Archives

Keep the Cameras Rolling! -

Friday, July 03, 2009

I read last week in the Statesman that APD officials are reviewing their patrol car camera policies in regards to when officers must turn on their devices. The paper claimed that the new policies will likely require officers to film any incident in which they detain or try to stop a suspect, and will also likely require backup officers to also record incidents.

Police officials are also reviewing whether an officer's failure to follow the policy should fall under disciplinary guidelines. (As an aside, I have never handled a DWI case on either side of the bench where an officer forgot to turn on his or her camera to record a person walking the imaginary line.)

This policy review comes after the fatal shooting of Nathaniel Sanders II by Senior Police Officer Leonardo Quintana, whose camera was not recording when he fired at Sanders. If I were an officer who found myself in a deadly situation and believed my actions were justified, I would definitely want that recorded as the video would serve to protect and exonerate me. And, if the shooting was not justified, Mr. Sanders' family and the rest of our community deserves to be told the truth.

I commend the APD top brass for reviewing these policies and hope that they do implement policy that requires all potential stops and detentions to be recorded.

Even better, I would like to see the cameras automatically activated as soon as their overhead lights or sirens are turned on or as soon as they respond to a dispatch. Or a type of rotating digital loop like security cameras use in which the camera is constantly recording. Surely we're technologically capable of that.

Labels: , , , , , , ,

posted by Kristi Couvillon   permalink   0 Comments

Why You'll Probably Fail Field Sobriety Tests While Totally Sober -

Friday, July 03, 2009

By Raman GillFormer Texas House speaker Gib Lewis had this to say about his recent DWI arrest: "There's nothing to say but don't drink and drive."

That's excellent advice and it's exactly what I tell my family and friends, as well as my clients who are charged with DWI. And by "Don't drink and drive," I don't mean, "Be sure you only have one or two drinks, no more, before you drive," or, "Be sure you wait a good while after having a drink before you get behind the wheel." Nope. I mean, don't drink ANY alcoholic beverage and then drive (or boat, which seems particularly relevant given these three-digit temperatures and the need we all seem to feel to be in or around water if outside these days).

I can't tell you how many people our firm has represented who've had a drink or two after work, or two glasses of wine at a book club meeting, or a glass or two of wine at dinner with their spouse, and then were stopped for a minor traffic violation while driving home - and the next thing they knew they were trying to take nine steps, heel-to-toe, down an imaginary line along the side of a dark road. Often, when an officer smells ANY alcohol on your breath, he'll start asking you about whether you've been drinking and then he'll ask you if you mind taking a few field sobriety tests.

The answer to the officer's question, by the way, is YES, you do mind. You mind very much. (Except you say it very politely, as in, "With all due respect officer, I won't take any field sobriety tests and I'd like to speak with my lawyer.") Because unless you've got the balancing skills of Mary Lou Retton (I know this reference ages me, but I remember her landing perfectly off that vault in the 1984 Olympics to win the all-around women's gold medal), you might very well fail these tests, intoxicated or not.

I'm certified to administer the three "standardized" field sobriety tests most often given during DWI stops, as are most lawyers at our firm. Part of our training included attempting these tests - many times. I certainly don't want to impugn the balancing abilities of my colleagues, but let me at least say as to myself - I could not do the "Walk and Turn" or "One Leg Stand" stone cold sober, at least not until I practiced many, many times. It's simply not natural to walk heel-to-toe with your hands by your side, or with one leg six inches off the ground. If you've ever tried yoga, you'll know that making your body do what it doesn't do in everyday life doesn't always go so well the first few times. Especially if you're very nervous and distracted, maybe on the side of the highway, as most people are during DWI stops. Even our resident yoga diva Kristin Etter gave a less-than-stellar performance her first few goes at these field sobriety tests. (Did I say I wasn't going to impugn anyone else's balancing skills? Sorry, Kristin!)

So there you have it. One of the many reasons it's really just better to not drink and drive - at all.

