Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association

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PR: Declaration of Independence

July 1, 2015 Leave a Comment

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT:
JoAnne Musick, HCCLA President
832-448-1148 office,  email JoAnne

6th ANNUAL READING OF THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE
Houston, Texas – June 29, 2015

In celebration of Independence Day, the Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association (HCCLA) is holding its 6th annual reading of the Declaration of Independence. This year’s event will be led by JoAnne Musick, the association’s president.

HCCLA’s reading of the Declaration is an annual tradition that was started by HCCLA Past President, Robert Fickman. This year he organized similar readings across the state, making defense bar history. Readings by defense lawyers will take place in front of 127 Texas courthouses, covering one-half of all county seats. 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: Thursday, July 2, 2014
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 750 active members. For more information about the history of the readings and photos, visit: http://www.criminaldefensedeclarationreading.com/
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download here:

Download (PDF, 53KB)

 

Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association also issued their press release as this event has grown into a statewide event:

PRESS RELEASE: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT:  Joseph Martinez, Executive Director : TCDLA
TELEPHONE:  (512) 478-2514
PLEASE SEND ELECTRONIC TEARSHEET TO:  declarationreading@gmail.com

Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers to Lead Readings of Declaration of Independence in over 120 Texas Counties on July 2, 2015.

Members of the Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association (TCDLA) are holding Annual Fourth of July readings of the Declaration of Independence at over 120 Texas County Courthouses on July 2, 2015. TCDLA is an organization committed to protecting individual rights guaranteed by the U.S. and Texas Constitutions in criminal cases. The readings were first organized in 2010 by Robert Fickman, a Houston criminal defense attorney, who leads the organization of readings today as well.

Sam Bassett, the President of TCDLA, states: “Criminal defense lawyers fight to protect the liberties of our fellow Americans on a daily basis in courts across Texas. As a group, we are proud to stand united and lead readings of the Declaration of Independence. It is a recognition that our Founders intended for individual liberty to be a paramount concern. As recent events have shown, power threatens these liberties. Prosecutors who illegally withhold evidence, courts that conduct plea mills, abusive police officers and appellate courts who gut the Fourth Amendment are examples of the ongoing struggle within the criminal justice system.”

The members of TCDLA stand united in defense of liberty.

To learn more about this event, please contact TCDLA President Sam Bassett at (512) 472-0144 or sbassett@mbfc.com or Robb Fickman at (713) 655-7400

Filed Under: honor, justice, Members, press release, Public Trust Tagged With: declaration of independence, harris county, joanne musick, press release, Robert Fickman

How Do You Do It All?

June 9, 2015 Leave a Comment

by Lisa Shapiro Strauss, Attorney at Law, mother of 3 kids & Rabbi’s wife

Every working Mom has heard this question, from either our friends who are not working or those without children. This is one of the greatest challenges young women face. Just a generation ago, most women did not work outside the home full time. While some of these apply to men as well, there are issues that are uniquely facing Moms at home (whether single Moms or married Moms).

Fortunately, I had a fantastic role model. My Mom was a small business owner, politician and community volunteer.   On top of that, she raised 3 children, ran carpools, cooked meals and made it all look easy! However, she was probably unraveling underneath the surface and hanging on by a thread at times. She didn’t have many friends in her similar circumstances to lean on in stressful moments. Talk to your peers – go out for a glass of wine, unwind and vent your frustrations!

In our generation, things have gotten better as men take more responsibility at home with children and housework. However, a line item in my budget is to pay someone else to do the housework and laundry for my family of five. There are too many people looking for work that can take this jobs off your plate. I never want to feel guilty about spending quality time with my kids because there is a sink full of dirty dishes staring at me. Your time per hour is so much more valuable spent working or with your family.

Prioritize your extra-curricular activities. When my children were babies, I gave up volunteer opportunities and was not available for evening meetings. There were a few volunteer positions I wanted to hold onto, but realized I wasn’t helping anyone if I couldn’t fulfill my commitments. The time comes when you can take on more activities, but it needs to be once you are ready and your family can handle having you away from home.

