Will There Be a Video of a DWI Arrest?

July 31, 2012

By Collin County Criminal Defense Lawyer Jeremy Rosenthal

(972) 369-0577

texasdefensefirm.com

Probably, it depends on where the arrest took place.

DWI Arrests in Richardson, Plano, Frisco, Allen and McKinney are virtually all video-taped.  Texas law formerly required only larger cities and municipalities to have cameras on squad cars.  The law has since been amended so that all police cars have video cameras.  Some agencies that were not previously required to have cameras may take a bit of time to come into compliance for logistical and/or budgetary reasons.

You should always assume that you are being video and/or audio taped with talking with police.  The tape protects you just as it does the police.  Police reports frequently only highlight the facts which support the officer’s conclusion — that the driver is intoxicated.  The video, though, shows the entirety of the situation.  It exposes when police try to exaggerate their claims on any given case.

Each county has different policies for releasing the video tapes to defense attorneys.  Collin, Dallas, Denton and Tarrant Counties are all fairly easy to work with in attaining videos, however, they are frequently not available to the defense for a month or more after the arrest because the video must go from the agency to the District Attorney’s office — and then a copy must be made for the defense.

*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 legal advice about any situation you should contact an attorney directly. Contacting the attorney through this forum does not create an attorney client relationship and communications sent through this forum are not privileged nor confidential.


What Happens After A DWI Arrest?

July 13, 2012

By Collin County Criminal Lawyer Jeremy Rosenthal

texasdefensefirm.com

(972) 369-0577

I am frequently asked “what now” after someone is released from jail on a driving while intoxicated arrest.  Though the specific answer may vary depending on where in Texas you were arrested, here are some answers to common questions:

What is My Legal Status?

If you just got out of jail for a DWI or DUI arrest, then you are technically released on bond.  This means have conditions to live by to assure you appear in court (or in certain cases) do not endanger the public.  You will probably not be formally charged with DWI for several weeks or in some cases (usually where there is blood evidence) for several months.  The District Attorney’s office in your county will review the report and decide whether to file a case against you with a document known as an “information.”  In Collin County virtually every case where an officer makes an arrest ultimately gets filed.

What Happens Now?

A DWI is two cases in one.  There are the driver’s license suspension issues and then there are the criminal aspects.

For the driver’s license suspension portion, you must remember you have 15 days appeal any driver’s license suspension issued because of a breath test refusal or failure (score of 0.08 or greater) within 15 days of the arrest with the Texas Department of Public Safety.  These are highly technical proceedings which lawyers commonly handle.  If a voluntary blood specimen was given, then you have 20 days after you receive notice your blood was above 0.08 blood/alcohol concentration.

For the criminal side of the case, you can expect to appear in court for an announcement when the case is filed with the information.  This appearance is more of a work-session between your lawyer than the prosecutor than an actual appearance before a judge (though in some jurisdictions the judge may wish to proceed with technical matters that require you to visit with them).  It is the announcement where your lawyer will have some access to the police report (again, depending on the jurisdiction) and access to the video evidence in the case.

Ultimately, you and your attorney will decide whether you wish to plead guilty to the charges with a plea bargain — or plead not guilty and have a trial.  It is also possible the State may dismiss the case depending various other factors.

Is My Driver’s License Suspended Immediately?

No.  If you were given a document called a DIC-25, then you have a temporary driving permit valid for 40 days from the date of the arrest.  If you appeal the suspension, the temporary permit is valid until your administrative law review hearing (ALR) which could be several months later.  This is the case even if the officer confiscated your driver’s license.

Can I Get This Off My Record?

Yes.  The steps may be different in each unique case, but not guilty verdicts and expunctions are common for DUI and DWI cases.  You should visit with a lawyer directly about how to accomplish this in your case.

*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 situation you should contact a lawyer directly.


What I Like About Defending DWI Cases Collin County

July 9, 2012

By Collin County Criminal Defense Lawyer Jeremy Rosenthal

texasdefensefirm.com

(972) 369-0577

Defending driving while intoxicated case presents a unique challenge to lawyers.  This is because long before entering the courtroom, you can detect a stiff headwind of resistance working against you which lasts the entire case.

You get the sense the legislature, lobbyists and victim advocacy groups, and even many jurors don’t stop to consider whether the police are right when they make an arrest.  Even the news media runs article after article about how if the courts and police were just meaner and tougher on these cases — they would somehow go away.  There is an unmistakable and heavy bias which reaches far beyond whether drunk driving is a problem — and assumes everyone suspected of DWI is guilty.

