Showing posts with label Tyler Texas Criminal Law. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tyler Texas Criminal Law. Show all posts

Friday, February 28, 2014

What is a job of a public defender?

Question:

What is a job of a public defender?

Honestly what are they for because they don't care about the person they represent. Often people who have no choice but to have a public defender represent them, always get the worse deals. So what are the defending?

                                                                     


Their job is to zealously represent their clients to the best of their ability. Some do and some don't. This is due to being either burned out or having a case load that is too large to manage.
I stopped taking court appointed cases years ago.  But, I enjoyed the cases and obtained a lot of not guilty verdicts form my clients.

Unfortunately, it's a roll of the dice.  Either you're going to get a good one that care or your going to get a plea machine.


Submit your own Legal Question Today!
Texas Trial Lawyer

24 Hour Emergency
903-593-9100






Oklahoma Man Dies In Police Custody; Moore Cops Put On Administrative Leave


                                                                          

Man dies in Police Custody of Brutality. 

Oklahoma detectives are investigating the death of Norman resident Luis Rodriguez, who died after being handcuffed by police officers responding to a domestic disturbance at a movie theater Friday.
Before cops arrived on the scene at the Warren Theater in Moore, Okla., a fight broke out between Rodriguez’s wife, Nair Rodriguez, and his daughter, Lunahi Rodriguez, NewsOK reported. Luis intervened and tried to break up the dispute. His wife fled and Luis allegedly then fought with officers, who put him in handcuffs.
Lunahi Rodriguez claimed her father didn’t resist but was nevertheless repeatedly hit by the officers. She told News9 that the cops beat her father to death in the parking lot of the theater.
"When they flipped him over, you could see all the blood on his face. It was, he was disfigured; you couldn't recognize him,” she told the Oklahoma television station. She added to NewsOK, “They jumped on him like he was some kind of killer or drug dealer and beat him up. He never fought the officers. They beat him on the head and that's how he lost his breath.”
Nair Rodriguez said her husband was only trying to break up the fight between her and her daughter. She said she slapped her daughter in the face when her husband intervened. She said she knew her husband was dead when she saw his body.
"I saw him. His [motionless] body when people carry it to the stretcher," she said. "I knew that he was dead."
Three police officers were placed on administrative leave while detectives investigate Rodriguez’s death. Moore Police Department spokesman Jeremy Lewis told NewsOK that Rodriguez stopped breathing as the officers were restraining him. An ambulance was at the movie theater, but paramedics weren’t able to revive Rodriguez.
Lunahi Rodriguez said her mother videotaped the incident on her cell phone, but police confiscated the device. News9 was able to obtain an audio recording of the confrontation.
"My mom was taking a video and asking, ‘What are they doing this for? Why?' And they didn't give really an explanation,” she said.
Mother and daughter were taken to the hospital and were told they could see him, indicating that he was alive. But Lunahi Rodriguez said that turned out not to be the case.
"Two hours passed. They finally called [Nair Rodriguez] up to say, 'Oh you could see him,' but it turned out it was a lie. They moved his body elsewhere," Lunahi Rodriguez said.

Submit your own Legal Question Today!
Texas Trial Lawyer

24 Hour Emergency
903-593-9100

Cop Killed His Wife and Himself in the Cedars, Dallas Police Say

                                                                         

Police Killing their own. Horrible.

At midday on Wednesday, Dallas police and firefighters broke down the front door of a small townhome in the 1800 block of Browder Street in the Cedars to perform a welfare check. Inside, they found the bodies of Nick and Vanessa Pitofsky, both dead of gunshot wounds.
Police are describing the slayings as a murder-suicide. Pitofsky, a 47-year-old Crandall police officer, allegedly shot his wife of three years, then turned the gun on himself.
Police haven't specified a motive, though Fox 4's Natalie Solis says friends of Vanessa Pitofsky described her husband as "very jealous," though what sparked the jealousy, and if that's what prompted Pitofsky to allegedly pull the trigger, is unclear.
The Dallas Morning News spoke with neighbors of the Pitofskys, who were surprised by the murder-suicide, but not overly so. Vanessa, 42, was social and active in the neighborhood. Nick the paper describes as "very focused and intense."
Crandall PD issued a statement describing Pitofsky as an "energetic and jovial person who got along with everyone" and was "well-respected by his peers."
Inevitably a couple of outlets, including the U.K.'s Daily Mail, searched out the YouTube video Pitofsky posted a few days earlier reviewing his new Mossberg 500 shotgun.
In retrospect, his endorsement sounds rather ominous: "I purchased this as a self-defense weapon for my household, essentially for my wife."