You have to spend time every single day taking care of yourself, both physically and mentally. Get up early to take a spin class or break out of your routine early and go to yoga or for a walk. I love being done with my exercise by 6:00am before my kids get up, so I can make lunches and get them out the door. However, you have to get enough sleep so you don’t run your body down. You know what works for you, but you need to add it on your permanent schedule.

On a practical note, I could not live without my iPad, scanner and Dropbox. I have all my contracts, offense reports, photos, witness statements and other evidence scanned into Dropbox. Each Client has a folder in my Dropbox. I upload their videos and photos. I have access to my entire case file no matter where I may be in the world. I have done business on vacation (sadly), but more importantly, in my home. Any client that calls or issue that arises, I have the whole file at my fingertips 24/7. This is a lifesaver for a Mom on the go, driving carpool and sitting at baseball games.

You cannot be the best lawyer, best Mom, best wife, best friend and best volunteer. Something has to give and you need to decide which of these you value the most. Superwoman doesn’t exist and don’t fool yourself into thinking you are the first who will be able to do it all.

At the end of the day, turn off your ringer and enjoy your family.   Our children’s well-being affects us and ours affects theirs. We are inexplicably connected. The quality of the time we spend with them matters. We cannot hear our children while we are face booking, texting and watching the news at the same time. Spend time unplugged!

You cannot be the best lawyer, best Mom, best wife, best friend and best volunteer. Something has to give and you need to decide which of these you value the most. Superwoman doesn’t exist and don’t fool yourself into thinking you are the first who will be able to do it all.

We all need to stop and enjoy the fruits of our labor (no pun intended)! Before we blink, our babies will be gone and all those clients will be a faded memory. Cherish every moment you have with your kids so you don’t regret this time later. The kids will remember your presence and it does make an impact on their future.

Filed Under: Defender, Members Tagged With: criminal defense, hccla, lisa shapiro strauss, mother, the practice

Can I represent two co-defendants?

June 7, 2015 Leave a Comment

Whether or not to represent co-defendants is often the subject of query and debate. While the answer is not always clear, the best practice is certainly to avoid representing co-defendants because of an apparent or potential conflict of interest.

The Texas Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct address conflicts of interest in Rules 1.06 through 1.09, with each rule addressing differing situations. A look at Rule 1.06, Conflict of Interest: General Rule, and its comments reveals that conflicts are to be avoided because of the duty of loyalty a lawyer owes to his client.

Generally speaking, as addressed in Rule 1.06, a lawyer shall not represent opposing parties to the same litigation. This makes sense, and normally, it is the defendant and the government who are opposing parties in the same litigation. But, what about co-defendants? Do they share the same position in relation to the government, as an opposing party? Do they have substantially different possibilities of settlement of the claims or liabilities in question? Is there a substantial discrepancy in their testimony?

It’s important to look at Rule 1.06 and its comments when addressing these questions. “An impermissible conflict may exist or develop by reason of substantial discrepancy in the parties’ testimony, incompatibility in positions in relation to an opposing party or the fact that there are substantially different possibilities of settlement of the claims or liabilities in question.” Texas Rules Rule 1.06 cmt. 3. “Such conflicts can arise in criminal cases as well as civil. The potential for conflict of interest in representing multiple defendants in a criminal case is so grave that ordinarily a lawyer should decline to represent more than one co-defendant.” Id. (emphasis added).

Why is that? Let’s explore a couple of issues, among many that may arise. Where co-defendants have substantially different possibilities of settlement (i.e. different bargaining positions based on culpability or background) there is at least a potential for a conflict of interest between the co-defendants. Where their testimony or version of the facts differs, there again exists at least the possibility of a conflict of interest. As the lawyer, which client’s bargaining position is more important, whose version of facts is more important? That’s the inherent conflict…which client do you favor? Let’s assume two co-defendants, A and B, participated in a robbery. Both have asked you to represent them. A says they worked together and planned and executed the robbery. B tells you that A was the mastermind, having done this sort of thing before, and he should have a lesser or mitigated sentence based on lower culpability. Do you tell A to take the fall and help B get a lesser sentence? Do you tell B that he should keep quiet about A’s planning and leadership so that A can get a lesser sentence? What if both clients want to testify and their version of the facts are not the same? What if their defenses are inconsistent? In this over-simplistic example, it’s clear that one lawyer should not undertake to represent both clients as there is a real conflict. Sometimes the conflict is not quite as clear. But in almost every criminal case there at least exists the possibility for a conflict between the two clients.

