Monday, July 10, 2017

The Criminal Defense Process Part 1- Allegation of Criminal Conduct



The Criminal Defense Process Part 1- Allegation of a Criminal Conduct


Hello, my name is Brandan Davies. I am a criminal defense lawyer with the law firm Copley Roth & Davies here in Overland Park, Kansas. In this series of videos, I am going to be talking a little bit about the criminal defense process and basically walk you through a criminal defense case from start to finish. Now, the first part of every criminal case is that there has to be an allegation that a crime has been committed. This can be done through initial police contact, maybe a police officer witnesses a crime that has been committed, or it can be reported to the police by a witness, either someone calling 911 or calling the non-emergency line and reporting that a crime has been committed. Now this kicks off the investigation stage of a case. That’s what the police do and law enforcement does, is they investigate crimes and gather evidence. Now when a police officer goes out so they can gather evidence based on allegations of a crime, they might interview witnesses, take witness statements, they may go collect physical evidence if there is some sort of physical thing associated with the crime; maybe it’s broken glass or maybe it’s fingerprints or something like that, blood samples. Another part of the investigation will be obtaining a search warrant. In some cases, law enforcement may seek out a judge to get a search warrant to search a premises. These are all parts of the investigation stage of a case. Now, at this point, a criminal defense lawyer will have little involvement in the case because they don’t know that the case has even come about yet. And in some cases, the police will go out and investigate a crime and they will find that no crime has been committed or that there is not enough evidence to charge a person with a crime. At the conclusion of some investigations, the police will find that there isn’t enough evidence to find that a crime has been committed and the case will end right then. If the police do believe that a crime has been committed, then they will turn over their findings or their products of their investigation to the district attorney’s office or a city prosecutor, depending on what crime they believe has been committed. Now remember, the investigation stage is just the first process to any criminal case. If you’d like to find out more about criminal cases and how they progress, continue to watch these videos.

The Criminal Defense Process Part 2 -Charging the Defendant with a Crime



The Criminal Defense Process Part 2- Charging the Defendant with a Crime

Hello, my name is Brandan Davies. I am a criminal defense lawyer with the law firm Copley Roth & Davies here in Overland Park, Kansas. In this series of videos I am going to be walking you through a criminal defense case from start to finish. In this video we are going to be talking about the charging decision or when charges or going to be brought. Once the investigation stage is concluded, the police have done their investigation, they are going to turn over the products of their investigation to the prosecutor. Now, there is a couple of different prosecutors that they may turn that over to depending on the allegations or the crime they believe has been committed. It may be a city prosecutor or it may be a state prosecutor. This will be the first time that a lawyer gets to look at the product of the police investigation and start determining what they want to charge the person with, or what crime has been committed. Now, prosecutors have a very wide latitude of what they can decide to charge a person with based on the investigation. They have, what they call, prosecutorial discretion. After the prosecutor has looked at the fruits of the investigation, and determined what charges are appropriate for this person to be charged with, they will try to seek out an arrest warrant and contemporaneously file a complaint. That complaint will have listed out the charges which the prosecutor thinks that they can prove and they will seek to go get an arrest warrant from a judge. Now, remember that the prosecutor alone does not have the power to issue an arrest warrant. At this stage, the charging stage, a criminal defense lawyer is usually not involved because either the person does not know they are going to be charged with a crime, or does not know that their charges are forthcoming. For more information on the progress of a criminal defense case, please watch our next video about arrests.

The Criminal Defense Process Part 3 - Arresting a Defendant


The Criminal Defense Process Part 3 – Arresting a Defendant


Hello, my name is Brandan Davies. I am a criminal defense lawyer based out of Overland Park, Kansas with the law firm of Copley Roth & Davies. In this video, I am going to be talking to you a little bit about an arrest. Now an arrest can occur in a couple of different ways. One of the most common ways is for an officer to witness a crime, establish or develop probable cause that a crime has been committed and that the person committed it, and then take a person into custody. Now a police officer can do this and they can hold you up to 48 hours before you are charged with a crime. Another way that an arrest can occur can be execution on an arrest warrant. This is whenever a prosecutor has obtained some evidence from the police during a police investigation, they have made the decision to charge someone with a crime, the prosecutor has went through the process of obtaining an arrest warrant from the judge, and then the arrest warrant has been issued to the sheriff or a law enforcement officer to go out and arrest a person based on that warrant. Now in both of these instances, a person will be taken into custody and then shortly thereafter, will be brought in front of a judge to establish bond or a bond amount. For more information on the criminal defense process, please watch our next video on bonding and how that works.  

