Sunday, October 17, 2010

The Crime of Assault

This is shocking, but in Texas in 2007 alone, there were 73,426 assaults reported statewide. If that doesn't give you some pause, I don't know what else would. Since then, the economy has gone into the toilet and you may well imagine what those figures may be when tallied for 2008.

The crime of assault is usually defined as the intentional, knowing or reckless causing of bodily injury or threatening imminent bodily injury. This crime is usually charged as a Class "A" misdemeanor, but may be enhanced for various reasons.

Since intention is part of the definition, assault is pegged as an intentional wrongdoing that distinguishes it from negligence.

Further to this classification of assault is the aggravated assault, which means causing serious bodily injury or use of a deadly weapon. This is typically a second degree felony.

Another assault crime classification that many people are relatively familiar with, thanks to shows like CSI, is assault and battery (also a felony.) This is where actual contact is made with the victim and they require medical treatment. If convicted on this charge, there is usually time behind bars, fines, anger management classes, etc. The punishment, in most cases, suits the circumstances of the nature of the crime. Any priors will make things worse.

The thing with assault cases, and any other criminal offense, is that nothing is ever cut and dried. This is precisely why, if you are facing any of these types of charges, you must contact a qualified board certified criminal defense attorney. This is the "only" person who will be able to see to it that you get a good defense and who may be able to mitigate the charges or the punishment, and who may also be able to get the charges thrown out of court.

Make your first call to a criminal defense attorney who knows the system inside out and is familiar with the hundreds of nuances the various assault cases carry with them. It may mean your freedom or serving a reduced sentence.




Daniel Wannamaker is a board certified criminal law specialist and has 24 years of criminal trial experience with proven results as a Dallas criminal defense lawyer [http://www.wannamakerlaw.com] practicing in Austin criminal defense and Houston Texas. To learn more, visit [http://www.wannamakerlaw.com]

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Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Embezzlement Isn't a Crime

Don't confuse swindling with embezzlement, as they are two different things. Embezzlement is the unlawful appropriation of another person's property by someone in a position of trust.

Swindling means getting their hands on your property under false pretenses by lying, cheating or tricking you at the time a property is transferred and makes you transfer your title to him/her instead.

Now this slight confusion over larceny and embezzlement means there is a bit of an overlap in some statutes in a few states. Larceny involves the illegal taking of property right from the get-go and embezzlement is the wrongful appropriation carried out after the initial lawful taking.

In all instances when you are facing charges in either of these areas, talk to a Dallas criminal defense attorney who knows what they are doing to formulate a defense. Most people know embezzlement as being a crime where people that are entrusted with other's property steal it from them - bankers, corporate managers, lawyers and agents. It is all too easy to get their hands on others people's property when in a position of power and trust. Interestingly enough the statutes don't specifically spell out who is liable for embezzlement, but they do outline the type of property that may be embezzled - stocks, promissory notes, bonds, checks, commercial paper, intangible personal property, deeds and contracts.

Be aware that not every state has the same definitions and speaking to a lawyer in situations like this is an absolute must. For instance, some states simply say property is anything that can be subject to larceny. In others, property requirements are broader and may penalize the embezzlement of real and personal property. There are a variety of elements needed to make this type of charge and they too vary from state to state. Your Houston criminal defense lawyer will be able to advise you of which statutes apply in any given case. Generally speaking though, the elements of embezzlement are: that the property must belong to another person besides the accused (a principal or employer) and the property must be converted (embezzled) subsequent to the defendant's original lawful possession of it. The third element is the defendant must be in a position of trust, so that holding the property is a fiduciary duty and there must be the intent to defraud the owner at the time of the embezzlement/conversion.




Daniel Wannamaker is a board certified criminal law specialist and has 24 years of criminal trial experience with proven results as a Dallas criminal defense lawyer [http://www.wannamakerlaw.com] practicing in Austin criminal defense and Houston Texas. To learn more, visit [http://www.wannamakerlaw.com]

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Saturday, October 9, 2010

5 Things To Look For In A Good DUI Attorney

Hopefully you will never need the services of a DUI attorney. Unfortunately, many people end up making stupid mistakes like driving drunk every year in the United States and around the world. When caught doing so they will need the help of a DUI attorney.

However, before I recommend what you should look for in your lawyer I must say one word of warning. If you have driven drunk, whether or not you have been caught, you must promise yourself and those you love never to do it again. Every year tens of thousands of people around the world are killed by drunk drivers and I believe those who do, deserve to be punished.

Nevertheless, some people just make the mistake once and as long as they haven't hurt anybody and have a means of preventing themselves from doing it again have the right to a DUI attorney. Also, in case you are unsure DUI stands for driving under the influence and DWI stands for driving while intoxicated and a good attorney can help with both charges.

