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<h2>Blog</h2>
<h2>'''The Library'''</h2>
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{{Special:Wikilog/Blog:Main|limit=3|view=summary}}
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<h2>Case Reviews</h2>
 
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________________________________________________
 
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<table class="gallery">
File:Image001.jpg|'''[[Search_and_Seizure|Search and Seizure]]'''<br>[[Search_and_Seizure#Did_the_State_Infringe_Upon_a_Privacy_or_Possessory_Interest_of_Defendant.3F|Privacy Interest]], [[Search_and_Seizure#Was_the_defendant_stopped.3F|Stops]],[[Search_and_Seizure#Was_Defendant_Arrested.3F|Arrests]],  [[Search_and_Seizure#Did_someone_Consent_to_the_search.3F|Consent]],  [[Search_and_Seizure#Was_there_an_exception_to_the_Warrant_Requirement.3F|Warrant Exceptions]], [[Search_and_Seizure#Was_there_an_exception_to_the_Warrant_Requirement.3F|Suppression Exceptions]],  [[Search_and_Seizure#Was_there_a_Search_Warrant.3F|Search Warrants]]
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File:Blood-1.jpg|'''[[Forensic_Evidence|Forensic Science]]'''<br>[[Ballistics|Ballistics]], [[Bitemarks|Bitemarks]], [[Bloodstain_Pattern_Analysis|Bloodstains]], [[DNA|DNA]], [[Eyewitness_Identification|Eyewitness ID]],  [[Fingerprints|Fingerprints]], [[Handwriting_Identification|Handwriting ID]], [[Polygraphs|Polygraphs]],  [[Shaken_Baby_Syndrome|Shaken Baby]]
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[[File:Police.jpg|x70px|link=Search_and_Seizure|center|border]]
 
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File:Phoenix-Wright-Objection1.jpg|'''[[Evidence_Code|Evidence Code]]'''<br> [[Evidence_Code#Procedure|Procedure]], [[Evidence_Code#Relevance|Relevance]],  [[Evidence_Code#Privileges|Privileges]], [[Evidence_Code#Examining_Lay_Witnesses|Lay Witnesses]], [[Evidence_Code#Examining_Expert_Witnesses|Experts]], [[Evidence_Code#Hearsay|Hearsay]], [[Evidence_Code#Physical_Evidence|Physical Evidence]]
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[[File:Blood43.jpg|x70px|link=Forensic_Evidence|center|border]]
File:128px-immigration.jpg|'''[[Immigration|Immigration]]'''<br>[[Padilla|Padilla]], [[Aggravated_Felonies|Agg Felonies]],  [[Inadmissibility|Inadmissibility]], [[Removability|Removability]], [[Moral_Turpitude|Moral Turpitude]],  [[Naturalization|Naturalization]], [[Juvenile_Defendants|Juveniles]], [[U-Visas|U-Visas]]
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<td>
File:Police-line.jpg|'''[[Crimes|Crimes]]'''<br>[[Crimes#Measure_11_Crimes|Measure 11]], [[Crimes#Drug_Crimes|Drugs]], [[Crimes#Sex_Crimes|Sex Crimes]], [[Crimes#Homicide|Homicide]], [[Crimes#Property_Crimes|Property]], [[DUII|DUII]], [[Crimes#Child_Abuse_Crimes|Child Abuse]], [[Crimes|Other Crimes]]
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[[File:Courtroom.jpg|x70px|link=Evidence_Code|center|border]]
 
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File:Interrogate2.jpg|'''[[Self-Incrimination|Self-Incrimination]]'''<br>[[Evidentiary_Burdens|Evidentiary Burdens]], [[State_Compulsion|State Compulsion]], [[Custody/Compelling_Circumstances|Custody/Compelling Circumstances]], [[Right_to_Silence|Right to Silence]],  [[Impeachment|Impeachment]]
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File:Brain_seen_from_above.jpg| '''[[Mental_States|Mental States]]'''<br>[[Civil_Commitments|Civil Commitments]], [[Fitness_to_Proceed|Aid & Assist]], [[Utilizing_a_GEI_Defense|GEI]], [[Disordered_Mental_State_Strategy|Disordered Mental State]], [[Mental_States#Mental_States_Required_for_Conviction|Mens Rea]], [[Testing|Testing]], [[DSM|DSM-IV]]
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'''[[Search_and_Seizure|Search and Seizure]]'''<br/>
File:Defense.jpg|'''[[Defenses|Defenses]]'''<br>[[Alibi|Alibi]], [[Choice_of_Evils_and_Necessity|Necessity]], [[Speedy_Trial|Speedy Trial]], [[Self_Defense|Self Defense]]
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[[Search_and_Seizure#Did_the_State_Infringe_Upon_a_Privacy_or_Possessory_Interest_of_Defendant.3F|Privacy Interest]],
 