The Criminal Defense Process Part 4- Establishing a Bond.



The Criminal Defense Process Part 4 – Establishing a Bond


Hello, my name is Brandan Davies. I am a criminal defense lawyer with the law firm Copley, Roth & Davies based out of Overland Park, Kansas. In this series of videos, I am walking you through, from start to finish, a criminal defense case. In this video, I am going to be talking about bond. Now, after an allegation that a crime has been committed, after the district attorney’s office has charged someone with a crime, and after that person has been arrested, we get to bond. What bond is, is it is essentially a promise that a person will come back to court. And in some cases, your promise may not be as good as your word so the judge will establish an amount of money or some sort of other condition that will ensure that you come back to court. Now, when bond takes place at the beginning of a case, a judge is going to consider a lot of different things when they set an amount for bond. They are going to look at your criminal history. They are going to look at the severity level of the crime in which you are charged with. They are going to look at your past crimes and if you failed to appear at court on those crimes. They are going to look at the likelihood that you return to court on this case and then they are going to look at the safety of the community. The judge is going to weigh all of these factors and then they are going to establish an amount of money, or bond, that you would have to pay or secure with the court for you to be released, pending your upcoming case. Now, there are lots of other things that a judge can do as well. It is not limited to just an amount of money. The judge can set other conditions. The judge can put you on house arrest. The judge can make you have a remote breath unit if they think you have an alcohol or drug problem they want to monitor. They can put you on GPS tracking. They can put you with pretrial services. There are hosts of different things that a judge can make you do while on bond to secure that you are going to come back to court or address some sort of problem that the judge thinks you have. Now, a bond amount or bond conditions will vary widely depending on you and your case. And at some point, you will get a chance to argue those conditions or argue for a bond if one has not been established, or a bond that has been established that is too high for you to make. This is when your criminal defense lawyer comes in. For more information on bond, and how bond works, and when you will be able to talk about adjusting your bond for a motion to modify your bond, please watch our next video on first appearances.  

The Criminal Defense Process Part 5 - What Happens at your First Appeara...



The Criminal Defense Process Part 5 – What Happens at your First Appearance?


In this video, I am going to be talking about first appearance. Now, first appearance is your initial court date. This will be the first time getting your chance to be in front of a judge about your case. First appearances, a lot of people think is a time when you are going to get to argue your case and you are going to get to talk or address the allegations against you. That is simply not true. First appearance is mainly a housekeeping type appearance. It is going to have a couple of minor things that can be talked about that will impact your case. The primary one is modifications to bond. At your first appearance, the judge has to do a few procedural things like read you your charges and make sure that you understand what you are charged with, talk to you about if you have a lawyer or if you have the funds to hire a lawyer, and things like that. The main thing that is going to happen at your first appearance is that you are going to be able to talk or make a motion to modify any bond that has been set for you. Now, when you originally get arrested, at the start of the case, the judge will make a bond for you. Usually that is an amount of money that you will post with the court so that you can get out of jail. If that bond amount is too high, or there is some sort of other condition on the bond, at your first appearance is going to be your best time to try to get those bond conditions modified or the amount lowered. After you make your motion for bond, the judge will make a determination right then and there whether he or she wants to allow your bond to be modified. One of the last things that a judge will do at your first appearance date is talk with your lawyer and the state’s lawyer about what they want to set your case for, and what will happen at your next court date, whether it will be a meaningful hearing like a preliminary examination, or whether it will be just a scheduling. For more information about how the criminal defense process works, please watch our next video about initial discovery.  

The Criminal Defense Process Part 6 - Discovery from the State in a Crim...



