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PR: Harris County Criminal Court Suggestions Post-Harvey

September 5, 2017 Leave a Comment

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT: Tucker Graves, HCCLA President 713-225-4273 office, email Tucker Graves

Houston, Texas – September 5, 2017 – The Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association, which represents Harris County’s criminal-defense bar, the largest organization of participants in the Harris County criminal justice system, suggests the following to help ensure a safe, functioning, and fair criminal justice system for the people of Harris County in the wake of the destruction rendered by Hurricane Harvey:

  1. Judges should be uniform in their policies to provide predictability to the bar and the public. Nobody should have to learn which of 38 different policies apply to his or her case.
  2. Defendants with counsel should be allowed resets of at least ninety days between court appearances. Hurricane Harvey is going to have a huge financial toll on our county; the lost productivity of the accused attending multiple unnecessary court appearances would only compound this toll.
  3. Bond conditions such as ignition interlock and SCRAM devices should be used minimally.
  4. Pretrial intervention and other diversionary programs should not rely on the Court Services Department or the Community Supervision and Corrections Department. These agencies are going to be overburdened already, and their participation in such programs is not (and has not historically been) necessary.
  5. Electronic filing should be speedily implemented. The less physical resources the system needs, the better for all involved.
  6. The cases of defendants in custody should be prioritized. We recognize that this catastrophe may affect defendants’ ability to get their cases quickly resolved; those who are unable to make bail should not suffer the extraordinary consequences of this storm any more than is necessary.
  7. Lawyers should be appointed to indigent defendants at the bail hearing or initial appearance. Court coordinators should select appointed counsel promptly upon an indigency determination, and contact that counsel immediately so that they can begin working for the accused.
  8. Bail amounts should be lowered, except in extraordinary cases, to take into account the financial drain that the people of Harris County are already suffering from destroyed property and a kneecapped economy.
  9. Those arrestees who are constitutionally entitled to reasonable bail should be released expeditiously and allowed to appear with counsel. Scarce jail and court resources should not be clogged with people who don’t need to be there.
  10. Court-appointed counsel should be paid on interim vouchers. Those defending indigents accused have expenses that are not going to be put on hold. They cannot wait until cases are resolved to be paid.
  11. Defendants with counsel should not be required to appear in court except for a plea or contested hearing. The financial cost to Harris County economy of lost productivity because of court appearances at which defendants’ appearance is required for no good reason has always been huge. This might have been bearable in ordinary times, but during this emergency Harris County needs every productive person working to rebuild.
  12. If weekend or evening dockets are instituted, they should be voluntary. The criminal-defense bar is not opposed to such dockets, and they may work better for some defendants and lawyers, preventing a productivity loss, but some people are unable because of family obligations to attend such dockets.
  13. No bail should be revoked for failure to appear in court until there is a plan in place and the criminal-defense bar has had an opportunity to notify our clients of where they must attend court.

We look forward to working with the bench and the prosecutorial bar to build a system that works even better for the people of our county than it did before the storm.

Houston strong!

(photo by Robert Pelton)

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Filed Under: press release

PR: 8th Annual Reading of the Declaration of Independence

June 27, 2017 Leave a Comment

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT:  Tucker Graves, HCCLA President 713-225-4273 office

8th ANNUAL READING OF THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE

Houston, Texas – June 27, 2017 – In celebration of Independence Day, the Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association (HCCLA) is holding its 8th Annual Reading of the Declaration of Independence on Friday, June 30 at 11:30 am. This year’s event will be led by Doug Murphy, the association’s president elect, at the Criminal Justice Center, 1201 Franklin Street, Houston, Texas.

HCCLA’s reading of the Declaration is an annual tradition that was started by HCCLA Past President, Robert Fickman. This year he has organized similar readings across the state in front of over 115 local courthouses.

HCCLA continues to lead Texas with the largest gathering, boasting over 100 local attorneys, judges and Houstonians in attendance.

The Declaration of Independence is our nation’s most cherished symbol of liberty. This sacred document is the founding document of the United States, and contains within its text the fundamental truths and unalienable rights that typify and embody the American way of life: …that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

Please join us in honoring our nation’s most sacred document in the spirit of independence:

When:     Friday, June 30, 2017
Where:    Harris County Criminal Justice Center
1201 Franklin Street , Houston, Texas (Front steps of the courthouse)
Time:      11:30 AM

 

The Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association is the largest local criminal defense bar in the United States with more than 700 active members.