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[[Search_and_Seizure#Was_the_defendant_stopped.3F|Stops]],[[Search_and_Seizure#Was_Defendant_Arrested.3F|Arrests]],  [[Search_and_Seizure#Did_someone_Consent_to_the_search.3F|Consent]],  [[Search_and_Seizure#Was_there_an_exception_to_the_Warrant_Requirement.3F|Warrant Exceptions]], [[Search_and_Seizure#Was_there_an_exception_to_the_Warrant_Requirement.3F|Suppression Exceptions]],  [[Search_and_Seizure#Was_there_a_Search_Warrant.3F|Search Warrants]]
File:Oregon-flag3.png|'''[[Oregon_Constitution|Oregon Constitution]]'''<br>[[Speedy_Trial|Speedy Trial]], [[Right_to_Counsel|Right to Counsel]], [[Confrontation/Cross_Examination|Confrontation]], [[Oregon_Constitution#Section_12:_Double_jeopardy.3B_compulsory_self-incrimination|Double Jeopardy]], [[Oregon_Constitution#Section_20:_Privileges_and_Immunities_of_Citizens|Equal Privileges]], [[Ex_Post_Facto|Ex Post Facto]], [[Oregon_Constitution#Section_11:_Rights_of_Accused_in_Criminal_Prosecution|Venue]]
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'''[[Forensic_Evidence|Forensic Science]]'''<br>[[Ballistics|Ballistics]], [[Bitemarks|Bitemarks]], [[Bloodstain_Pattern_Analysis|Bloodstains]], [[DNA|DNA]], [[Eyewitness_Identification|Eyewitness ID]],  [[Fingerprints|Fingerprints]], [[Handwriting_Identification|Handwriting ID]], [[Polygraphs|Polygraphs]],  [[Shaken_Baby_Syndrome|Shaken Baby]]
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<td>
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'''[[Evidence_Code|Evidence Code]]'''<br> [[Evidence_Code#Procedure|Procedure]], [[Evidence_Code#Relevance|Relevance]],  [[Evidence_Code#Privileges|Privileges]], [[Evidence_Code#Examining_Lay_Witnesses|Lay Witnesses]], [[Evidence_Code#Examining_Expert_Witnesses|Experts]], [[Evidence_Code#Hearsay|Hearsay]], [[Evidence_Code#Physical_Evidence|Physical Evidence]]
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[[File:Passport.jpg|x70px|link=Immigration|center|border]]
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[[File:Police-line.jpg|x70px|link=Crimes|center|border]]
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[[File:Interrogate2.jpg|x60px|link=Self-Incrimination|center|border]]
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'''[[Immigration|Immigration]]'''<br>[[Padilla|Padilla]], [[Aggravated_Felonies|Agg Felonies]],  [[Inadmissibility|Inadmissibility]], [[Removability|Removability]], [[Moral_Turpitude|Moral Turpitude]],  [[Naturalization|Naturalization]], [[Juvenile_Defendants|Juveniles]], [[U-Visas|U-Visas]]
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</td>
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'''[[Crimes|Crimes]]'''<br>[[Crimes#Measure_11_Crimes|Measure 11]], [[Crimes#Drug_Crimes|Drugs]], [[Crimes#Sex_Crimes|Sex Crimes]], [[Crimes#Homicide|Homicide]], [[Crimes#Property_Crimes|Property]], [[DUII|DUII]], [[Crimes#Child_Abuse_Crimes|Child Abuse]], [[Crimes|Other Crimes]]
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</td>
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'''[[Self-Incrimination|Self Incrimination]]'''<br>[[Evidentiary_Burdens|Evidentiary Burdens]], [[State_Compulsion|State Compulsion]], [[Custody/Compelling_Circumstances|Custody/Compelling Circumstances]], [[Right_to_Silence|Right to Silence]],  [[Impeachment|Impeachment]]
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</td>
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[[File:Brain3.jpg|x70px|link=Mental_States|center|border]]
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[[File:Defense.jpg|x70px|link=Defenses|center|border]]
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[[File:Constitution.jpg|x70px|link=Oregon_Constitution|center|border]]
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'''[[Mental_States|Mental States]]'''<br>[[Civil_Commitments|Civil Commitments]], [[Fitness_to_Proceed|Aid & Assist]], [[Utilizing_a_GEI_Defense|GEI]], [[Disordered_Mental_State_Strategy|Disordered Mental State]], [[Mental_States#Mental_States_Required_for_Conviction|Mens Rea]], [[Testing|Testing]], [[DSM|DSM-IV]]
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'''[[Defenses|Defenses]]'''<br>[[Alibi|Alibi]], [[Choice_of_Evils_and_Necessity|Necessity]], [[Speedy_Trial|Speedy Trial]], [[Self_Defense|Self Defense]]
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'''[[Oregon_Constitution|Oregon Constitution]]'''<br>[[Speedy_Trial|Speedy Trial]], [[Right_to_Counsel|Right to Counsel]], [[Confrontation/Cross_Examination|Confrontation]], [[Oregon_Constitution#Section_12:_Double_jeopardy.3B_compulsory_self-incrimination|Double Jeopardy]], [[Oregon_Constitution#Section_20:_Privileges_and_Immunities_of_Citizens|Equal Privileges]], [[Ex_Post_Facto|Ex Post Facto]], [[Oregon_Constitution#Section_11:_Rights_of_Accused_in_Criminal_Prosecution|Venue]]
 