The Criminal Defense Process Part 6 – Discovery from the State in a Criminal Case


In this video, we are going to be talking about discovery, or initial discovery in the criminal defense process. now, initial discovery takes place after you have been charged with a crime, after you have hired your lawyer, and after your first appearance. In this process, your lawyer will file what they call a motion for discovery and inspection with the court, and they will give a copy of that to the district attorney’s office. Once you have filed that motion for discovery and inspection, the state will begin to produce evidence. They will produce any evidence that they have against you and give that over to your lawyer. Now it is not only evidence that shows that you committed the crime, they also have to produce evidence that shows you did not commit the crime. Anything that they have under their control that tends to prove that you did not commit the crime, or helps your case, they have to give you that as well. Now, how this happens as a practical matter, is after your lawyer has filed the motion for discovery and inspection, they will get some documents; usually a police report, a complaint, an affidavit, the first things that are available to the district attorney’s office. Then, your lawyer will look through that then, almost invariably, they will elude in those reports to some other discoverable material. Then your lawyer will communicate with the district attorney’s office and try to obtain that discoverable material. If there is some sort of discovery dispute, then your lawyer may file a motion to compel, and bring it in front of the court for the court’s determination on whether you are entitled to whatever your lawyer thinks that you are entitled to as far as discovery purposes. Now once you obtain this discovery, this is part of your lawyer’s job to look through it and see not only if there are other things that are discoverable, but is there any evidence that the police illegally obtained and how can your lawyer suppress that evidence? Also, once your lawyer has filed the motion for discovery and inspection, the state is under a continuing obligation to supplement or give to your lawyer any other evidence that comes in. Initial discovery is a very important process because it helps frame your case from the outside so that your lawyer can get a good idea of what he is working with. For more information on the criminal defense process, please watch our next video on preliminary examinations.  

The Criminal Defense Process Part 7 -What is Preliminary Examination?


The Criminal Defense Process Part 7 – What is Preliminary Examination?


In this video, we are going to be talking about a preliminary examination, or it is commonly known as the preliminary hearing, in the context of a felony criminal defense case. Now the preliminary hearing is what most people consider, other than the first bond appearance, their first appearance the real first meaningful hearing in their case. This is where they are going to hear evidence against them, they are going to get an idea of kind of how their case is going out aside from what is just on paper. Now, what the preliminary hearing is, is it is basically a mini trial. It is a time in which the state has to meet a low burden in front of a judge for a threshold of evidence to show a judge a couple of things: one, that a crime has been committed and two, the defendant is the one who committed the crime. Now they do not have to show a high burden of proof like beyond a reasonable doubt like they would at trial, they only have to show that probably cause exists, so it is a low burden. Most people are bound over on preliminary examinations. Now what bound over is, is a term that lawyers use that just allows the case to go forward. In other words, the judge says “I believe that probable cause exists that a crime has been committed and that the defendant committed the crime. Just a low burden of proof has been established and I am going to allow the case to continue.” Now, just because a person is bound over after a preliminary hearing does not mean that they have lost their case, it does not mean that they are going to jail, it does not mean anything like that, it just means that the judge has allowed their case to go forward. Now, many people will say that since it is such a low burden of proof at the preliminary examination, “Why do I want to do it?” Well, for your criminal defense lawyer, the preliminary examination is invaluable. Your criminal defense lawyer gets a chance to cross-examine the witnesses, gets the chance to view the witnesses, they have to show up to court so your lawyer gets some insight on their willingness to cooperate with the police or state in this case, and the lawyer gets an insight to see how they perform on the witness stand. It can be a good time for your lawyer to ask them questions and flush out the answers so that they understand the case better. It can be used as a very good tool for discovery. For more information on the next step in the criminal defense process for filing motions, please watch our next video.  