Where either a conflict exists or an apparent conflict may exist, before you can represent the two clients, the clients must each provide informed consent to the representation. Because the rule is meant to protect the client, Rule 1.06 recognizes that a client can consent to a representation that would otherwise violate the conflict of interest rule if such consent is provided after sufficient disclosure. See Texas Rules Rule 1.06(c)(2) and cmts. 7-11. Informed consent must be thorough and complete with full disclosure to each client of the possible effects of the dual representation on the exercise of the lawyer’s independent professional judgment on behalf of each client. Consent further must be in writing, signed by each client. See Texas Ethics Opinion 448 (1988).

Should you decide a conflict does not exist or should the clients execute informed consent for dual representation, the court may still prohibit the dual representation. In a criminal case, inquiry by the court is generally required when a lawyer represents multiple defendants. Texas Rules Rule 1.06 cmt. 17. And, where the conflict is such as clearly to call in question the fair or efficient administration of justice, opposing counsel (i.e. the government) may properly raise the question. Id.

So, again, you ask, Can I represent two co-defendants? The bottom line is that there could be circumstances in which you could. But all too often a real or potential conflict will keep you from adequately and appropriately protecting each client’s individual interests and advocating each client’s individual position. This is why the comments warn that lawyers should decline, in most cases, to represent more than one co-defendant. The better practice is to simply represent only one!

Filed Under: Defender, Members, practice pointers, Public Trust Tagged With: codefendants, conflict of interest, criminal defense, practice, real conflict, representation

Press Release May 2015

June 3, 2015 Leave a Comment

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT:
JoAnne Musick, HCCLA President
832-448-1148 office,  email JoAnne

First Second-Term President Elected in HCCLA History

Houston, Texas – May 18, 2015 – The Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association (HCCLA) held its 45th annual banquet and awards ceremony on Thursday, May 14, 2015 at The Rice Hotel, 909 Texas Street, Houston, Texas 77002. HCCLA honored the following award recipients:

Stanley G. Schneider ~ Richard “Racehorse” Haynes Lifetime Achievement

           Mark Bennett ~ Lawyer of the Year

           David R. Dow ~ Torch of Liberty

           Thuy Le & Nicolas Hughes ~ Sharon Levine Unsung Heroes

Tyler Flood ~ Member of the Year

            David M. Ryan ~ Mentor of the Year

            Christopher L. Tritico ~ President’s Award

HCCLA also honored Dick DeGuerin for 50 years of practice. Mr. DeGuerin swore in the new Officers and Board of Directors for 2015-16. JoAnne Musick will lead the Association as President for her second term. Her first term was in 2009-2010.

HCCLA President-Elect, JoAnne Musick said, “I am honored and humbled to undertake this office once again and lead the largest local criminal bar association in the nation.” Her theme for this year is Martin Luther King’s example:

A man dies when he refuses to stand up for that which is right. A man dies when he refuses to stand up for justice. A man dies when he refuses to take a stand for that which is true.

– Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. on courage, March 8, 1965

“We have a strong board this year. I have challenged them to stand with me for what is right.” With so many ongoing projects, our new board will hit the ground running and work to better the criminal justice system and raise the bar for criminal defense.