No one wants drunk drivers on the road.  Everyone’s heart breaks for victims of drunk drivers.  The vast majority of people respect and trust police which is one of the things that makes Collin County a great place to be.  But legislators, activist groups, and police are human.  By their very nature, groups with this degree of moral authority tend to make up the rules as they go along — and therein lies the potential for them to badly hurt innocent people in the name of the public good.

I enjoy the challenge of showing jurors that not everyone caught in the wide-cast-net of DWI is a drunk driver.  I enjoy showing the jury how the framers of the constitution knew the timeless attitudes of accusers, authority figures, and even society’s tendency to rush to judgment.  Most of all, I enjoy the challenge of winning cases where there is a steep up-hill climb with skeptical jurors, difficult police officers, and strict rules limiting our ability to defend the case.

Though I’m probably biased in favor of Collin County jurors, I enjoy trying cases in front of people that live in places like Allen, Plano, Frisco, McKinney and Richardson for the reason they are intelligent and open minded.  Without people even willing to listen — having a fair trial anywhere would be impossible.

*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 legal advice about any situation you should contact an attorney directly.  Contacting the attorney through this forum does not create an attorney-client relationship nor are any communications confidential or privileged.


Why Prosecutors Withhold Evidence

April 10, 2012

By Collin County Criminal Defense Attorney Jeremy Rosenthal

texasdefensefirm.com

(972) 369-0577

As a criminal defense lawyer my job is to try to understand people without judging.  Trying to understand why a prosecutor might withhold or actually conceal evidence in that way is no different than trying to understand why a person who committed a crime was the situation they found themselves clinically without finding fault.

There have been two clear-cut and higher profile violations (called Brady violations) by Texas prosecutors in the past year which serves as cannon fodder for the debate.  One is from the Morton case in Williamson County which you can read about here, and the other is a more recent debacle in Denton County where two assistants district attorney have been banned by a district judge from practicing in his courtroom.

Put succinctly — prosecutors withhold evidence because (1) some don’t believe people get wrongly accused; (2) some minimize facts which go contrary to the theory of their case; and (3) some assume that as long as they are well intentioned on how they handle a case — they are not violating constitutional rights to discovery.

The Michael Morton Case

Michael Morton was wrongfully convicted of the murder of his wife in the 1980’s.  The prosecutors in that case were alleged to have withheld exculpatory evidence which is the subject of an ongoing investigation.  Even more disturbing, the Williamson County District Attorney’s Office vigilantly fought the testing of a bloody bandana found at the scene from being tested for DNA after Morton was convicted through the Texas appeal process.  Eventually the bandana was tested over the objection of the district attorney — and showed to contain the DNA of the victim and another person accused of similar crimes (not Morton).

The Denton County Case

As reported in the Denton Record-Chronicle, a victim of an aggravated assault with a deadly weapon who was stabbed 9 times repeatedly made the conclusory claim that her husband was the assailant.  In a pre-trial interview with prosecutors, she revealed the basis for her belief was based on recognizing his scent and by seeing the sole of one of his shoes.  The prosecutors failed to disclose this to the Defense lawyer and instead tried to pressure he and his client into a plea deal according to the Record-Chronicle.  The case was dismissed by the judge after he heard the nature of the Brady violation and took the further step of banning the two lawyers from his courtroom.

The Problem

The concept of Brady material is highly subjective regardless of what anyone tells you.  It is reversible error where there is a violation which meets the following criteria: (1) the State failed to disclose evidence, regardless of the prosecution’s good or bad faith; (2) the withheld evidence is favorable to him;  and (3) the evidence is material, that is, there is a reasonable probability that had the evidence been disclosed, the outcome of the trial would have been different.

The very concept of having a ‘material‘ violation compared to ‘any‘ violation shows the Court has to weigh just how serious a violation must be to over-turn a case.  Prosecuting lawyers, like defense lawyers, are advocates for their position.  Their job (as is mine) is to take evidence and argue it’s meaning to a jury.  It’s not uncommon at all for a criminal defense lawyer and a prosecuting lawyer to take an identical fact and argue it has completely divergent meanings.

A classic example is from a driving while intoxicated case.  When a criminal defendant in a case looks stable on his or her feet can be argued by the defense that the defendant had the normal use of his mental or physical faculties.  The state’s lawyer on the other hand can argue (assuming it’s supported by evidence) that the defendant has a tolerance for alcohol.  Same fact — different ways to argue.