The Criminal Defense Process Part 8- Filing Motions in a Criminal Case


The Criminal Defense Process Part 8 – Filing Motions in a Criminal Case


In this video, I am going to be talking about filing motions or motion practice in the context of a felony criminal defense case. Now, motions can be filed in many different times during the progress of a case. The reason we put it here after the preliminary hearing examination is this is a time when a lot of motions start being filed in a case. So, what you are doing when you file a motion is you are requesting the court to make an opinion on something. It may be as simple as getting a bond modified so you can file a motion to modify a bond. You are getting in front of a judge, the judge is getting to read or hear your thoughts on a specific subject, and then the state gets a chance to respond to your thoughts or give some of their own thoughts, and then a judge makes a determination on what they want to do, whether it is wholesale adopt what you think is right, wholesale adopt what the state thinks is right, or come to some sort of middle ground. Now, after a preliminary examination, after your lawyer has gotten a large amount of the discovery that will be produced in the case, has had a chance to hear the witnesses in the case and get some of their testimony on record, this is when your lawyer a lot of times will begin to file motions. There is a multitude of motions that can be filed and this video would be 20 minutes long if we want to do all of them. But I am just going to go over a couple of ones. A very common one would be a motion to suppress. Now, once your lawyer looks through the discovery in your case and he sees maybe a search that was done illegally, or a confession that was obtained illegally, and that evidence or the fruits of that search or a confession obtained because of illegal questioning or something like that, can dramatically impact your case. It can hurt your case. So, obviously if those things are not in front of the judge, if that evidence is not presented at trial, then your case gets a lot better. So, your lawyer will file a motion to suppress. They will say, something along the lines of, “Judge, I have discovered in the discovery that this, (whatever this is, whether it is a confession or physical evidence), was obtained illegally, here is the reason it was obtained illegally, and I believe that the court should exclude that evidence at trial.” And then the state gets a chance to respond to that motion to suppress. They will almost invariably disagree and say “No, I do not think that evidence was obtained illegally and therefore it should come in.” Then the judge gets to read both motions and decide. Sometimes they will even have argument on motions, in which your lawyer will go to court and present oral argument to the judge, in which the judge can then determine who is right and who is wrong. Another type of motion, which may not have as dramatic of an impact as a motion to suppress, but like a motion in limine. A motion in limine is just a motion that is filed before a trial that tends to do a very similar thing as a motion to suppress. It is saying, to a judge, “This evidence should not be presented in trial. Maybe it was not obtained illegally but it is going to be used for an improper purpose” or something along those lines. Now those are just a couple of different motions. There are literally dozens and dozens of motions that your lawyer can file based on evidence, based on specific facts of your case, and how your case was processed. For more information on the criminal defense process and the next step, or doing discovery on your own, please watch our next video.  

The Criminal Defense Process Part 9 Defense Discovery


The Criminal Defense Process Part 9 – Defense Discovery


In this video, I am going to be talking about doing your own discovery, or defense discovery, in the context of a criminal defense case. Now, just like in almost every situation you deal with, you do not want to rely on just one avenue for getting all of your information. You want to do your own investigation. Now, in a criminal defense case, this is vital because you do not want to rely on just the police or just the people who are trying to charge you with a crime or convict you of a crime to produce all of the evidence in your case. What you want to do is do some discovery on your own. Now, it is common for a criminal defense lawyer to go out and visit the scene of an alleged crime. At that time, they can take pictures, or have a private investigator take pictures. These will be useful when they are trying to lay out the case or draw out a diagram or make some sort of demonstration to the jury. The next thing that you will want to do in a criminal case is you will also want to hire a private investigator. That private investigator can be invaluable. They can go out, they can interview witnesses, they can interview witnesses that the police did not interview. If there is a crucial witness in a case that is against you, that private investigator can do a background search on them, they can try to find evidence your criminal defense lawyer can use to impeach that witness. Also, as part of the discovery process on your side, you can interview experts. If you have an expert that would be relevant to your case that can help explain a complicated, scientific issue to a jury, you might want to consult with that expert or even retain that expert to come into court to explain these types of things. I cannot stress enough that whenever, on any criminal defense case, the defendant’s discovery is going to be vital to having a successful outcome in a criminal defense matter. For more information on criminal defense, and topics like these, please view our website, www.copleyroth.com for more information.

The Criminal Defense Process Part 10- What happens at Pretrial Conference?



The Criminal Defense Process Part 10 - What happens at Pretrial Conference?


In this video, I am going to talk about pretrial conference in the context of a criminal defense case. Now, any time you are going to have a trial, whether it is a jury trial or a bench trial, you are going to have a pretrial conference or a final pretrial conference right before trial. This usually happens just a couple of days before the trial is to begin, and what happens at the pretrial conference is a lot of different things. First, if there are some pending motions in limine, the judge will usually rule on those to decide what is going to come in as evidence, what is not going to come in as evidence, and how you are going to address concerns that you, or either the state or your criminal defense lawyer has about how evidence is going to be presented in the case. They will also talk about the timing of the case, how long the case is to be expected, how long they anticipate the voir dire will take and kind of lay out a road map so that both the state and criminal defense lawyer and you are all on the same page as how this trial is going to go. Now, obviously they cannot anticipate everything that is going to happen at trial, and the judge will have to deal with problems that may arise, but this time, this pretrial conference, is basically there to get out every single thing, iron out every single problem, that either side can anticipate. This is also done to save time. This pretrial time is going to limit a lot of the back and forth between the lawyers on the day of trial which will make the trial go a lot quicker. Depending on the judge, the judge may go ahead and pull jurors or establish the jury pool. This would be a time when you get juror questionnaires and things like that. Anything that we can do to limit the amount of time that trial takes will be handled at a pretrial conference. One of the final things that happens at a pretrial conference is because at this stage, your lawyer and the state’s lawyer are ready for trial, they have looked at all of the evidence, they have looked at all of their own discovery and the other side’s discovery in most cases, and they are going to have a very good sense of what is going to happen with the case and where their weaknesses are in the case. So, this is a good time, if there is any middle ground, to be had on a plea some sort of thing that can be done in exchange for dismissal, then this is a very good time to flush out any opportunities. If you have any other questions about a pretrial conference in a criminal defense case, if you have any other questions about the criminal defense process or are in the element of the criminal defense process, please view our website, www.copleyroth.com.

