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This wikilog article is a draft, it was not published yet.

by: Sduclos • November 20, 2012 • no comments

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==='''Oregon Supreme Court Candidates on Think Out Loud'''===
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==='''Is There an Innocence Exception to Anti-Terrorism and Death Penalty Act for Timeliness Requirement?'''===
  
"The two candidates for a seat on Oregon's Supreme Court sparred over their experience and endorsements Friday.
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Floyd Perkins filed his habeas petition five years too late-however…
  
Multnomah County Circuit Court Judge Richard Baldwin and Portland attorney Nena Cook faced off on OPB's Think Out Loud.
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"[d]ocuments in the court file suggest that Mr. Perkins actually tried pretty hard given his circumstances. Just before one deadline, he told Judge Bell in a handwritten filing, 'petitioner's legal documents and much of his personal property was destroyed' by prison personnel 'following petitioner's involvement in inciting a riot.'
  
Baldwin emphasized his experience as both a judge and private practice attorney.
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'After which,' Mr. Perkins continued, 'petitioner was denied access to the law library and law materials while he was held in solitary confinement' for almost five years. He said he continued to seek legal help and to work on his case 'as much as one could have done being confined to solitary.' "
  
"I went to law school to become a civil rights lawyer. I started Multnomah's County's first Mental health court three years ago, presided over drug courts as well. So I've been in the trenches now for a total of 35 years," Baldwin said.
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-Adam Liptak, "[http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/13/us/post-trial-evidence-is-issue-in-supreme-court-case.html?ref=todayspaper&_r=0 Case Asks When New Evidence Means a New Trial]," New York Times (Nov 12, 2012).
  
Baldwin's campaign website says he has the endorsement of a dozen current and former appeals and supreme court justices.
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The Supreme Court granted cert on Oct 29, 2012, and arguments are expected in February on whether, under the AEDPA of 1996, there is an actual-innocence exception to the "timely filing" requirement of a habeas petition. (SCOTUSblog coverage available [http://www.scotusblog.com/case-files/cases/mcquiggin-v-perkins/?wpmp_switcher=desktop here].).
  
Nena Cook is younger, and while she has not been hired as a judge, for the last five year's she's volunteered as a pro tem judge in Multnomah County.
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==='''King County Dismisses All Misdemeanor Marijuana Cases'''===
  
...Cook's website says she has endorsements from 27 district attorneys from counties across the state."
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"King County Prosecutor Dan Satterberg has dismissed all misdemeanor marijuana possession cases currently pending in Washington's largest county. **** Friday's announcement followed the passage of Initiative 502, which legalized marijuana possession of one ounce or less in Washington State. The law also called for a legal framework under which marijuana could be grown and sold; both those activities remain illegal outside the medical marijuana industry.
  
- "[http://www.opb.org/news/article/supreme-cuort-candidaates-tout-experience/ Supreme Court Candidates Tout Experience]," Think Out Loud, OPB, Oct 19, 2012.
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The initiative goes into effect Dec. 6, but Satterberg said he saw no reason to wait to drop the charges. 'Although the effective date of I-502 is not until Dec. 6, there is no point in continuing to seek criminal penalties for conduct that will be legal next month,' Satterberg said in a statement."
  
==='''Oregon Supreme Court to Hear Gary Haugen Case in March'''===
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-Levi Pulkkinen. "[http://www.seattlepi.com/local/article/Satterberg-dismisses-all-misdemeanor-marijuana-4024296.php#ixzz2C85UZoWk Satterberg Dismisses All Misdemeanor Marijuana Cases]," Seattle PI.com (Nov 9, 2012).
  
"The Oregon Supreme Court has agreed to hear Gov. John Kitzhaber's appeal of Gary Haugen's refusal to accept a reprieve of a death sentence.
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==='''Once an Acquital, Always an Acquital?'''===
  
Oral arguments are scheduled at 10:30 a.m. March 14 at the University of Oregon law school. . .
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"Lamar Evans was acquitted of burning down a vacant house after his trial judge mistakenly required Michigan prosecutors to prove more than they needed to, all sides now in the case agree.
  
The justices will hear arguments on a single point: Whether someone such as Haugen must accept a reprieve offered by the governor under the Oregon Constitution for it to be effective."
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The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday considered whether Evans can now be tried again.
  
- "[http://www.statesmanjournal.com/article/20121022/UPDATE/121022044/Oregon-Supreme-Court-hear-Haugen-case-appeal?odyssey=nav%7Chead Oregon Supreme Court to Hear Haugen Case]" by Peter Wong, Statesmen Journal, Oct 22, 2012.
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At the request of Evans's lawyer at the time, the trial judge said prosecutors had to prove that the house was a dwelling, even though state law did not require such proof. When they could not, the judge directed that Evans be acquitted.
  