Effective immediately, please direct all media inquiries to:

JoAnne Musick, HCCLA President
Musick & Musick, LLP
397 N. Sam Houston Pkwy. E., Suite 325
Houston, TX  77060
(832) 448-1148 Office
(832) 448-1147 Fax
email JoAnne

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Filed Under: Members, press release, Public Trust Tagged With: banquet, hccla, president, press release

HCCJCC MacArthur Grant

June 3, 2015 Leave a Comment

At today’s HCCJCC (Harris County Criminal Justice Coordinating Council) meeting, Harris County’s grant award was discussed. The County applied for and received one of 20 grant awards (from approximately 200 applicants across the nation) for the MacArthur Safety + Justice Challenge. The County was awarded $150,000 to create a plan to improve public safety while reducing the overuse of local jails. The goal in this “challenge” is to find ways to REDUCE jail population. The grant funds are used to study the problem and come up with a plan (within 6 months) for implementation. The 20 current award winners will compete to have their plan selected for another grant of up to $2 million to be used toward implementation.

The goals of the challenge related to receiving the grants are:

  1. Reduce the number of people coming INTO the local jail
  2. Reduce the amount of time people STAY in the local jail
  3. Reduce the ethnic disparity in the jail population.

As stated during the meeting, the MacArthur Foundation has identified a significant problem: crime rates across the nation have decreased significantly over the the past many years yet our local jail populations continue to rise disproportionately. The challenge looks at only local jail populations and not prisons. It was stated that across the nation 2/3 of those in local jails are “pending trial” so they have not been convicted of anything yet they are incarcerated. For Harris County, they quoted a 74% jail population of those “pending trial.” Thus, we are higher than the national average at pre-trial incarceration rates. The speaker noted that African American’s are 6 times more likely to be incarcerated pending trial, and the mentally ill are 4-6 times more likely to be incarcerated.

A complete study entitled “Incarceration’s Front Door: Misuse of Jails in America” can be viewed/downloaded here:

http://www.safetyandjusticechallenge.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/incarcerations-front-door-report.pdf

More information on the Challenge can be found here:

http://www.safetyandjusticechallenge.org/ 

Filed Under: incarceration, jail, justice, Members, politics, Public Trust Tagged With: grant, harris county, incarceration, jail, justice, MacArthur Foundation, misuse of jails in america, safety and justice challenge

Thankful for Heart

May 26, 2015 Leave a Comment

IMG_1275We are so quick to point out the bad rulings wFullSizeRender-2e get. Let’s take a moment and be thankful for the judges who immediately cancelled their courts this morning in light of flooding. They took to social media to get the word out or had their staff text.

Thanks to Judges Ryan Patrick, Kristin Guiney, Catherine Evans, Brock Thomas, Susan Brown, and Jay Karahan for the compassion, saving folks from driving downtown needlessly, and for the heads up on social media! (If there were others, we missed them)

FullSizeRender-3  FullSizeRender-1     IMG_1277

Filed Under: Defender, Members, politics, Public Trust Tagged With: #docketisnotworththerisk, #savelives, fair, harris county, judges, thankful

Honoring the Fallen: Memorial Day

May 24, 2015 Leave a Comment

MEMORIAL DAY….. A SALUTE TO OUR HEROES

By: Robert Pelton and Anne Ritchie

If you think that you are having a bad day because your TV or phone or computer is not working, then get in your car and go to the nearest VA hospital and see real problems. People bitch and complain and gossip about BS all the time. In the hospital you will see men and women of the “Greatest Generation” suffering and coping with things most people can not comprehend. When my family members joined the army in WWII, they signed up for the duration of the war, not for two years or three years. They went over the pond as my uncle used to say and did not come back for over four years. When Lawyer Richard “Racehorse” Haynes was dodging bullets on Iwo Jima he was just trying to stay alive. My Abilene friend William Ervin Sims, who recently died at age 92, carried a BAR, a browning automatic rifle, weighing 16 pounds up the hills of Iwo Jima. Those two men and many others fought 35 days without rest and managed to survive.

Memorial Day has traditionally been a day of observance for the men and women who died in the sacrifice of the cause they were fighting for. This day is different from Veterans Day in that Veteran’s Day is set aside to honor all Veterans. Since many in the WWII and Korean War generation are growing older, I felt it incumbent on me to honor all Veterans by putting forth a short statement honoring those both living and dead who have served this great country.