You should look for the following in a good DUI attorney:

1. Experience

The first thing you should look for is a lawyer who has had many years experience dealing with DUI and DWI related charges. Ideally you don't want your case to be their first case in this area.

2. Track Record

Closely related to experience is the track record of the DUI attorney. They may have many years experience but how many cases have they won? Obviously you want someone with a good track record representing you.

3.Compatibility

The third thing you want to look for in a DUI lawyer is someone who shares or least understands you goals in disputing your DUI/DWI charges. Hopefully, they will be able to give you a few different options to choose from in terms of how to go forward with your case. Also, if you do end up going to court you want someone with whom you can have a good working relationship to help ensure your case is resolved successfully.

4.Price

When choosing a good DUI lawyer price should never be your primary concern. A DUI or DWI charge is very serious and the most important thing for you should be to win your case. That being said in most cases money is an issue so you should look for someone you can afford but that also has a positive track record.

5. Alcohol counseling

Finally, a good DUI attorney should inform you about different forms of alcohol counseling that are available to you. You may not feel that you 'have a problem with alcohol' but quite frankly since you drove drunk at least once you may want to rethink that a little. Either way they should be able to provide help to you in this very difficult time.

I will say once more hopefully you will never need a DUI lawyer but if for some reason you do these are the primary things you should look for to make sure you hire a good one.




Ian Wright is not a lawyer but writes about many legal issues on his websites. Moreover he thinks drinking and driving are about the stupidest thing you could do to yourself and those you love; but realizes people do sometimes make mistakes. For more on this topic please visit his sites: DUI Attorney and California DUI Attorney.

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Thursday, October 7, 2010

Knock, Knock! Who's There? The Police!

The situation: You and 75 of your closest friends or drunkest frat brothers or sorority sisters are packed into the living room of the duplex that you are renting when you here someone yell, "It's the cops!" Many scream and bodies start scattering like roaches... What do you do? What are your rights?

If you're at someone else's house you have less to worry about than if it is your residence, and if you are a minor and alcohol is involved, you may receive a citation but that is trivial with what could happen if you run or worse yet, if you are uncooperative or fight. However, if it is your house, you are the one to maintain control of the situation and interact with the officers.

Before Interacting with the Officers at the Door:

1. Keep your activities hidden.

Whatever it is you are doing it is none of their business unless you allow  it. I am surprised that I am even writing this, as it seems quite obvious. This means, keep the blinds closed, do not open the door and stand with it open, etc. Anything that falls within an officer's view will allow the officer access to enter the house. The most important activity you can take is to keep the officer OUTSIDE your residence... after all, this is YOUR CASTLE.

2. ALWAYS make sure that only YOU OPEN THE DOOR (No one else should ever open the door for the officer).

Try to ensure that everyone knows not to open the door if the police are called. Even if an officer yells through a window or at the door for a guest to open it, the guest should come and get you. While this is an ideal goal, it is often not realistic as the substances that may make a party really "good" at the same time cause the imbibers of said substances to make poor decisions.

Ideally, you want someone to work the door and to ensure it is shut immediately after people enter or exit. Your right to protect your home from being searched is dramatically reduced if someone else lets an officer inside, where the officer may see more and more evidence and get to cover more space under the "plain-sight" rule.

Meeting the Officer(s) Outside 3. Come from a door where the officer(s) are not or immediately shut the door behind you.

Take a deep breath, calm yourself and step outside; If you know the officer is standing on the other side of the door, you might consider going out the back door and meeting the officer where he stands. You can always say that you were outside and someone told you he or she was on the porch. But, if you do go out the door the officer is standing at, immediately shut the door behind you. This is crucial and serves multiple purposes: 1) it makes it much harder for the police to enter, 2) it stops the smell of drugs and metabolized alcohol from escaping, 3) it lowers sound levels, and 4) it prohibits the police from viewing any incriminating evidence like bongs that may have been left in plain view.

4. When talking to officers, be calm and non-confrontational.

Introduce yourself as the owner, renter, or whatever role you have with the property and ask the officer(s) how you can assist them. Remain calm and remember that officers exist to protect us. Treat them like you would any unexpected visitor - remember that Golden Rule? You have nothing to gain and a lot to lose by being aggressive, hostile, or a favorite "officer word" belligerent. Try to put yourself in the officer's boots and think about what you would want to do if you responded to a call for a loud party and the host treated you rudely. You too would probably want to shut down the party!

5. When talking, respect authority

Use the title, "Officer." Keep in mind that officers put their lives at risk in order to make our neighborhoods safe. So treat them with the respect they deserve. Call them by their official title, "Officer [Name on Shirt]," or "Sir/Ma'am." Some may take offense if you don't. Officers like it when you acknowledge their authority.

