Defending People

the tao of criminal-defense trial lawyering

Criminal Practice: The Treadmill

| November 4, 2009

I charge bigger fees . . . so I can take fewer cases . . . so I can give each case more attention . . . so I can get better results . . . so I can charge bigger fees . . . so I can take fewer cases . . . I [...]

Share

Recharging

| September 22, 2009

I spent the weekend in trial mode, preparing for a DWI trial in Montgomery County, north of Houston. This would’ve been only my second trial in a slow year for jury trials (the first ended in an acquittal; several others have been dismissed on the eve of trial) and my client’s career was at stake, [...]

Share

Jury Selection: Simple Rule 16: The Herd Rule

| September 10, 2009

The last rule for right now (it is an evolving list). . . . I’ve talked about how the jury panel is a group and the jury is a group. Why? Because people like to be in groups. Most people will, given a choice between being in a big group and being in a small [...]

Share

Jury Selection: Simple Rule 15: The Bat Rule

| September 10, 2009

If the rules were in some particular order, this would have received much higher ranking.  Simple Rule 15: The Bat Rule: Ping, then listen. Or fail. Because bats, you know, use echolocation: ping! and detect food and obstacles by the signal that bounces back. A bat that doesn’t ping doesn’t eat, but neither does a [...]

Share

Jury Selection: Simple Rule 14: The Atticus Finch Rule

| September 10, 2009

Remember the scene near the end of To Kill a Mocking Bird in which Atticus Finch, having lost the case, wearily packs up his things to leave the courtroom? As he’s preparing to leave, the blacks in the gallery stand up for him; Reverend Sykes tells Scout, “Miss Jean Louise? Miss Jean Louise, stand up! [...]

Share

Jury Selection: Simple Rule 13: The Undertow Rule

| September 10, 2009

In Simple Rule 12: The Field Trip Rule, I talked about how the jury panel is a group, and you have to stay with the group. This group has sixty heads and sixty bodies, each one of which is throwing off communications cues every second. It is not possible for one lawyer, talking to sixty [...]

Share

Jury Selection: Simple Rule 12: The Field Trip Rule

| September 10, 2009

In Simple Rule 2: The Blind Date Rule, I pointed out that the 60 potential jurors, by the time they reach the courtroom, are no longer strangers to each other; they have formed a group. When you get up to talk to them, what’s your relationship to the group? You’re an outsider. You are not [...]

Share

Jury Selection: Simple Rule 10: The Marathon Rule

| August 31, 2009

I want to make it clear that I don’t do foolish things like play beer pong or run marathons. But I draw inspiration from the foolish things that other people do. So the next Simple Rule for Better Jury Selection is The Marathon Rule, to wit: Save something for the end. There’s the possibility that, [...]

Share

Jury Selection: Simple Rule 9: The Beer Pong Rule

| August 31, 2009

In Beer Pong, The ball is always in play. If the ball hits the floor, ceiling, wall or even leaves the room it can still be, and should be, hit back in the direction of the table. So it is in jury selection, except that “the ball” is the conversation and “the table” is the [...]

Share

Jury Selection: Simple Rule zero: One Rule to Rule Them All

| August 29, 2009

Jury selection is not only—nor even mostly—about selecting (or deselecting) jurors. If you use voir dire simply to find the jurors whom you want to strike, you're missing out on most of the value of jury selection. These rules will help you anyway.  

Share

Bad Behavior has blocked 2490 access attempts in the last 7 days.