One good friend and veteran Victor Blaine went away several months ago and I know he would approve of me writing this article now. John Saur is another Houston lawyer who froze for months when in Korea serving his country. When I asked him about the article he was happy and said any one who was worried about the date could come see him and he would have a surprise for them that he brought back in his duffel bag from Korea. John Saur was in the middle of the fighting and came back, finished college and law school and has been a lawyer almost 50 years.

Memorial Day is a federal holiday originally enacted to honor fallen Union soldiers after the Civil War. It was originally known as Decoration Day. Decorating the graves of their fallen soldiers was commonplace by Confederates even before the Civil War had ended, by southern ladies of Richmond and southern schoolchildren. The catastrophic number of dead soldiers from North and South alike meant that burial and memorialization was very important after the war. Townspeople, mostly the women, buried the dead and decorated graves during the war. The oldest national cemetery was created in 1862. After Abraham Lincoln’s death, many events to commemorate the war began. The first such event was in Charleston, South Carolina on May 1, 1865. Union soldiers who died there were buried in unmarked graves. Freed slaves knew of this and decided to honor these soldiers. They cleaned up and landscaped the burial ground. On that day, nearly 10,000 people gathered to honor the dead and 3,000 schoolchildren and others brought flowers to lie on the burial field. Historians said this was the first Memorial Day. African Americans invented Memorial Day in Charleston. Black Americans, freed from slavery brought flowers and sang songs about the war.

Speeches on Memorial Day were a time for veterans, politicians, and ministers to commemorate the war. People of all religious beliefs joined together and the point was made that immigrant soldiers had become true Americans because they had shed so much blood in battle. By 1870, much of the anger was gone and speeches praised the brave soldiers of blue and gray. By 1950, the theme of Memorial Day was to uphold freedom in the world. Today, Memorial Day extends to honor all Americans who have died in all wars.

Tennessee was a divided state during the Civil War. Some of the families that served in the Union Army had family members joining the Confederates. My maternal great-grandfather Abraham George Washington Cox and great-great-grandfather Abraham Cox enlisted with the Confederate Army on the same day. Abraham George Washington Cox was 15 and his father Abraham was 51. They served in the Tennessee Calvary. After the war, Abraham George Washington Cox rode a mule from Tennessee to Cooke County, Texas, got married, and had 12 children and named them after Confederate heroes. My grandfather was named Robert E. Lee Cox. Abraham George Washington established the Mt. Zion School, Church, and Cemetery. Each year in May, our family meets there to attend “Graveyard Working” like the old customs that started Memorial Day. My paternal great-great-grandfather Joseph Washington Mathis fought with the 1st Alabama Infantry. He was captured at Island Tennessee on 4/8/1862, escaped capture at Port Hudson, Louisiana on 7/9/1863 and was captured again in Nashville, Tennessee on 12/16/1864. He was held prisoner until the end of war. His children came to Jones County, Texas in 1899.

My son, who coincidentally was born on July 4, called me from the recruiting station when he turned 17. He said the recruiter would not let him join without my permission and would not let him be a military police officer. I got the recruiter on the phone and he laughed and said you will have to get permission from the Pentagon. I was in Ted Poe’s court that morning and told him. He, himself a Veteran, made some phone calls and at 4pm that day a major at the recruiting station said, “Please don’t make any more phone calls, meet me here at 5pm and your son will be sworn in.” My son went to the US Army and was trained at Fort Anniston, Alabama as a military police officer. He served there and got out but was recalled after 9/11. He served again and left the Army as an E-5 with an Honorable Discharge.

In Flanders fields the poppies blow

Between the crosses, row on row,

That mark our place; and in the sky

The larks, still bravely singing, fly

Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead. Short days ago

We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,

Loved and were loved, and now we lie,

In Flanders fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe:

To you from failing hands we throw

The torch; be yours to hold it high.

If ye break faith with us who die

We shall not sleep, though poppies grow

In Flanders fields.

