s be real. Whar­ton is merely a tran­si­tion gig for Ms. Siegler. Kelly Siegler is a “Brand Name”. She will be a hot com­mod­ity in the civil mar­ket and have the lux­ury of hand­pick­ing the offers thrust on her with­out hav­ing to actively mar­ket her­self. Iron­i­cally, the “win at all costs” con­dem­na­tion she was unfairly labeled with is exactly what plain­tiffs and big busi­ness alike yearn for.

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