1. More on House Srebnick and the cert grant,
from the DBR:
The U.S. Supreme Court agreed Monday to decide in a Miami case whether federal prosecutors can freeze untainted assets a criminal defendant needs to retain an attorney.
Miami attorneys and brothers Scott and Howard Srebnick filed a petition for writ of certiorari in the case of Sila Luis. Senior U.S. District Judge Paul Huck in Miami froze Luis' assets after she was indicted in a Medicare fraud scheme.
The defense attorneys believe the government violated Luis' Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights to due process and to counsel of her choice.
"Our view is that she's not yet been convicted, she's not yet had a trial, and under our Constitution she has the right to use her own legitimate assets to pay for defense," said Howard Srebnick of Black, Srebnick, Kornspan & Stumpf.
2. Justice Scalia gives a funny graduation speech on platitudes.
From the Washington Post:
Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia delivered an off-the-bench
opinion on graduation addresses Thursday, drawing laughter and applause
as he criticized cliches that don’t work during a commencement speech at
an all-girls Catholic school.
“My problem with these platitudes
is not that they are old and hackneyed, but that a lot of them are
wrong,” Scalia said, standing before 79 graduates and hundreds of
relatives and friends in the main gymnasium at Bethesda’s Stone Ridge
School of the Sacred Heart.
***
As they and others listened, Scalia parsed a litany of stock phrases,
melding them with his own advice. He first took issue with the
oft-expressed sentiment that “we face unprecedented challenges.”
“Class
of 2015, you should not leave Stone Ridge High School thinking that you
face challenges that are at all, in any important sense,
unprecedented,” he said. “Humanity has been around for at least some
5,000 years or so, and I doubt that the basic challenges as confronted
are any worse now, or alas even much different, from what they ever
were.”
Scalia — dressed in a suit and tie — took on other bits of advice, too, including, “To thine own self be true.”
“Now
this can be very good or very bad advice, depending on who you think
you are,” he said, as laughter rippled through the crowd.
He also turned some age-old sayings on their head.
“Never
compromise your principles,” Scalia said, “unless of course your
principles are Adolf Hitler’s, in which case you would be well advised
to compromise them as much as you can.”
3. When does counsel need to raise suspicions about jurors? The Second Circuit issued an interesting opinion about juror misconduct but didn't address the question head on.
Here's Alison Frankel:
The 2nd U.S Circuit Court of Appeals undid an injustice Monday when it ordered
a new trial for David Parse, a one-time Deutsche Bank broker who was
convicted in 2011 for his alleged participation in a tax shelter scheme
supposedly masterminded by the now-defunct law firm Jenkens &
Gilchrist. In an opinion by Judge Amalya Kearse, the appeals court said
Parse’s conviction was tainted by a biased juror who admitted after
trial that she had told a series of breathtaking lies during voir dire.
Even though Parse’s former lawyers at Brune & Richard had turned up
Internet evidence before and during trial that raised suspicions about
the juror, the 2nd Circuit said, Parse had not waived his right to an
impartial jury.
But the appeals panel refused to define
exactly when lawyers are obliged to inform judges that prospective
jurors might be lying in order to preserve their clients’ constitutional
rights. Parse’s counsel, Alexandra Shapiro of Shapiro Arato, and the
New York Council of Defense Lawyers, in an amicus brief, had asked the
2nd Circuit to establish a bright-line rule that defense counsel need
not report concerns unless they are sure of jurors have done something
wrong. Judge Kearse and the other members of the 2nd Circuit panel,
Judges Richard Wesley and Chester Straub, said they doubted “that such a
sweeping and absolute rule is appropriate,” and that, in any event,
they didn’t need to devise a broad rule to resolve Parse’s appeal.
That’s a missed opportunity to clarify
the implications of juror research that has become commonplace in
white-collar cases. The Parse opinion seems to imply that judges should
not construe defense counsel’s failure to alert the court of their
suspicions as a waiver of their client’s Sixth Amendment right to an
unbiased jury. I doubt, however, that any lawyers want their clients to
go through Parse’s ordeal of four years of post-trial and appellate
proceedings before securing a new trial. Defense lawyers in the 2nd
Circuit will probably have to err on the side of disclosure if their
investigation of prospective jurors turns up anything untoward: Tattling
to judges may invade jurors’ privacy and annoy the court, but that’s
preferable to risking a defendant’s constitutional rights.
2 comments:
Interesting. The studies I've seen say that the overwhelming majority of defendants would be better off with federal public defenders than private attorneys.
“Never compromise your principles,” Scalia said, “unless of course your principles are Adolf Hitler’s, in which case you would be well advised to compromise them as much as you can.”
I would add, “unless of course your principles are the Lost Cause of the Confederacy, Dixie, the Stars and Bars, white supremacy racism, the Ku Klux Klan, Jim Crow, peonage, lynching, Confederate History (propaganda) Month, or support of Dylann Roof.
Unfortunately a significant portion of the US population holds such principles, which are a majority view in the South.
Maybe "we face unprecedented challenges" after all.
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