6. Determine why the officers are there.

Sometimes officers are nearby for another reason. An example, when I was sixteen, I was stopped and questioned about my presence in a neighborhood. The officer questioned me, insinuating that I had been doing something illegal. It turns out the officer was actually looking for someone who had toilet-papered a house and shot the front door with paint balls. The point of the story: do not assume the officers know what illegal things you are up to, even if they pretend they know.

It is possible the officer sat your door are asking about something going on in the neighborhood, but it is probably a safe bet they are there because of the noise complaint caused by your drunken friends rapping along to old M.C. Hammer. With some luck, there's a good chance the officers will leave if you agree to turn down the music and not "make them come back...."

7. NEVER CONSENT to a search or admission without a warrant.

You must protect your home at all costs. Do not consent to the officers entering. Officers will not tell you about your right to refuse their entry. But you have that right, and it's your responsibility to know that and to exercise the right.

Explicitly state that without a search warrant, you will not let them inside. The only reason officers ask you if they can enter is because they don't have enough evidence to search without your consent. I repeat: The only reason officers ask you if they can enter is because they don't have enough evidence to search without your consent. If you do not give them your consent, they cannot enter.

Tell the officers you understand they are doing their job and you will keep the music down. Then ask if there is anything else you can do and if you are free to go. It doesn't matter what they say; there's never a reason to allow them into your home.

If the officers say: "If nothing illegal is going on inside, then you have no reason to object to my entry." [They may then try to walk by you, interpreting your silence as consent].

You should respond: "Officer, I know you are doing your job, but I do not consent to any searches. Am I free to go?"

This stops them from entering without a warrant. If they threaten to go and get a warrant, agree to that, even if they say that an officer will remain by the doorway. If they do enter anyway and find illegal items, an Austin Criminal Defense Attorney will likely have the evidence suppressed and excluded because the items were discovered through an illegal search.

Allowing the police inside gives up your 4th Amendment right, which protects you from unreasonable searches and seizures. Most police searches happen because people unknowingly waive their 4th Amendment rights by consenting to warrantless searches. Keep in mind that "consenting to warrantless searches" could mean standing idly by as the officers try to walk inside the front door. You must actively refuse searches, but verbally state your refusal, do not grab hold of or use force against an officer to prevent his entry.

If the officers say something like, "We have to do a routine check to make sure everything is okay inside," they are trying to trick you into giving up your rights and getting you to consent to a search. (But, if the reason they are there is for a 911 hang-up call from the residence or because they here someone screaming for help, they may have a right to enter as an "exigent circumstance.)

If officers begin to put the pressure on, an effective tactic is to answer their questions with questions but do not ever consent.

8. Answer their Questions with Questions ("Am I Free to Go?")

If they say: "I smell pot. Are people smoking marijuana inside?"

You respond: "Sir, I don't smell anything. Am I free to go?"

If they say: "We need to do a routine check inside."

You respond: "I will keep the music down, officer. Am I free to go?"

While this is a voluntary encounter, remember you walked up to the officer, I would not advise saying, "Thank you, but I'm going back inside." While you may legally be entitled to terminate the encounter, the problem is that you still have the police at your door.

9. Tell the truth or remain silent - do not lie.

Officers can tell when you are not being truthful. They have busted way too many parties to fall for anything less than honesty. Lying will irritate the officers and give them a reason to bust your party. You can always mimic politicians and try to avoid questions by changing the subject.

Officer: "Those people that went inside looked underage. Are you supplying alcohol to minors?" You respond: "Officer, if the music is too loud, I will turn it down. Am I free to go?"

Officer: "You didn't answer my question. Are you supplying alcohol minors?" Then, make sure you remain silent and ... 10. Do not answer any questions about illegal activities without your attorney there.

If they say: "You didn't answer me. Are you supplying alcohol to minors?" You respond: "Officer, I have nothing to say until I speak with a lawyer. I will turn the music down. Am I free to go?"

If you do not feel comfortable answering their questions truthfully, then remain silent. Anything you say can and will be held against you, and everything you do not say cannot and will not be held against you. So do not give them anything to work with. You cannot get in trouble for refusing to answer questions.

Remember that if the officers do not have enough evidence to develop probable cause for a warrant or consent, they cannot enter. And, refusing to answer questions does not count as evidence to be used against you.

Unless officers think you are committing a serious crime, there is almost no chance that they will get a search warrant for your house, and if they do, then you deal with that later. If you remain calm and agree to turn down the music, the police will likely leave and then you will have a story to embellish....

You and only you can exercise your rights. The law is on your side, so use it. Refuse searches. Remain silent.




Dax Garvin, Attorney and Counselor At law is an experienced Austin Texas DWI Attorney at http://www.daxlegal.com

I graduated from Texas Tech University School of Law in May, 2002, and was licensed to practice law in Texas that November, following the July, 2002, Texas Bar Exam. Prior to that, I obtained my Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice from the University of Texas at Tyler and my first years of undergraduate work were spent at Austin College in Sherman, Texas, where I learned the true passion of humanity-recognizing we are all part of one great society.