==='''Court Denies Detainees' Right to Habeas '''for Afghanistan Detainees===
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However, the Michigan Supreme Court ruled 4-3 in March that Evans could be retried as the acquittal was based on an error of law that did not address the facts of the alleged crime.
  
"WASHINGTON - A judge on Friday rejected a request for hearings from three men imprisoned by the United States military for nearly a decade in <span class="meta-loc">Afghanistan</span> without trials. The judge ruled that new information was not sufficient to undermine a previous appeals court ruling against them.
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*** Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg questioned where to draw the line. 'If we adopt your [the government's] rule, it can't be for this case only,' she told Gannon. 'That's a difficult line to adopt.' "
  
The [http://www.documentcloud.org/documents/472749-bates-ruling-maqaleh.html ruling] by Judge John D. Bates was a victory for the Obama administration and a blow to efforts to extend to detainees at the Parwan detention complex at <span class="meta-classifier">Bagram</span> Air Base, north of Kabul, the same <span class="meta-classifier">habeas corpus</span> rights that the Supreme Court has granted to similar prisoners at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.
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-Jonathan Stempel, "[http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/sns-rt-us-usa-court-doublejeopardybre8a51bc-20121106,0,3665377.story Supreme Court Weighs Limit on Double Jeopardy Rule]," Reuters (Nov 6, 2012).
 
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{{wl-publish: 2012-11-13 10:54:20 -0800 | sduclos }}
The men are two Yemenis and a Tunisian who say they were captured outside Afghanistan and are being held by mistake. They want a judge to review the evidence and order their release."
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"[http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/20/us/judge-denies-hearing-request-from-3-afghanistan-detainees.html?_r=0 Judge Denies Hearing Request From 3 Afghanistan Detainees]," by Charlie Savage, NYT, Oct 19, 2012.
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{{wl-publish: 2012-10-23 10:56:38 -0700 | sduclos }}
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Revision as of 19:12, December 21, 2012

Is There an Innocence Exception to Anti-Terrorism and Death Penalty Act for Timeliness Requirement?

Floyd Perkins filed his habeas petition five years too late-however…

"[d]ocuments in the court file suggest that Mr. Perkins actually tried pretty hard given his circumstances. Just before one deadline, he told Judge Bell in a handwritten filing, 'petitioner's legal documents and much of his personal property was destroyed' by prison personnel 'following petitioner's involvement in inciting a riot.'

'After which,' Mr. Perkins continued, 'petitioner was denied access to the law library and law materials while he was held in solitary confinement' for almost five years. He said he continued to seek legal help and to work on his case 'as much as one could have done being confined to solitary.' "

-Adam Liptak, "Case Asks When New Evidence Means a New Trial," New York Times (Nov 12, 2012).

The Supreme Court granted cert on Oct 29, 2012, and arguments are expected in February on whether, under the AEDPA of 1996, there is an actual-innocence exception to the "timely filing" requirement of a habeas petition. (SCOTUSblog coverage available here.).

King County Dismisses All Misdemeanor Marijuana Cases

"King County Prosecutor Dan Satterberg has dismissed all misdemeanor marijuana possession cases currently pending in Washington's largest county. **** Friday's announcement followed the passage of Initiative 502, which legalized marijuana possession of one ounce or less in Washington State. The law also called for a legal framework under which marijuana could be grown and sold; both those activities remain illegal outside the medical marijuana industry.

The initiative goes into effect Dec. 6, but Satterberg said he saw no reason to wait to drop the charges. 'Although the effective date of I-502 is not until Dec. 6, there is no point in continuing to seek criminal penalties for conduct that will be legal next month,' Satterberg said in a statement."

-Levi Pulkkinen. "Satterberg Dismisses All Misdemeanor Marijuana Cases," Seattle PI.com (Nov 9, 2012).

Once an Acquital, Always an Acquital?

"Lamar Evans was acquitted of burning down a vacant house after his trial judge mistakenly required Michigan prosecutors to prove more than they needed to, all sides now in the case agree.

The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday considered whether Evans can now be tried again.

At the request of Evans's lawyer at the time, the trial judge said prosecutors had to prove that the house was a dwelling, even though state law did not require such proof. When they could not, the judge directed that Evans be acquitted.

However, the Michigan Supreme Court ruled 4-3 in March that Evans could be retried as the acquittal was based on an error of law that did not address the facts of the alleged crime.
*** Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg questioned where to draw the line. 'If we adopt your [the government's] rule, it can't be for this case only,' she told Gannon. 'That's a difficult line to adopt.' "

-Jonathan Stempel, "Supreme Court Weighs Limit on Double Jeopardy Rule," Reuters (Nov 6, 2012).