For more information about the history of the readings and photos, visit:
https://hccla.org/declaration-of-independence-reading

 

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Filed Under: declaration of independence, press release Tagged With: declaration of independence, Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association

Mass Pleas of Guilty

April 29, 2017 Leave a Comment

RF1

(Reprinted from The Defender, Winter 2006)

$300 million is a lot of money. So maybe, just maybe, we ought to think about this expenditure.

First of all, why do we need to lock up more people? Are we about to have a sudden crime wave? No. Maybe this need for more jail space is necessitated by the need to keep up the local trend of misusing the jail space we already have. What do I mean by that?

There are two kinds of people in jail: Those that belong there and those that don’t. I would argue that many of the 9,000 people currently in jail do not need to be there. Restated, the taxpayers are paying to house a lot of people the taxpayers should not be paying to house.

Who is in jail? People who are charged and not convicted and people who have been convicted who are serving a sentence.

There are far too many people in jail who arc charged and not convicted. behind-bars

There are far too many presumably innocent people in jail with cases pending. If you really want to free up some jail space give these people bond. Bond is not supposed to be used as a form of punishment, but it is. Far too often people arc stuck in jail because they simply cannot afford bond. If you don’t believe me, go to any of our fifteen county courts or our twenty-two district courts on a Monday morning and start counting heads of those who didn’t make bond.

Why are these people still in jail on Monday, when anybody with any sense and money would have bonded out? The answer is simple: They are still in jail because they are too poor to make bond.

If you cannot afford to make a $500 misdemeanor bond by definition you are poor. So we keep presumably innocent people in jail in this county because they arc poor. This is wrong. Supposedly we got rid of debtors’ prison a long time ago. Truth is, we still have it.

Since poor folks cannot afford to make misdemeanor bonds or state jail bonds, they arc cluttering up the jails. Why then aren’t they getting PR Bonds or Pre-trial Release Bonds? Can anybody answer that? I haven’t heard a good answer yet, and they are not all homeless.

Let me suggest a two-part answer: First, the judges, while well-intentioned, are still elected by voters who don’t know who they are. The judges worry about the “nightmare case” where they give a guy a Pre-trial Release Bond and he goes out and kills someone. So what do the judges do? They don’t grant Pre-trial Release Bonds. It’s safer for the judge to leave the presumably innocent person in jail then to release him on Pretrial Release Bond. While it may be politically safer for the judge, it is far more dangerous to the fundamental tenets of our system for the judge to keep the presumably innocent locked up for political reasons.

What is the second reason judges don’t grant Pre-trial Release Bonds? Well, the Pre-trial Release folks are simply overworked. A long time ago Pre-trial Release was created, at least in part, to provide an avenue to allow judges to release presumably innocent indigents on bond. I remember it actually happening at the old courthouse. Now, though, the same Pretrial service people are bogged down with their new job: Supervising bond conditions for those people lucky enough to actually make bond. If you don’t believe me, just go to the twelfth floor and watch.

As the years have worn on, the judges for a number of reasons have added more and more conditions to even the most mundane bonds. It has gotten to the point that bond conditions in some courts virtually mirror conditions of probation. Walk into any court and listen as bond conditions are set and you will swear the person has just pled guilty and is being sentenced. Nope. He is just getting bond conditions set. Once those conditions are set someone has to supervise them. Guess who? You got it, the good folks in Pre-trial Services.

So why are our jails overcrowded with presumably innocent folks?
Because, the courts refuse to utilize Pre-trial Services for its proper purpose.

What is the net effect? Defendants who are presumably innocent remain in custody. What happens to all these poor people who are denied Pretrial Release Bond? How is all this resolved for them?

The answer is simple and revolting to any sense of justice: Mass pleas of guilty.

Everyone reading this knows what I am talking about. Every Monday morning the lawyer for the day appears. He is assigned to represent 6-8 people. He goes back, says “Hi” to all his spanking new clients and then the District Attorney’s office extends offers. If “Joe” pleads guilty he gets thirty days, or if he wants to go to trial he can tee it up in sixty to ninety days. “Joe” takes the thirty. The system is set up to keep poor people in jail and to encourage pleas of guilty. If you have a choice of pleading guilty and getting out in ten days or pleading not guilty and maybe getting out in ninety days which choice would YOU take?

People who are presumably innocent are kept in jail and they plead guilty and they fill up our jails. It’s been our system far too long. A lot of people will probably not like my criticism of the system. Undoubtedly, I am painting with a broad stroke. But it is all true.