I worked in the Travis County Attorney's Office from August, 2002, until October, 2003, when I entered into private practice with a mid-size Austin civil litigation firm, where I enhanced my skills for legal research, writing, motion practice, and working with insurance companies from the defense perspective.

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Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Driven - A Ticket Tale

I was busted. I had only been in Dallas for a year and half, but I didn't have the excuse that I didn't know where the DMV was located. My registration was overdue by a couple of months and the officer stopped me while cruising down Greenville Avenue during my lunch hour.

His police car was trailing behind me for a bit, but it made me nervous so I slowed down and changed lanes to let him pass. I guess he noticed the expired sticker from his rearview. I should have renewed online when I had the opportunity.

Once expired, you can not renew online or by mail. I was dreading having to wait in line at the court house for the renew. So I exchanged 30 minutes of inconvenience for five hours of my life, when I had to go to the court house two more times.

10 or 20 Days?

The officer told me I had 20 days to get my registration and to go to the court house to schedule a court date. Twelve days later I was waiting in a long line at the court house with my new proof of registration I had paid for that day.

With my proof of registration (receipt) and the peeled off expired sticker of yesteryear in hand, I was proud of myself for getting it taken care of earlier. The court clerk corrected me by saying I had 20 days to contact the court about the ticket, but ten days from the day of the ticket to get my registration. I was two days too late. My face fell.

She said it is policy to dismiss those types of citations on the spot if not over ten days, but instead they scheduled a court date seven months later the following October.

Now I know why so many people go to jail because they miss a court date. When you are sitting in jail, it is easy to remember your court date, but it is a different story when you are a typical law-abiding citizen who might get a ticket once every two years. I considered my options:

- Pay it

- Hire a lawyer

- Plead no contest & take defensive driving

- Contest it

In the back of my mind, I had planned on getting a lawyer closer to the court date. For some reason I never secured one. I had used one a year ago when I had received two tickets in one month, but he was reluctant to take the case since they were not that severe.

When my court date arrived, I decided to defend myself. I truly believed the police officer gave me wrong information. If I failed, I would still be able to take defensive driving, so I was not worried.

Sitting in the court room at 8:30 am they called out the names of those on the roster scheduled for court that morning. I was not on the list. I could have walked out, but I called attention to it. The bailiff looked me up in the computer and found me.

The judge told all to come back at 10am, so I went and got some breakfast. When I got back they dismissed my ticket. I am not sure if it was because the officer was not there, or for some other reason. The moral of the story is, you should always try to fight your tickets. You may just get it dismissed. If not, you can still take defensive driving.




Neil Lemons represents Comedy Defensive Driving, a state approved ticket dismissal course serving those needing defensive driving in Houston, Dallas, Austin, as well as all other cities in Texas. For more information, check out http://www.comedydefensivedriving.com

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DWI Vs DUI

There are two different types of drunk driving cases: DWI and DUI. Each of these has different details that make them different from each other. If you have been arrested for one of these, it would be in your best interest to know the difference between them and what the consequences are.

DUI, or Driving Under the Influence, can either be a civil case or a criminal case. A civil case of DUI means that the person that was arrested was under the age of 21. This also means that the person submitted to taking either a blood test or a breathalyzer test and was officially under the legal limit. The legal limit in the state of Texas is a BAC, or Blood Alcohol Concentration, of .08%. A criminal case of DUI means that the person was over the age of 21 and also agreed to take some kind of sobriety test and tested below the legal limit. Usually a criminal case DUI is considered a Class C misdemeanor. This means that for a first time offender there will be a fine of up to $5000 with no jail time. The judge will most likely assign you to do some type of community service along with an alcohol awareness class. If you are a repeating offender, the judge or court might consider sentencing you to a higher fine and maybe jail time because they would think that you haven't learned your lesson.

A DWI, or Driving While Intoxicated, case can be a little bit different. There are both civil cases as well as criminal cases, but they both mean different things. A civil DWI case means that the person was under the age of 21 and submitted to a sobriety test. The person must have tested above the legal limit of .08%. This can also be for those over the age of 21 that refuse to take a sobriety test. The punishment for this is usually a suspended license for up to 1 year, a fine up to $5000, and some amount of jail time depending on how many prior offenses the person has had.

A criminal DWI case gets to be a little bit more complicated than all the others. In most criminal cases, the person submits to a sobriety tests and has a BAC over the legal limit. This is usually considered a class B misdemeanor. The sentence for this misdemeanor is usually a fine with a minimum of $2000 and not less than 3 days in jail. The court will also probably require some kind of alcohol awareness training for this misdemeanor as well.




For more information, contact the Austin DWI Lawyers of Morales and Navarrete at 866-812-4596.

Joseph Devine

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