Labels: , ,

posted by Dan   permalink   0 Comments

Only in Texas -

Wednesday, July 01, 2009

Imagine being told that you must register as a sex offender for life for something that is not a even a crime in Texas, let alone a registerable offense. Well, that is exactly what happened to a client of mine when he moved from out-of-state to Texas to live near his mother. When I consulted with this young man I thought surely this is a beaurocratic mix-up with Texas Department of Public Safety that can be resolved with a few phone calls right? Wrong. What ensued was a series of Kafka-esque conversations with DPS employees, culminating in a year of litigation after we had to sue DPS to have our client removed from the sex offender registry.


The situation all started when my client was convicted of a misdemeanor in his home state for having consensual sex with his seventeen year old girlfriend when he was twenty-one (the longer back story was that the girlfriend's father was upset so he called the cops to report this "crime"). Unlike Texas, where the age of consent is seventeen, in my client's homestate, the age of consent was eighteen. When he moved to Texas, however, authorities told him that because his "offense" was "substantially similar" (more on that in a second) to the Texas offense of Sexual Assault of a Child, he would have to register as a sex offender for life. Despite the fact that courts have held that sex offender registration is a "collateral consequence," and "non-punitive", having to register as a sex offender is as close as you can get to a lifetime sentence if you ask me.


The legal basis DPS was relying on to make my client register was a provision under Article 62.003 of the Code of Criminal Procedure which allows DPS to make a determination whether an out-of-state offense is "substantially similar" to an offense here in Texas. If they say yes, then you will be forced, with threat of prosecution for the third-degree felony of failure to register as a sex offender, for the rest of your life. Thankfully, 62.003 also contains a provision that allows a person to appeal this determination by DPS. As I mentioned, this is exactly what we had to do in this case.


The result? The Court thankfully sided with us and found that my client's previous offense was not "substantially similar" to any offense in Texas (imagine that, something that is not a crime in Texas is not "substantially similar" to a crime in Texas). Moreover, the Court ordered DPS to immediately remove my client from the sex offender registry and to contact all agencies that they have previously disseminated this information to.


Interestingly, in some logistical discussions with DPS post-hearing, I was told that this was the first case ever brought successfully in Texas under 62.003. What this tells me anecdotally is that my client can't be the only one in this situation. If I had to guess, I would suspect that there must be hundreds, if not thousands, of people in Texas who are currently on the sex offender registry that should not be.

Labels: , ,

posted by Kristin Etter   permalink   0 Comments

Zero Tolerance and Taking the Easy Way Out -

Monday, June 29, 2009

If there is one area of law that has changed more than any other through the years, it is juvenile law. And I don’t mean change in terms of legal definitions or statutes, I’m talking about change in terms of societal perception and treatment.

When I was a kid if someone got into trouble at school they were dealt with by adults entrusted with the power to investigate and respond accordingly - Adults with the wisdom to evaluate a situation and discipline a child if necessary. A coach might order someone in gym class to do pushups, have a student run laps around a field, or even whack a behind with a paddle. Teachers might give additional homework, write a letter to a parent, or send a child to the principal’s office. Principals might reprimand a student, expel them, or send them home to face their parents. Parents might ground their child or levy additional chores. Whatever the response, adults in charge could exercise discretion when deciding what discipline, if any, should be administered. Police interrogations, strip searches, and criminal charges were a last resort. Now, investigative measures and disciplinary actions are, more often than not, pre-determined. Now there is zero tolerance.

On October 8, 2003, thirteen year-old Savana Redding was strip-searched while at school. Savana was an honor student who had never been in trouble before. Even so, because of an unsubstantiated allegation that she had brought drugs to school, authorities felt compelled to search her. First, she was forced to take her outer clothing off. A male vice-principal and female school nurse inspected her jacket, t-shirt, pants, shoes, and socks. When nothing was found she was told to pull her bra to the side, exposing her breasts, and shake it out. Still nothing. Finally, she was made to expose her pelvic area by pulling the crotch of her underwear out to see if any drugs had been hidden there. Nothing was found. During this process Savana continued to express her innocence. She never consented to the search and her parents were not contacted.

What kind of dangerous drug would justify such an evasive search? What were they looking for?

Advil.