The Criminal Defense Process Part 11- The Trial


The Criminal Defense Process Part 11 – The Trial


In this video we are going to talk about trial in the criminal defense context. Now, if you are accused of a crime, everyone knows that you have a constitutional right to have an impartial third party, whether that be a judge or a jury, hear your case and hold the state to its’ burden. Basically, this is to hear the case and decide whether they have met their burden and you are guilty or not guilty. Now, what people do not know is that there are various different processes within the trial context that must take place. The first thing that is going to happen, whenever a person is set for trial on the day of trial, is the judge is going to come in and basically give a greeting to everyone and kind of tell people a little bit about how the process goes and explain to them why they are there and how long they are going to be there. This is usually pretty quick, and then the judge will jump right into voir dire. Voir dire, or voir dire, depending on how you want to say it, is the process of jury selection, or jury D selection. This is where the lawyers, both the state and the criminal defense lawyer, will get to ask the panel, or the people that have been called for jury duty that day, questions, and help determine whether they have inherent biases or if they are not going to be fair in your trial. Now this process, depending on the type of case, how much publicity the case has had, and the person in which is charged with a crime can take a few hours or it can take a few days. And what the ultimate goal of jury selection is, is to make sure that you get a fair and impartial jury to hear your case. Now, after this was concluded, the judge will have the state begin with opening statements. You have to remember throughout the entire context of the criminal defense trial, the state will always go first. They will go first in jury selection, they will go first in opening statements, they will go first when presenting evidence. Everything will happen with the state going first. It is designed that way because it is the state’s burden to prove that a person is guilty. So, after we have done jury selection, the state will go first on opening statements. At the end, your criminal defense lawyer will be able to produce their opening statement, and then the state will go right in to presenting evidence. Now, evidence in a criminal defense case can range very widely. It can be very short, which is a relatively simple matter, to just having one officer testify, all the way up to multiple witnesses testifying, experts, police officers, and a whole host of evidence presented. The defendant has a small disadvantage here because all of the state’s evidence is presented first and people tend to have formed their opinion before the defendant has even had a chance to present their evidence. But, after the state’s evidence is concluded, they will rest their case, and usually this is a time when would the defendant or the defendant’s lawyer will make a motion for an acquittal to the judge. And if there is any sort of defect in the state’s case, then the judge can grant the motion for acquittal. After the state has presented their evidence, then the defendant gets a chance. The defendant gets the chance to produce any evidence that is relevant to their case, including having the person testify if they want to, but there is no obligation for a person to testify in a criminal defense case. This would be a time for you to call an expert, if you have an expert, or present any evidence through a private investigator that you obtained. Remember, that in any criminal defense case, that the defense part is generally going to be a lot smaller than the state’s part because they are going to have the burden of proof. The defendant does not have to prove that he did not commit the crime. The state has to prove that he did commit the crime beyond any reasonable doubt. So, after the state has presented their evidence then the defendant has presented his evidence, the last part of the trial will be closing arguments. Now with closing arguments, it is your time to tell your story through your lawyer. Your lawyer is going to get a chance to get up and speak and point out the inconsistencies in the state’s case and point out your theme of your case and how the state has not met their burden of proof. After closing arguments, then the judge will instruct the jury, he will read the instruction that have been agreed upon by the judge and both lawyers, and then the jury will be released to deliberate on the case. This will conclude the trial portion of your case. If you have any other questions about criminal defense, or want something else explained to you in the criminal defense context, please view our website, www.copleyroth.com, for more information.