Submit your own Legal Question Today!
Texas Trial Lawyer

24 Hour Emergency
903-593-9100

NFL star Darren Sharper, facing fresh rape charges, turns himself in

                                        



NFL star Darren Sharper, wanted in New Orleans in connection with the alleged rapes of two women, has turned himself in to Los Angeles authorities.
A source told CNN that Sharper made arrangements to surrender to Los Angeles police and did so without incident Thursday evening.
Los Angeles police confirmed the arrest, but did not provide details.
Earlier Thursday, the Orleans Parish district attorney's office said Sharper, 38, and Erik Nunez, 26, each face two counts of aggravated rape.
If convicted, the two men face a possible sentence of life in prison without parole.
The New Orleans charges are in addition to charges Sharper already faces in California.
Last week, he pleaded not guilty to the California charges, which included two counts of rape by use of drugs.
CNN reached out to an attorney for Sharper and to Nunez, but neither immediately returned messages seeking comment.
Prosecutors in Louisiana said the two alleged rapes occurred on September 23 in a New Orleans apartment.
The alleged rapes in California occurred in October and last month, authorities said.
Prosecutors there said the five-time Pro Bowl player, who became an NFL Network analyst, is also under investigation in Arizona and Nevada.
Police in Tempe, Arizona, say they expect to file charges against Sharper soon.
"We have nothing yet. We anticipate filing charges very shortly and we are still waiting on a couple of results from the crime lab," said Sgt. Mike Pooley.
In addition, a Florida woman last month filed a sexual battery complaint in Miami Beach against Sharper relating to a 2012 incident, a police report said.
According to the report, the woman was with two friends at a Miami Beach club in September or October 2012 when she met Sharper. The woman, her friends and another person went to Sharper's condo, where the woman claims the battery took place.
Miami Beach police are investigating the case, Miami Beach Detective Vivian Hernandez said last week.
One of Sharper's lawyers disputed all the rape allegations last week at his hearing.
"It was all consensual contact with women who wanted to be in his company," Leonard Levine said.
Sharper played for the Green Bay Packers, Minnesota Vikings and New Orleans Saints from 1997 through the 2010 season.

Submit your own Legal Question Today!
Texas Trial Lawyer

24 Hour Emergency
903-593-9100

Dead Mississippi man begins breathing in embalming room, coroner says

                                         


Maybe a Coroner needs a 
second opinion before 
pronouncing someone dead?

Even in the Bible Belt, coroners don't use the word "miracle" lightly.
But Holmes County, Mississippi, Coroner Dexter Howard has no qualms using the word for the resurrection, as it were, of Walter Williams, who was declared dead Wednesday night.
Howard received the call from Williams' hospice nurse, who told Howard that the 87-year-old had passed away. A family member called as well, saying the same, Howard said.
Howard and Byron Porter from Porter & Sons Funeral Home in Lexington, Mississippi, drove to Williams' home to collect the body for funeral preparations. Howard checked Williams' pulse about 9 p.m. and pronounced him dead.
"There was no pulse. He was lifeless," Howard said.
The coroner completed his paperwork, placed Williams in a body bag and transported him to the funeral home, he said. There, something strange happened: The body bag moved.
"We got him into the embalming room and we noticed his legs beginning to move, like kicking," Howard said. "He also began to do a little breathing."
They immediately called an ambulance. Paramedics arrived and hooked Williams up to monitors. Sure enough, he had a heartbeat, so they transported him to the Holmes County Hospital and Clinics.
"They were in shock. I was in shock. I think everybody at the hospital was in shock," Howard said.
Neither in the 12 years as county coroner nor during his decade as deputy coroner has Howard seen anything like it. Howard was absolutely certain Williams was dead.
The only reasonable explanation he could think of, Howard said, is that Williams' defibrillator, implanted beneath the skin on his chest, jump-started his heart after he was placed in the body bag.
"It could've kicked in, started his heart back," Howard said. "The bottom line is it's a miracle."
Overjoyed family members are thanking God for saving the life of the longtime farmer they call "Snowball."
"So it was not my daddy's time," daughter Martha Lewis told affiliate. "I don't know how much longer he's going to grace us and bless us with his presence, but hallelujah, we thank Him right now!"
Nephew Eddie Hester affiliate he was at Williams' Lexington home when Howard and Porter zipped up the body bag, so he was more than a little stunned when his cousin called at 2:30 a.m. Thursday and told him, "Not yet."
"What you mean not yet?" Hester recalled asking his cousin. "He said, 'Daddy's still here.' "
"I don't know how long he's going to be here, but I know he's back right now. That's all that matters,".
Howard visited Williams on Thursday at the hospital and said he was still "a little weak" but was surrounded by family members and talking.
Mike Murphy, the coroner for Clark County, Nevada, and past president of the International Association of Coroners and Medical Examiners, said he couldn't comment on this specific case without knowing all the details, but he's read news reports of people returning to life at funeral homes "from time to time."
Asked if he'd ever heard of a case in which a defibrillator played a role in bringing someone back to life, Murphy said he hadn't, "but just because I haven't heard it doesn't mean it hasn't happened."


Submit your own Legal Question Today!
Texas Trial Lawyer

24 Hour Emergency
903-593-9100