Parents need to realize that student behavior, which in the past, would have been handled by the school - or better yet, the parents - is now, more often than not, pursued according to pre-determined directives and turned over to law enforcement. Criminal charges are filed and must be dealt with. One kid pushes another kid and assault charges are filed. A child sprays deodorant in a locker room, sets off a smoke alarm, and is charged with a felony. A kid who writes “bomb” on an empty envelope as a joke then makes the mistake of leaving it on top of a trashcan, is charged with terroristic threat. The list goes on and on. Don’t get me wrong - it’s easy to see how we got here. It’s a frightening new world with kids taking guns to school to exact revenge for perceived persecutions, joining gangs in order to feel tough and protected, self-medicating via prescriptions found at home or drugs purchased on the street. Terrible crimes occur in school these days that shock all of us. We have to do everything possible to ensure the safety of our children.

But aren’t we just taking the easy way out with zero tolerance?

A child’s life is so difficult these days, and I fear we are just making it tougher, albeit in the name of safety and a child’s best interests. A child is given no leeway to exercise poor judgment and make the stupid mistakes of childhood without grave consequences. An adult, meanwhile, can avoid making a mistake of judgment altogether by merely turning to zero tolerance. So much easier than weighing the facts and using common sense! We're saying, "It doesn’t matter that you are a child and do not know better, I will not burden myself with personal judgment regarding the situation and run the risk of making a decision that others might not agree with. Zero tolerance will make my decision for me."

Last week the Supreme Court found the search of Savana Redding to be unconstitutional. “Outrageous” was the term used to describe the school official’s actions. But I fear zero tolerance is here to stay in one form or another. A school official faced with the decision of how far to go when dealing with a child’s apparent misbehavior will almost certainly err on the side of caution and avoid the danger of subjective discretion. Whether violating a child’s constitutional rights in an effort to procure evidence or deciding to press criminal charges, caution will be the driving factor, not tolerance. When in doubt, search the child, call the authorities, and file the charges.

I think about this every time I’m confronted by an upset parent who doesn’t understand why their child has suddenly become involved in the juvenile justice system. Why is my child being treated like an adult criminal? Why have criminal charges been filed just because my child got into a schoolyard fight or had ibuprofen in his pocket? It’s hard to understand. Shouldn’t they, as parents, be given the opportunity to discipline their child without such drastic measures being taken? That’s when I remind them that the world has changed. That there was a time when a kid could act like a kid and be treated like a kid, but unfortunately… those days are long gone.

Labels: , , ,

posted by Dal   permalink   0 Comments

DWI Court Graduation and The Role of the Defense Attorney -

Monday, June 29, 2009

I just read Raman's post on The National Network for Safe Communities and couldn't agree with her more. Reading it, I reflected on this week's DWI Court graduation ceremony. I am one of two defense attorneys in Travis County's DWI Court - an innovative program which serves people arrested for multiple DWI's by "providing an intensive, judicially supervised program of team-based counseling, treatment, and supervision."

My participation in this court is quite different from my work in "regular" court - rather than working from the traditional adversarial approach, the DWI Court works as a team. Before our Court sessions, the team - consisting of the Judge, Probation, County Attorney, Alcohol Counselors, and Defense Attorney - meets to discuss each participant and their recovery. We problem-solve together and often disagree amongst ourselves, but in the end come up with agreed-upon solutions to help each participant in their recovery.


Even through the team approach, we still function in a "defense attorney" role - as the National Drug Court Institute warns, "It is essential that defense attorneys remain vigilant in protecting civil liberties - even in the relatively nonadversarial context of drug court." That is why I agree with Raman that there should be defense attorneys involved in this new program that could be a great solution to reducing crime and incarceration.


Anyway, as I said, her post made me reflect on this week's graduation ceremony. I must admit that this was the first time that I truly "got" just what makes this court different. Listening to one of the graduates - an older man who had spent many decades addicted to alcohol - speak about how the Court truly changed him was humbling. "I feel like I've just graduated kindergarten and am going into the first grade of life," he said. Not only does the court provide an alternative to incarceration, it can be a springboard into a whole new life.

Labels: , , ,

posted by Kristi Couvillon   permalink   0 Comments

Main Page - Services - Our Firm - Contact Us - Site Map
© 2008 Sumpter & Gonzalez , L.L.P., 206 East 9th Street, Suite 1511, Austin, TX 78701 - T: 512- 381-9955 | F: 512-485-3121