We don’t need to spend $300 million to build more jails; we need to let people out on Pre-trial Release Bonds and our jail problem will be solved. While we are at it, the courts need to stop illegally revoking bonds. When clients show up without an attorney that is no basis to revoke bond. Having an attorney is a right, not an obligation of bond.

In the meantime we can use that $300 million to support education and employment opportunities in the inner city. We can use that money to pay for drug rehabilitation and to support drug court. We have enough people in jail in Harris County.

Let’s take a hard look at our system and institute some long overdue changes. The solutions are as evident as the problems. All we need is the willingness to be honest with ourselves and the desire to do better.

Filed Under: Defender, jail, judges Tagged With: bail, harris county, Robert Fickman

PR: Richard ‘Racehorse’ Haynes: Legendary Attorney

April 28, 2017 Leave a Comment

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT:
Chris Tritico, HCCLA Past President, 281-744-7446, email Chris Tritico
Tyler Flood, HCCLA President, 713-224-5529, email Tyler Flood

racehorseHouston, Texas – April 28, 2017 – It is with a sad heart that Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association acknowledges the passing of legendary attorney Richard “Racehorse” Haynes.  Racehorse was born in San Antonio in 1927 and lived to be 90.  He is considered to be the father of the defense bar in Harris County and one of the most publicly recognized defense attorneys in the nation.

Numerous Judges and Lawyers knew him and studied under him. He is a cultural icon in the criminal justice world.  Racehorse was a United States Marine who served in World War II and participated in the Battle of Iwo Jima at the age of 17.   He was a dramatic lawyer in the courtroom going so far as to almost nailing a real nail through his own had in front of the jury.

Racehorse was involved with many landmark cases such as the State of Texas v. John Hill, which became the basis for the book Blood and Money.  In addition to other notable clients such as Fort Worth millionaire Cullen Davis, he also represented the famous kissing bandit Morganna.

To honor his life and his passing, HCCLA respectfully requests that the flags at the Courthouses be flown at half staff today.

 

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Download (PDF, 474KB)

Filed Under: press release Tagged With: criminal defense, harris county, Iwo Jima, lawyers, Racehorse, Racehorse Haynes

PR: Call for Immediate Investigation of HCDAO and Pct 4

September 6, 2016 Leave a Comment

*** FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE ***

CONTACT: Tyler Flood, HCCLA President 713-224-5529 office, email Tyler Flood 

Houston, Texas – September 6, 2016 – Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association (HCCLA) sends this letter to request immediate action be taken regarding the destruction of over 21,000 pieces of evidence by Harris County Precinct 4 Constable’s Office and to investigate the Harris County District Attorney’s Office for failing to disclose this information and for their continued failure in doing so.

This request has been sent to: Ken Magidson, U.S. Attorney’s Office – Southern District of Texas; Special Agent Perrye Turner, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Texas Governor Greg Abbott; DPS/Texas Rangers – Public Integrity Unit;  and Texas Commission on Law Enforcement.

HCCLA is the largest local criminal defense bar association in the country made up of over 700 criminal defense lawyers.  We are extremely concerned about the lack of any serious, outside investigation of Harris County Precinct 4 Constable’s destruction of evidence.  Additionally, there is no outside agency investigating the Harris County District Attorney’s Office to determine what ethical violations were committed and what laws were broken for withholding this information that the District Attorney claims to have had knowledge of since January of 2016.  HCCLA has no confidence in the ability of the Harris County DA’s Office to investigate themselves, if they are even doing so.

HCCLA makes a request that:

  1. Harris County Precinct 4 Constable’s Office be IMMEDIATELY de-certified of its law enforcement abilities in order to investigate potential criminal acts Precinct 4 has committed.
  2. The Harris County District Attorney’s Office IMMEDIATELY be investigated for its misconduct in failing to disclose information relating to criminal cases stemming from Harris County Precinct 4.
  3. All Harris County Precinct 4 Constable’s Office cases be IMMEDIATELY placed on hold, if they are not dismissed, so that no action may be taken on them until further notice about this investigation.
  4. The Harris County District Attorney’s Office IMMEDAITELY release a list with Cause numbers and Defense Attorney’s names of all Precinct 4 cases that have been disposed of since January 1st, 2016, whether by dismissal, plea or trial.

View/download full release here:

Download (PDF, 79KB)

 

Filed Under: press release Tagged With: evidence destruction, Harris County Constable Precinct 4, Harris County District Attorney, Precinct 4

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