Brown & Little, P.L.C. » Entries tagged with "plea bargaining"

Switching Attorneys

I don’t like taking over cases from other lawyers. In a perfect world, I would begin representing every client before charges are filed and stay with the case to the very end. That said, like pretty much every other lawyer I know, a good-sized portion of my clients come to me from other criminal defense attorneys. They seem to be split evenly between people previously represented by public defenders and people previously represented by private attorneys. They’re usually looking for a new lawyer for the same kinds of reasons. I hear many people say they want a new lawyer because their lawyer does not return their calls. I usually take that statement with a grain of salt. A lot of lawyers don’t return calls as … Read entire article »

Filed under: Clients, Practice in General

Tribal Probation

If you are serving a term of probation for a conviction in the Gila River Indian Community Court, you can spend the entire term of probation in jail if you violate a single condition of your probation. That means that if you’re doing a year of probation and fail to check in or get caught drinking, you could do a year of jail. No matter how long your term of probation is, you can get the same amount of jail. By stacking counts, the courts can put defendents on probation for years. That probably means years of jail sooner or later. When I first handled a Gila River Indian Community probation case, almost every defendant automatically got the max unless the prosecutor was willing to cut them … Read entire article »

Filed under: Indian Law

Deviations and Personal Circumstances

I often write deviation letters to prosecutors. That is especially important in Maricopa County Superior Court, where deputy county attorneys are forced to follow strict and often ridiculous plea bargaining guidelines. In my experience with deviation letters, I have found that letters citing constitutional issues or exculpatory evidence are far more likely to get a deviation than those citing a client’s mitigating personal circumstances. While I can understand that a prosecutor would rather offer a better bargain than lose a case, it concerns me that prosecutors do not give much weight to a client’s otherwise spotless background, bad health, or personal responsibilities. To me it seems that a strong case for the State involving aberrant behavior and a victimless crime should be just as worthy of … Read entire article »

Filed under: Practice in General, Prosecutors

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