Domestic Violence Charges – Blog 18:  Preparing for Mitigation and Punishment

December 30, 2020

By Criminal Defense Lawyer Jeremy Rosenthal

(972) 369-0577

www.texasdefensefirm.com

We attempt to fight all cases on two fronts.  We are prepared to fight about guilt/ innocence and we always have to prepare to handle things should we lose.

Preparing for punishment in a trial is like buying car insurance.  No one buys it because they’re planning to crash, rather, you buy it because it’s the prudent thing to do and the law requires it.  The law requires defense counsel to prepare for a punishment phase of a trial too though we do our best to avoid being in one.

For all the tough talk about taking cases to trial and winning not guilty verdicts – punishment and mitigation cannot be ignored.

Here are my other blogs in this series on defending domestic violence charges.

Mitigation

Mitigation is evidence which tends to explain or lessen the culpability.

I explain to clients people commit acts of domestic violence for one of two reasons.  Either they are rotten and no good SOBs who enjoy inflicting pain on people they love — or there are deeper causes, factors, and issues which need to be untangled.  In all my years of practice, I don’t know if I’ve met anyone in the first category.  The former is a caricature or cartoon figure which prosecutors make my clients out to be — the latter is reality.

As for the deeper causes or roots to these situations — we can and do find them everywhere.  They can be anger issues,  substance issues, or mental health issues.  Perhaps parents or previous partners unintentionally trained them to solve family problems with physical abuse.  Maybe their relationship has the dysfunction of reciprocal domestic violence which needs addressing.

To avoid harsh sentencing we must also present a compelling mitigation case to a judge or a jury.

This Can’t Happen Again

If we are pleading guilty or the jury finds defendant guilty – this is question about which we must be able to assure the jury.  Beyond assuring it doesn’t happen again there are very real victims in domestic violence who need to be allowed to heal in their own way too.

A good mitigation strategy is good for the society, good for the victim and is fair to the defendant in light of all the circumstances.

“Never Lose Punishment”

I have a saying at our office – “never lose punishment.”

Trials are broken into two phases.  The guilt/ innocence phase and if the judge or jury finds defendant guilty then a punishment phase.

We don’t make the facts and each case which walks in the door walks in with different degrees of difficulty.  I’d love to say we can secure acquittals in the guilt/ innocence phase for all – but that’s a tall order.  But we should be able to tell our client’s story in a compelling fashion for the purposes of mitigation if nothing else.

For punishment – the prosecution often has theories and tag lines.  They try to sell the jury on the caricature or cartoon wicked-guy.  We have a human being with a story.  I don’t think we should ever lose punishment.

*Jeremy Rosenthal is certified in criminal law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization.  He is recognized as a super lawyer by Thomson Reuters.


What is Mitigation?

November 8, 2020

By Criminal Defense Lawyer Jeremy Rosenthal

(972) 369-0577

www.texasdefensefirm.com

“Mitigation” means making something less severe, serious, or painful.  In criminal law it refers to learning, seeking and providing facts which reduce someone’s potential punishment.

Mitigation is Important in Every Single Case

A big misunderstanding is mitigation and trying to get an acquittal are mutually exclusive – they are not.  People think you somehow admit guilt if you try to take mitigation steps after an arrest such as seeing a mental health professional or entering drug and alcohol treatment.

You can still fight for innocence at the same time you try to explain or lessen the harshness of the possible punishment coming towards defendant.  In fact, we are legally bound to do so and it can constitute ineffective assistance of counsel to ignore mitigation.

A solid mitigation case actually strengthens our ability to fight for an acquittal.  This is because we are less concerned about severe punishment in the event a jury disagrees with us and finds the defendant guilty despite our best efforts.

Mitigation Which Looks Backwards

Mitigation can help explain why the Defendant is in the predicament they are in.  Examples of backward looking mitigation to explain or give context to someone’s actions often include:

  • Mental health or psychological disorders
    • anxiety
    • ADHD
    • Depression
    • Bi-Polar Disorder
    • Psychosis
    • Manic episodes
  • Past sexual abuse of the accused;
  • Past physical abuse of the accused;
  • Past or childhood emotional abuse of the accused;
  • Addiction and history of addiction of the accused.

When Someone Has a Great History

Another form of backwards mitigation is potentially where an accused has never been in trouble at all.  Certainly someone who has been straight as an arrow their entire lives do deserve some credit and lenience in many cases.  The same goes for people who really have their act together and are – for example – in school making straight A’s and helping build houses for homeless people on the weekends.

Mitigation which Looks Forward

Any mitigation must have a forward path to be effective.  Explaining to the judge or jury an accused has been able to explain or identify why they have a particular problem is great.  It lets the jury know the accused isn’t an evil person.  But without a path forward to correct things – a judge or jury might feel they need to incarcerate the person to protect society in the future.

Forward mitigation could include steps taken by the accused after the arrest.  Examples are endless of the types of steps which can be taken to hopefully re-assure folks criminal behavior won’t repeat itself with the accused.  Examples might be;

  • Drug and alcohol treatment
  • psychological treatment
  • Sex offender therapy or treatment
  • Rage or anger management treatment.

Examples of Mitigation in Criminal Cases

  • A classic and easy to understand example are Driving While Intoxicated cases.  I explain to clients everyone at the courthouse including prosecutors, judges and probation officers think (1) someone arrested for DWI is not only guilty – but they’ve probably gotten away with it 100 times we don’t know about; and (2) all people arrested for drunk driving are alcoholics.  Those assumptions may be completely fair or unfair – but those are the attitudes we will have to over-come in a case whether we like it or not.

If we can convince the courthouse types not only did the defendant get screwed by being arrested in the first place – but also he’s perfectly fine to drive – it only strengthen’s our overall hand.

Bottom Line on Both Forward and Backward Mitigation

A criminal defense lawyer cannot assume they are just going to win every case no matter how confident we are we will ultimately win.  The Courts have held repeatedly to ignore mitigation is ineffective assistance of counsel.  Mitigation also helps us strengthen our hand and ability to fight the case on multiple fronts – not just sympathy or correcting certain behavior.

*Jeremy Rosenthal is board certified in criminal law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization.  He is recognized as a Texas Super Lawyer by Thomson Reuters.