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Brief • April 23, 2018
Perez v. County of Los Angeles, CA, Complaint, Wrongful Death (Police Shooting), 2018 Case 2.17-cv-01630-ODW-PLA Document 58 Filed 04/23/18 Page 1 of 30 Page ID #:411 1 LAW OFFICES OF DALE K. GALIPO Dale K. Galtr,o, Esq. (SBN 1.44074) 2 dalekgalipo@yahoo.com 21800 Burbank Blvd., Ste. 310 3 Woodland Hills, CA …
Publication • April 23, 2018
Arrests as Guilt, Anna Roberts, Seattle University School of Law, 2018 ARRESTS AS GUILT Anna Roberts* An arrest puts a halt to one’s free life and may act as prelude to a new process. That new process—prosecution—may culminate in a finding of guilt. But arrest and guilt—concepts that are factually …
The Prison Industrial Complex: Mapping Private Sector Players APRIL 2018 | 1 About the Corrections Accountability Project The Corrections Accountability Project (CAP) at the Urban Justice Center is a non-profit criminal justice advocacy organization committed to eliminating the influence of commercial interests on the criminal legal system and ending the …
Article • April 19, 2018 • from CLN May, 2018
New York Times Investigation Spotlights NYPD Practice of ‘Testilying’ by Derek Gilna by Derek Gilna An extensive New York Times investigation of the New York Police Department has uncovered that “at least 25 instances were found where judges or prosecutors reportedly determined that a cop’s testimony was likely untrue or …
Article • April 19, 2018 • from CLN May, 2018
New Washington State Law Removes ‘Actual Malice’ Roadblock in Police Prosecutions by Derek Gilna by Derek Gilna Two new Washington state laws have removed a statutory impediment to state prosecutors holding police officers accountable for reckless or negligent conduct. The measures eliminate the barrier of having to prove “malice” or …
Article • April 19, 2018 • from CLN May, 2018
Arizona Supreme Court Announces Defendants May Claim Both Self-Defense and Misidentification by Richard Resch by Richard Resch The Supreme Court of Arizona announced that a defendant is entitled to a self-defense jury instruction while simultaneously claiming a misidentification defense (he or she did not, in fact, commit the offense). In …
Article • April 19, 2018 • from CLN May, 2018
Filed under: Sexual Harassment, Defenses
Iowa Supreme Court Announces Indecent Exposure Statute Does Not Apply to Still Images of Genitals by Dale Chappell by Dale Chappell Interpreting the word ‘exposes’ in Iowa’s indecent exposure statute, the Supreme Court of Iowa held on February 2, 2018 that texting an image of one’s genitals to another does …
Article • April 19, 2018 • from CLN May, 2018
$175,000 Settlement Reached in Lawsuit Alleging Officers Literally Tried to Feed Graffiti Suspects to K-9s by Christopher Zoukis by Christopher Zoukis A lawsuit filed over a K-9 cop attack on two street artists who were spray-painting train cars in Broward County, Florida, has settled for $175,000. The men, Humberto Pellegrino …
Article • April 19, 2018 • from CLN May, 2018
New Jersey Supreme Court Interprets Criminal Harassment Statute to Avoid First Amendment Problem by Christopher Zoukis by Christopher Zoukis In a case involving a dispute between two prison guards, the Supreme Court of New Jersey clarified the kind of conduct necessary to expose an individual to criminal liability for verbally …
Article • April 19, 2018 • from CLN May, 2018
Prosecutors’ Offices Taking Thousands in Grant Money, Fueling Crackdown on Sex Buyers by Steve Horn By Steve Horn Investigative articles published on March 24 by the Seattle-based alt-weekly The Stranger and the online publication The Intercept reveal that prosecutors’ offices in King County, Washington and nationwide have taken hundreds of …
Article • April 19, 2018 • from CLN May, 2018
$325,000 Paid by Sheriff’s Office to Settle Fatal Shooting Case Over Not Wearing Seat Belt by Derek Gilna by Derek Gilna The Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office in Florida settled the case of a 19-year-old man who was fatally shot six seconds after being stopped for not wearing a seat …
Article • April 19, 2018 • from CLN May, 2018
Privacy Advocates Concerned About Google AI and Pentagon Drone Surveillance by Derek Gilna by Derek Gilna Tech behemoth Google has signed a contract with the U.S. Department of Defense (“DoD”) to apply its artificial intelligence technology (“AI”) to improve the recognition and targeting ability of its 1,100-strong drone fleet, raising …
Article • April 19, 2018 • from CLN May, 2018
Intellectual Disability and Wrongful Conviction in Death Cases: A Lethal Combination by David Reutter by David M. Reutter The death penalty is sold by its advocates as a crime deterrent or a penalty reserved for the most heinous of crimes. The reality is that the death penalty is often used …
Article • April 19, 2018 • from CLN May, 2018
Filed under: Release and Reentry, Bail
Philadelphia Tests Automating the Bail Risk Assessment Process by David Reutter by David M. Reutter Philadelphia is using part of a $3.5 million grant to create a computerized bail-risk assessment tool. The effort is part of the city’s Reentry Project. The MacArthur Foundation selected Philadelphia to take part in its …
Article • April 19, 2018 • from CLN May, 2018
Eighth Circuit: Teague Analysis Bars Retroactive Application of Padilla Ineffective Assistance of Counsel Claim by Christopher Zoukis by Christopher Zoukis The United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit ruled that Teague v. Lane, 489 U.S. 288 (1989), which bars retroactive application of new rules of criminal procedure on …
Article • April 19, 2018 • from CLN May, 2018
Filed under: Police Misconduct
The ‘Office Shuffle’: Ohio Police Recycle Bad Apples Among Rural Departments by Matthew Clarke by Matt Clarke An Ohio police officer who resigns under a cloud of pending disciplinary action or who is fired may not have reached the end of a law enforcement career. In some Ohio towns, employment …
Article • April 19, 2018 • from CLN May, 2018
Former Civil Rights Lawyer Krasner Puts Justice Reform into Practice as New Philly DA by Derek Gilna by Derek Gilna For decades, politicians have won many elections by promising to be “tough on crime,” which translated into escalating prisoner counts, unbalanced budgets, and societal disintegration of the inner city. In …
Article • April 19, 2018 • from CLN May, 2018
Mississippi Supreme Court Reverses Conviction Ruling; State Failed to Prove ‘Constructive Possession’ of Marijuana by Dale Chappell by Dale Chappell The State failed to prove that packages of marijuana hidden in a car truck were in the “constructive possession” of a passenger, who was unaware they were there especially when …
Article • April 19, 2018 • from CLN May, 2018
Sixth Circuit Denies Qualified Immunity for Officers in No-Knock Home Entry Case by Richard Resch by Richard Resch On October 29, 2014, at about 4 a.m., 13 Highland Park, New Jersey, police officers performed a no-knock entry into the Greer family home. Without knocking or announcing their presence, the officers …
Article • April 19, 2018 • from CLN May, 2018
Filed under: Sentencing
Sentencing Court’s Grant of Prior Custody Credit was Not ‘Clear Error’ to Allow for Removal by Dale Chappell by Dale Chappell The government’s “eleventh hour” motion to “correct” a sentence to remove credit for time served in a related case before federal sentencing was improperly granted by the district court, …
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