The Criminal Defense Process Part 12 - The Verdict



The Criminal Defense Process Part 12 – The Verdict


In this video, I am going to talk about the verdict after a trial in a criminal defense case. Before we get straight to the verdict and whether a person is guilty or not guilty, you have to talk a little bit about at the end of the trial how that works. After the judge has read the jury its’ instructions, he is going to release the jury to go back and deliberate about the case. Now after the jury is out deliberating, they are going, they are going to have very, very minimal impact on what happens after that. The jury will consider all of the evidence that is presented in the case and give it its’ due weight and they will decide whether the state has met their burden. Now during this process, the only real time you will interact, or your defense lawyer or the state will interact with the judge and jury in this case, is if there is a question. The jury has some sort of question that they want to present that either was not explained or if the jury wants to look at some sort of exhibit, they notify the bailiff and the bailiff will notify the judge and then you will have a conference with the judge, your lawyer, and the state’s lawyer, about whether they can answer the question and how best to answer the question if they can answer the question. It is up to the judge to determine if the question can be answered, and sometimes the answer is you just have to rely on the evidence that was presented at trial. After that is concluded, after the deliberations have gone through and any questions have been answered that can be answered, the jury will hopefully come to a verdict in the case. Now sometimes, the jury cannot come to a verdict in the case. They are incurably deadlocked. When this happens, then sometimes, the case has to be retried. But a judge will generally try to get a jury to come to some sort of verdict so that that process, the retire process, does not have to begin again. Once the jury comes to a verdict in their case, they will notify the bailiff, the bailiff will then notify the judge, and then the jury will come back into the courtroom. At that point, the judge will ask the jury if they came to a verdict. That verdict will be produced to the judge and the judge will read it aloud in front of the court. Now this is where the case can end. It can end if there is an acquittal, or if the person is found not guilty, then the case on your side just stops. If the person is found guilty, whether on one charge or multiple charges, then the case continues. For more information on how the case continues, please look at our website, www.copleyroth.com.

The Criminal Defense Process Part 13 - Motions after the Trial



The Criminal Defense Process Part 13 - Motions after the Trial


In this video, I am going to talk about what happens after a trial and if there is a verdict that is unfavorable to a defendant. If there is a verdict that is unfavorable to a defendant, then the case is not concluded with just the trial ending. There is a window of opportunity after the trial for your lawyer to file a motion for a new trial. Now, when this comes about, you are going to have to have a good reason to ask for a new trial. It cannot just be, “Judge, I felt like the jury got it wrong here.” What you have to do is you have to come up with a legal reason. There are many legal reasons you can get a new trial. If there is some sort of juror misconduct, like maybe you found out one of the jurors was not qualified to be on the jury. If there was some sort of prosecutorial misconduct, like maybe the prosecutor violated one of the motions in limine, or did something that irreprovably harmed your case and it caused the person, the defendant, to not get a fair trial. If there was some sort of error by the judge, like if the judge made some sort of ruling that was against the law and that was detrimental to the defendant getting a fair trial, you could file a motion for a new trial. Or, if there was some sort of newly discovered evidence that would exonerate the defendant. There are other reasons to file a motion for a new trial but those are the most common. For more information on topics like these and criminal defense, please visit our website, www.copleyroth.com for more information.

The Criminal Defense Process Part 14 - What happens after a Guilty Verdict?



The Criminal Defense Process Part 14 - What Happens After a Guilty Verdict?


In this video, I am going to talk about what happens after a person has either plead guilty or been found guilty after a trial of a criminal act. Now if this is a felony matter, the person is going to have to do a couple of things before the judge can sentence them on the crime in which they have been found to be guilty of. A couple of things, including what they call an LSI-R, which is a level of service inventory-revised, and you are also going to have to do a PSI, or a pre-sentence investigation. These are things that are just done as a matter of course before a judge can sentence you in a criminal case. The LSI-R is a process that the defendant goes through after they have been found guilty or plead guilty. It is design is to help the judge determine recidivism rates, or that person’s chance that they are going to commit a crime after this. Aside from the LSI-R, you are going to do a PSI, or a pre-sentence investigation. This is required by law in any felony matter. What the PSI accomplishes is that it goes through your entire criminal history. It is going to provide the judge with an accurate criminal history score so that the judge can use that when he sentences you. Now, the LSI-R and the PSI are vital tools that the judge has to have at his disposal before they can accurately sentence you and fairly sentence you. Because these things are tools that the judge uses to sentence you, you get a say on what happens. For example, like the PSI, the pre-sentence investigation, if during the course of the pre-sentence investigation, there comes back some crime that you have never been convicted of that shows up on your pre-sentence investigation, you get a chance to object to the criminal history that has been produced by the PSI. Then, it is on the state to prove that you actually were convicted of that crime and you can dispute that. Once you have objected to the criminal history score, it is on the state to prove that you have actually been convicted of those crimes before the judge actually can use that and enhance any punishment that you get. If you have any other questions about the PSI (pre-sentence investigation) or the LSI-R, please view our website for a full detailed explanation. 

