Handling Appeals Statewide

June 3, 2016

By Collin County Criminal Defense Lawyer Jeremy Rosenthal

(972) 369-0577

texasdefensefirm.com

Our office is in McKinney, Texas, but with the advent of efiling throughout the State of Texas, any lawyer can handle an appeal in any part of the State.

Efiling is a system where legal documents, pleadings and briefs of both the prosecutor and the defense can be submitted online.  Efiling is now available in all 254 counties in the State of Texas. Additionally we can review the record of any trial or legal proceeding because those transcripts can be emailed to us.

We can handle an appeal in any area of the state regardless of the cases length or complexity.  This allows us to help for cases where you might not be able to find an attorney willing to help you depending on where in Texas a  criminal trial was held.

Do We Need to Come To Where the Trial Was?

We may need to make a trip or two to the county where the trial was.  This could be to investigate certain facts of the case which may have been over-looked, or for brief hearings or to meet with essential parties.  We will need to come to the Court of Appeals in your district if the case is granted Oral Argument before the appeals court.

Why Rosenthal & Wadas for a Criminal Appeal?

We are a large Criminal Defense firm and there aren’t many firms like us around.  We have the resources to use a collaborative effort to have multiple lawyers assist on an appeal and we have more Board Certified Lawyers than any other Criminal Defense firm in Collin County.

*Jeremy Rosenthal is Board Certified in Criminal Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization and licensed by the Supreme Court of Texas. Nothing in this article is intended to be legal advice.  For advice about any case you should contact an attorney directly.

 


When You’re Entitled to a New Trial in Texas

June 12, 2010

By Collin County Criminal Defense Lawyer Jeremy Rosenthal

(972) 369-0577

texasdefensefirm.com

Regardless of whether you were convicted of DWI, marijuana or cocaine possession, assault, or any other offense in Texas, you may be able to get a new trial.

There are two main ways to get a new trail in Texas criminal cases. One is through a formal appeal to the courts of appeal (which takes lots of time and patience) and the other way is that the trial judge can grant you a new trial — but only of you act quickly after the conviction!

Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 21 governs new trials through the trial court. This means the same judge that tried the original case will be the judge that decides whether you get a new trial under this rule. Under TRAP 21.4, you only have 30 days to file a “Motion for New Trial”.  If you file it within the 30 days, you have another 45 days to have the judge give you a hearing to decide whether you actually get another full-blown trial.

Under TRAP 21.3, the judge must grant a new trial where; he has mis-instructed the law to the jury in a way that materially impacts the defendants rights, where the defendant was tried in absentia (other than a class c misdemeanor), or where the verdict is “contrary to the law and the evidence.”

Many of the grounds for new trial involve jury misconduct for TRAP 21.3 as well. The mis-conduct can include; where jurors reached a verdict by lot (or some other unfair means), jurors dis-obeying the courts instructions not to talk about the case with outside people or conducting outside research, or if a juror has been bribed. As a side note, proving juror misconduct is extremely difficult because generally jurors can’t be called to testify about their deliberations in Texas.

TRAP 21.3 also has various other reasons for new trials that are obvious… Where evidence was lost or destroyed… Or where a material defense witness was threatened or intimidated from testifying.

Basically, you must file a motion and have a hearing proving to the judge one of these grounds. the judge can order a whole new trial on guilt or innocence, or just on punishment if appropriate. Obviously the prosecution has the right to oppose your motion.

Sometimes you need to file a motion for new trial with the trial judge for no other reason than to perfect your record for the court of appeals… So even if you think the judge won’t grant your motion, you may still have to file it to do what appeal lawyers call, “preserving error.”

If you’re thinking of appealing a conviction and you still have time — you should consider asking the judge for a new trial with the assistance of an experienced attorney.

*Jeremy Rosenthal is Board Certified in Criminal Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization and licensed by the Supreme Court of Texas. Nothing in this article should be considered legal advice.  For legal advice about any specific situation you should contact a lawyer directly.