Defending People

the tao of criminal-defense trial lawyering

Thus Spake Brian

Okay, so I finally got around to down­load­ing and read­ing Miami criminal-defense lawyer Brian Tannebaum’s e-book, The Truth About Hir­ing a Crim­i­nal Defense Lawyer. (After Brian asked me to review it, I found it by googling the title; I was pleased to see Defend­ing Peo­ple pop up in the first page of search results.)

Sub­ti­tled, “The whole truth and noth­ing but the truth, and not the ‘truth that will lead you to hire me.’”, this lit­tle book cov­ers much the first-time accused needs to know to have at least a fight­ing chance of hir­ing com­pe­tent coun­sel, in six chap­ters entitled:

  • Money (for­get about your money prob­lems, and get the money; hire a lawyer you feel com­fort­able with, who charges more money than you wanted to spend);
  • Adver­tis­ing (adver­tis­ing works; don’t fall for it);
  • Prior Results (no two cases are the same);
  • Exper­tise / Types of Crim­i­nal Defense Lawyers (“mur­der is a six-figure word”);
  • For­mer Pros­e­cu­tors” (if you choose to hire an ex-prosecutor, make sure it’s for his defense expe­ri­ence); and
  • Con­nec­tions (we all know the judges, and the pros­e­cu­tors, and prob­a­bly the cops; none of them are going to sell out).

In the process of edu­cat­ing the pub­lic, Brian gives away some of the fam­ily secrets. For example:

Do not ever call a lawyer you are think­ing of hir­ing and ask how much he charges. He will imme­di­ately think you are cheap, broke, and that you will waste his time in a con­sul­ta­tion. On that note, don’t ever ask if there’s a con­sul­ta­tion fee. That’s like say­ing “you’re not going to ask me for $500 are you?” A client who has a prob­lem with $500 is again, per­ceived as cheap, broke, and a waste of a lawyer’s time.

There is one con­spic­u­ous absence from Brian’s book: “high-profile lawyers”. Many an accused goes shop­ping for a lawyer armed with the delu­sive belief that his case is a high-profile (“high-pub”, in the argot) case and that he needs a lawyer who spe­cial­izes in such cases. Some lawyers even make this part of their schtick (observe the page title). In my expe­ri­ence, the vast major­ity of peo­ple who think their cases are high-profile are engaged in ego­is­ti­cal wish­ful think­ing: “if it’s so impor­tant to me, it must be impor­tant to every­one else.”

Those who are actu­ally accused in high-profile cases, by con­trast, are des­per­ately seek­ing some­one who can get them out of the spot­light, and those lawyers who have han­dled high-pub cases and have their clients’ best inter­ests at heart would rather help the sto­ries drop off the news than see their own names in the paper. I’d like to see Brian address that.

The prac­tice of crim­i­nal defense law is a lit­tle dif­fer­ent every­where. In Florida, accord­ing to Brian, about 3% of DUI cases go to trial; in Texas, where DUI (which Texas law calls DWI) is a seri­ous crime for which an accused has a right to a jury trial, and espe­cially in Har­ris County, where there is essen­tially no plea bar­gain­ing in DUI cases, that num­ber ought to be a lot higher. (I don’t know if it is, but it should be — almost all first DUI/DWI cases should be tried.)

In Texas, where it’s all about the jury trial, “how often do you go to trial” would be a good ques­tion to ask the prospec­tive criminal-defense lawyer.

Those minor quib­bles aside, Brian pro­vides an excel­lent intro­duc­tion to the task of hir­ing a criminal-defense lawyer. I rec­om­mend it to any­one look­ing to hire his first criminal-defense lawyer. Or his sec­ond, though get­ting the right lawyer after you’ve already hired the wrong one is much more costly than get­ting it right the first time.

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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 “Thus Spake Brian”

  1. Windypundit says:

    Actu­ally, Brian wrote “Mur­der is a six-figure world.” But I like your ver­sion better.

  2. Mark Bennett says:

    I read that epi­gram and thought, “I wish I had thought of that.”

    It turns out that I had!

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