The Criminal Defense Process Part 15 - Sentencing



The Criminal Defense Process Part 15 – Sentencing


In this video, I am going to talk about sentencing in the context of a criminal defense case. Now, if you have been arrested and charged with a crime, been convicted of that crime, and you have done the other steps including the PSI and LSI-R, you will reach the last stage of the criminal defense process, other than appeals, and that is sentencing. Sentencing is the second part of the verdict which will be delivered against you. If you have already been found guilty, that is the first part. The second part is how much trouble you are going to get in, how much time the judge is either going to put you on probation or sentence you to prison. And as you can imagine, if you have made it to the sentencing phase, you are under a disadvantage. The state has already proven their case, the judge has heard the evidence against you, and there has been a finding of guilt. This is your time to try to mitigate the damages. Now depending on what happened in your case, whether you reached some sort of plea agreement, or whether you went all the way to trial, it is going to dictate largely what happens at your sentencing hearing. If you have reached some sort of plea agreement, there is usually either a defined amount of punishment that you have agreed to accept, whether that is probation or prison, or there is a very narrow difference in opinion between what the state is going to be requesting and what you are going to be requesting. If you went to trial on your case and have been found guilty, the state could ask for the maximum punishment and not be confined by some plea agreement. Also, depending on how your case progressed, whether you went to trial or entered a plea, you may have never actually got to get up in front of a judge and tell your side of the story or try to mitigate the damages against you. This, the sentencing, will be your opportunity. Now what the judge is going to do at sentencing, is he is going to look at your criminal history score, consider the facts and evidence in your case, and is going to look at the severity level of crime in which you were convicted. The judge is going to then, depending if it is an on-grid felony or an off-grid felony, consult the Kansas sentencing grid and look at what your presumptive sentence is by looking at your criminal history, and the severity level of crime you have been convicted of. Now, just because you fall within a certain box on the sentencing grid, does not 100% mean you are either going to get that probation or get that specific amount of time in prison. Your lawyer can ask for something different. Your lawyer can either do that through filing a motion for dispositional departure or a motion for durational departure. When your lawyer files either one of these motions, they are going to be trying to establish a substantial and compelling reason to depart from the sentencing grid. They will basically prove to the judge that you deserve an exception. Now, your lawyer can try to prove that you deserve an exception or that there is a substantial and compelling reason that exists that the judge should depart from the sentencing grid by testimony of witnesses, or having you testify, or just statements of counsel. Arguing a motion for a durational or dispositional departure can be the most crucial part of any sentencing, and in fact can be the most crucial part of the entire criminal defense process depending on your particular case. If you have further questions about sentencing, how it works, or filing a motion for dispositional or durational departure, please view our website, www.copleyroth.com.

Friday, July 7, 2017

Changes to Missouri’s Employment Discrimination Laws


Missouri Senate Bill 43 was signed into law on June 30, 2017. There has been a fair amount of discussion about the bill, but now that it has become law many employees may be left asking, “What exactly changed?” The main answer is that the Missouri Human Rights Act (“MHRA”) has been amended to more closely reflect and follow Title VII of the Civil Rights Acts—the federal anti-discrimination law. For many years, the MHRA made it much easier for employees that had been discriminated against to succeed in bringing claims against their employers. While the amendment will prevent some claims, most discrimination in Missouri is still actionable; an employee can bring suit and succeed against his or her employer. Below is a brief discussion regarding ways in which the MHRA has been amended by the new law.