– John McCrae

 

…We cherish too, the poppy red That grows on fields where valor led, It seems to signal to the skies That blood of heroes never dies… – Moina Michael

 

We all complain about high taxes, traffic, bad government, bad judges, bad prosecutors, bad presidents, and bad everything. The list is long on things we complain about. In America we have the right to complain. Try that in some foreign country and your life will be ended. We live in a free country where opportunity exists for all people. People from all over the world want to come to the United States of America. Members of TCDLA and their family members who have served, or are serving, will be listed at the end of this article. They all need to be recognized for their sacrifices, be it large or small. Some of us were in the military reserve and some were in the middle of battle and saw their comrades dying around them. Some were brave men who did extraordinary things in battle to fight for our country. One member at a recent seminar in Plano said, “I was only in the Naval Reserve.” I reminded him of the phrase by John Milton, “Those also serve who stand and wait.” Even those who were, or are standing in wait, are serving. As we have seen from recent history, many of those who were standing and waiting were called to active duty and sent to foreign lands to serve and fight if needed. Many of those who were standing and waiting went overseas and never came back.

The problems facing Veterans have gained some attention and in many counties there is now a Veteran’s Court. They recognize that Veterans have special needs. Too many times, when representing a Veteran, I try to point out to the prosecutor that this person served our country and may have suffered some disability or some change that affected the Veteran’s behavior. Too often I have heard the prosecutor say, “Well, everybody has some kind of excuse.” No, I point out everybody did not go through what the Veteran did. This attitude prevails in every court room across the state. Most of these people never served in anything, not even Cub Scouts.

As lawyers representing Veterans, we need to get the military records and prepare a mitigation motion or motion to dismiss the case. We need to be vigilant in our fight for the Veteran client. If there is a Veteran’s Court, try to get the case transferred there. If there is no Veteran’s Court then try to get other Veterans to help you do your best for the client. Get all the people from the VFW or American Legion to come to court and see what happens. Even bring the members of the Veteran’s motorcycle clubs, the Patriot Guard, and Rolling Thunder. Go to military.com to get a list of Veteran groups. If the Veteran has alcohol or dug problem, bring the AA or NA group too. It has proven to be very effective.

Famous wartime quotes:

A good battle plan that you can act on today can be better than a perfect one tomorrow. -General George Patton

Freedom is the right to be wrong, not the right to do wrong. -John Riefenbaker

Never trust a private with a loaded weapon, or an officer with a map and compass. -A Murphy’s Law of Combat

You don’t win a war by dying for your country. You win a war by making the other son-of-a-bitch die for his. -General George Patton

“People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf.” -Richard Grenier on George Orwell

 

Filed Under: honor, Members, military, Public Trust Tagged With: heroes, honor, memorial day, military

HCCLA presents Reasonable Doubt

March 29, 2015 1 Comment

For years, HCCLA has hosted a weekly call-in show through Houston Media Source: live streaming available Thursdays from 8-9pm. Currently, our hosts are Jimmy Ardoin and J. Julio Vela. Former hosts include Dan Gerson, Cynthia Henley, Robert Fickman, Kevin Fine, Todd DuPont, Tate Williams, Neal Davis, Murray Newman, and Damon Parrish II. That’s a lot of hosts over the years! Of course, we have been on the air since 1998!

Logo-BlackBackgroundEach week you can join us for live streaming at Houston MediaSource. Or, check your local cable channel and join the conversation at 8:30p by calling us @713.807.1794 or tweet us @hccla_tv.

Additionally, you can view past episodes on our website or YouTube channel.

Watch us! Call us! Tweet us! and Follow us!

Special thanks to our behind the scenes producers and volunteers who make this happen every week: Thuy Le, Justin Harris,  J. Julio Vela and Mark Pirtle.

