Monday, June 15, 2020

Judges Feed Those Who Feed Them

Most judges, at some level – whether unconsciously or consciously, whether overtly or covertly – feed the hand that fed, is feeding, or is going to feed them. Usually, that is whoever represents the most economically or politically powerful of the two sides in a lawsuit. Things are only completely equal when they start equal in the trough-to-judge quotient.

Loren M. Lambert © April 25, 2015

Judge Blocks Information from Jury

Today, I presented at a trial on a class B misdemeanor wherein the judge wouldn't let us get all the information to the jury. The problem was this: The client was technically wrong, but practically innocent. Very difficult day.

Loren M. Lambert © September 9, 2011

Friday, June 5, 2020

Unconditional Prison Time

While watching the movie, Unconditional  (which I thought was filmed in Texas), my attention focused on the irrationality of our penal system. We incarcerate more, per capita, than most other western nations. https://www.google.com/search?q=us+incarceration+rate&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ei=ACa0UYWOF4TmygHng4G4Bw&sqi=2&ved=0CEkQsAQ&biw=1366&bih=677

I represented a client who told me he got 10 years in prison, in Texas, because he was mad about losing his kids, so he took an ax and broke the porch at his ex-wife’s home. I thought, “You’re not telling me the whole story. Your kids or ex must have been put into danger or some other thing.” I got his records and learned that what he said is what really happened: He busted up the porch. The sheriff told him to stop and he wouldn't. He got a ten-year prison sentence!

I got his high school and family history records and learned he had severe learning disabilities because he got dropped on his head as an infant. He never secured any assistance. I don't want to justify anything, nor minimize his behavior, but it makes me wonder: Why ten years? As far as I could tell, he had no significant criminal history.

Loren M. Lambert © June 9, 2013