Motivating Factor
The key change in the MHRA is the level of discriminatory intent needed to successfully bring a claim. Missouri had previously required that the employee’s characteristic (race, religion, gender, etc.) be a “contributing factor” to find discrimination. This meant that if discrimination played even a 1% role in the decision to take the adverse employment action—firing, demoting, or other negative employment-related treatment—the employee had an action for discrimination and could recover. This requirement has now been changed to align with Title VII, requiring that the employee prove that discrimination was a “motivating factor.” As the United States Supreme Court noted in Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins, to be a motivating factor, the adverse action would not have been taken but for discrimination on the part of the employer. To put it another way, if the employee lacked the characteristic (race, gender, etc.), the employer would not have taken the negative action.
Aside from requiring more discriminatory intent before holding an employer liable, this change will give employer’s a better chance to have motions for summary judgment granted under the MHRA. Currently, surviving a motion for summary judgment is a big obstacle under Title VII discrimination cases. If successful, this motion prevents the case from ever getting to a jury. Under the contributing factor standard, it was nearly impossible for an employer to be granted summary judgment. To do so, the court would have to agree that there was no disputed fact that the employer was not motivated at all—even 1%—by the discrimination. Now, these motions will be granted if the court is convinced that there is no disputed fact that the employer would have taken the action without discrimination factoring in. This is a much easier thing for employers to prove. As a result, summary judgment will likely become the hurdle to trial under the MHRA that it has been under Title VII.  

Damage Caps
            The MHRA formerly had no limits on the amount of damages a jury could choose to award a victim of discrimination. Thus, most victims of discrimination would receive damages accounting for back pay (when adverse action had a direct effect on pay) and interest. The awards also included attorney’s fees, non-economic damages covering humiliation and emotional suffering, and punitive damages when it was shown the employer acted particularly heinously.
            The amended MHRA features damage caps based upon the size of the employer. Back pay and interest are uncapped, but the additional amount of damages, including punitive damages, is limited to an amount between $50,000 and $500,000. Again, the General Assembly used Title VII as a model for these limits. Under Title VII, all actual and punitive damages, including back pay and interest, are limited based on the employer’s size. Title VII’s amounts fall between $50,000 and $300,000. Thus, even under these new damage caps included in the MHRA, it is possible to recover more than under Title VII, depending on the amount of back pay and interest the employee is awarded.   

Employer size
Former MHRA
Current MHRA
Title VII
Employer with 100 or fewer employees
No Limit
$50,000
+ back pay & interest
$50,000
Employer with 101 to 200 employees
No Limit
$100,000
+ back pay & interest
$100,000
Employer with 201 to 500 employees
No Limit
$200,000
+ back pay & interest
$200,000
Employer with more than 500 employees
No Limit
$500,000
+ back pay & interest
$300,000

Supervisor Liability
            Under both the former MHRA and the amended statute, as well as Title VII, supervisors that discriminate create vicarious liability for their employer. This simply means that if the supervisor discriminates, his or her actions are attributed to the employer and the employer can be made to answer for the actions. Formerly under the MHRA, supervisors could also individually be sued for discrimination. In terms of recovery, this meant very little: most supervisors lacked the financial resources to satisfy a judgment, meaning an employee would have to sue the employer to get any recovery. However, this did provide one advantage to plaintiffs, as it generally allowed case to be filed and kept in state court. Cases can be “removed” to federal court when the plaintiff and defendants are from different states. Thus, when the employer is a large retail chain, the chain is probably not considered a “citizen” of Missouri because it has its headquarter in another state; the supervisor of the employee likely does live in Missouri, though. Having a “Missouri defendant” keeps the case from being removed to federal court. Being removed to federal court is not a death sentence for plaintiffs, but federal court does tend to favor defendants. It requires unanimous jury verdicts, fewer jurors, and stricter rules of evidence, making a case hard to prove.
            The amendments to the MHRA have changed the ability to sue supervisors for discrimination. Now, the definition of who can be sued under the act has been limited to the employer itself. This will likely result in more cases being removed to federal court. For a plaintiff, this is not ideal but it is truly the least concerning of the changes. Experienced counsel should be familiar with federal court and can pursue the claim in either venue.


            These are just some of the changes that Senate Bill 43 made to the MHRA. Discrimination is still very actionable in Missouri. This means that if you feel you have been discriminated against, you should not hesitate to contact experienced legal counsel. Unlike most amendments to law, Senate Bill 43 is based largely on already addressed terms and concepts found within Title VII. This means that pursuing your claim will not be a venture into the unknown for counsel experienced with the workings of Title VII. 

Thursday, February 16, 2017

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