Adding Everything Together

When you add up the ingredients to a Brady violation — it’s easy to see how it happens.  The key is that it is the prosecutor who makes this highly subjective judgment call about whether to report the existence of negative facts and prosecutor (1) simply doesn’t accept the possibility they could be completely wrong about a case; (2) completely minimizes the bad fact in their own mind; and (3) believes that simply because they’re well meaning the mistake doesn’t matter.

Avoiding Brady Violations

The District Attorney for Williamson County, when questioned about why his office fought not to have the bandana tested in the Morton case said, “Do I in hindsight wish we could have done this quickly? The answer is, ‘Yes I do… Do I think I acted in good faith at the time we were litigating these issues? Yes I do.”

This quote is extremely revealing.  It shows at least two and possibly all three of the thinking errors I’ve identified above.  Certainly the Williamson County DA didn’t want the wrong person jailed (he was not responsible for convicting Morton in the first place) but the result is the same regardless of his intent and well meaning nature.

Prosecutors aren’t bad people, evil people, or just competitive cheats.  They’re human and the mistakes.  Withholding evidence due to the mental traps of their job, however, has the same negative results which they themselves would agree is unacceptable.

Avoiding Brady problems start and ends with having prosecuting lawyers who truly realize they, the police, and their investigators do not have a monopoly on truth.  Though they are under no legal duty to presume someone innocent — if they would — then this would cause them to scrutinize evidence which hurts the theories of their cases instead of rationalize and minimize the evidence.

*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 legal advice about any matter you should contact an attorney directly.  Communications sent through this forum are not privileged nor do they create an attorney-client relationship.


Can You Show the Arresting Officer’s Disciplinary Record in Trial?

February 12, 2012

By Collin County Criminal Defense Lawyer Jeremy Rosenthal

(972) 369-0577

texasdefensefirm.com

It’s possible but it’s certainly not a given.

The Texas and Federal Rules of Evidence try to keep trials from turning into free-for-all mud slinging contests.  Imagine how ridiculous a trial would be if every officer could be drilled on the witness stand about their 4th grade report card.  Then again, if an officer has taken part in shenanigans which call his/her word into question — it might be key for a jury to know.

Two Rules — What the Judge MUST Allow and What they MAY Allow

The rules categorize prior conduct of a witness into two main categories.  Evidence that a judge must allow the jury to see and evidence the judge has the discretion to allow jurors to see depending on the circumstances.

Crimes of Moral Turpitude 

Under Tex.R.Evid. 609, evidence of a prior conviction for a crime of moral turpitude (typically crimes that involve honesty) shall be admitted as well as any felony conviction provided the conviction was in the last ten years.  This gives courts a bright-line, stringent test for allowing prior conduct into evidence.

The problem is that disciplinary action against an officer is virtually always going to fall short of the requirements under rule 609.  Good police agencies will fire an officer for any conduct which could be used to torch the officer repeatedly on the witness stand… and clever police agencies know not to make reports of misconduct in writing unless they absolutely have to.

A combination of other rules may, in certain instances, allow general impeachment of an officer based on past incidents of misconduct even if those bad acts fell short of being convictions required by rule 609.

Rules Which Allow You to Get Into the Officer’s Records 

Tex.R.Evid. 404(b), 405(b) 608, and 611 which you can read here combine to give a judge the ability to determine whether to allow a jury to hear evidence of bad conduct of a police officer (or any other witness for that matter).

Situations where a prior bad act by an officer would be allowed in evidence or excluded from evidence are like snowflakes in their ability to be unique and unpredictable.

An example where it may be admissible, however, is where a specific incident of police misconduct in the past is extremely similar to an occurrence in the present case — and the prosecutor has left the jury with a clear mis-impression that the office has a perfect history.  For instance where a police officer who routinely makes DWI arrest coincidentally has his microphone go off when giving instructions on field sobriety tests time after time against department policy.  At some point “I forgot to check my microphone batteries before my shift” quits working as an excuse.

These scenarios are typically very complex.  If you have questions about a specific case you should bring it to your attorney’s attention to see under what circumstances an officers past problems may be brought to the jury’s attention.

*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 legal advice about any specific situation you should contact an attorney direction.  Contacting the attorney through this forum does not create an attorney-client relationship.  Communications through this forum are not confidential or privileged.