Filed Under: Members, Reasonable Doubt Tagged With: Call in, criminal defense, Criminal Justice, hccla_tv, Reasonable Doubt, Television, Youtube

HCCLA Files Amicus on behalf of David Dow

March 19, 2015 Leave a Comment

HCCLA filed its Amicus brief in support of David Dow in his fight to overturn his suspension which was illegally handed down by the Court of Criminal Appeals without authority or due process.

view/download amicus here: HCCLA Filed Dow Amicus

Reprinted substance of amicus brief:

Now comes, the Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association, by and through the undersigned attorney and files this Amicus brief in support of David Dow, Relator-Petitioner and would show this Court the following:

Statement of Interests

The Harris County Criminal Lawyer’s Association (HCCLA) is a bar association of over 700 lawyers in Harris County, Texas who practice criminal defense law. HCCLA is the largest local criminal defense bar in the country. HCCLA’s mission is to assist, support, and protect the criminal defense practitioner in the zealous defense of individuals and their constitutional rights. It is further HCCLA’s mission to educate and inform the general public regarding the administration of criminal justice of the need for an independent, ethical, and professional criminal defense bar.

Statement in Support

HCCLA is concerned that the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (CCA) action suspending Relator-Petitioner David Dow (Dow) from appearing before it, exceeds its statutory and legal authority to discipline attorney, and constitute a chilling threat to a small segment of the bar in Texas who represent death row inmates. HCCLA believes that sanctioning Dow outside the scope of its power without referring the disciplinary matter to the appropriate court, the CCA has deprived Dow of his constitutional rights under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Fifth and Sixth Amendments and due process provisions of the United States Constitution are applicable in contempt proceedings. Dunn v. United States, 442 U.S. 100 (1979) HCCLA believes that the action by the CCA conflicts with the Supreme Court of the United States decision in Gentile v. State Bar of Nevada, 501 U.S. 1030 (1991), which held that an attorney has a liberty interest in the practice of law.

HCCLA joins the brief of the Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association and National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers Association in their statement of support for Dow. HCCLA believes that this Court should grant mandamus in this case to preserve its jurisdiction conveyed to it by the legislature to regulate the practice of law in this State and to ensure Dow is accorded due process as guaranteed by the Texas and United States Constitution.

RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED,
/s/ Carmen Roe
CARMEN ROE
PRESIDENT, HARRIS COUNTY CRIMINAL LAWYERS ASSOCIATION (HCCLA)

Filed Under: Members, politics

Winter Defender 2014 Online

March 18, 2015 Leave a Comment

The newest issue of the Defender (Winter 2014) is now available online for viewing and downloading.

Visit our publications page for a link!

This issue includes:

  • Mediation?…In My Criminal Case? (by Jason Truitt)
  • Practice Pointers
    Juvenile and Felony Sentencing
    Wants vs. Needs
    What the Welder Taught Me
  • Kent Schaffer: A Profile (by Thuy Le)
  • Strategy: Donald Rumsfeld & the Unknown (by Joseph Varela)
  • How Do You Do It All? (by Lisa Shapiro Strauss)
  • And regular features
    Winning Warriors (compiled by David Ryan)
    News Round Up (current events)
    Chess Corner (by Tyler Flood)

Filed Under: Defender, Members, Trial Tips Tagged With: criminal defense, Defender, harris county, harris county criminal defense, hccla, kent schaffer, Legal Publication, strategy, tyler flood, Winning Warriors

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Helpful Links & Resources

  • Seminars & Events
    • Speakers Bureau: Request a Speaker
  • Court Info & Policies
  • Harris County Managed Assigned Counsel (MAC)
  • Guide to ePLEA
  • HCCLA Ethics Hotline 713.518.1738
Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association (HCCLA)

Important Links

  • Bylaws
  • HCCLA Membership
  • Join HCCLA
  • Media
  • HCCLA Blog

Upcoming Events

  • HCCLA Brainstorming Lunch
    Wed Dec 10 2025, 12:00pm CST
  • No Board Meeting
    Thu Dec 11 2025
  • HCCLA Holiday Party!
    Thu Dec 11 2025, 5:00pm CST

Contact Us

Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association
P.O. Box 924523
Houston, TX 77292-4523
(713) 227-2404

    

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