|'''[[Trial_Procedure|Trial Procedure]]'''<br>[[Trial_Procedure#Charging_Decision|Charging Decision]], [[Trial_Procedure#Discovery|Discovery]], [[Trial_Procedure#Right_to_Counsel|Right to Counsel]], [[Trial_Procedure#Pre-Trial_Motions|Pretrial Motions]]
 
|'''[[Trial_Procedure|Trial Procedure]]'''<br>[[Trial_Procedure#Charging_Decision|Charging Decision]], [[Trial_Procedure#Discovery|Discovery]], [[Trial_Procedure#Right_to_Counsel|Right to Counsel]], [[Trial_Procedure#Pre-Trial_Motions|Pretrial Motions]]
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</td>
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</tr>
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[[File:Extradition.jpeg|x70px|link=Extradition|center|border]]
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[[File:Support_our_veterans.jpg|x70px|link=Veterans_and_Military_Service|center|border]]
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[[File:Prison3.jpg|x70px|link=Sentencing|center|border]]
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'''[[Extradition|Extradition]]'''<br>
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'''[[Veterans_and_Military_Service|Veterans and Military Service]]'''<br>Created by Jess Barton.
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</td>
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'''[[Sentencing|Sentencing]]'''<br>[[Sentencing#Same_Criminal_Episode|Criminal Episodes]],[[Sentencing#Merger|Merger]], [[Consecutive_Sentences|Consecutive Sentences]], [[Sentencing#Mandatory_Minimum_Laws|Mandatory Minimums]], [[Sentencing#Probation|Probation]], [[Sentencing#Restitution|Restitution]], [[Sentencing#Collateral_Consequences|Collateral Consequences]]
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</table>
  
File:Extradition.jpeg|'''[[Extradition|Extradition]]'''<br>
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</td></tr>
 
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</table>
File:Support_our_veterans.jpg|'''[[Veterans_and_Military_Service|Veterans and Military Service]]'''<br>Created by Jess Barton.
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File:Prison.jpg| '''[[Sentencing|Sentencing]]'''<br>[[Sentencing#Same_Criminal_Episode|Criminal Episodes]],[[Sentencing#Merger|Merger]], [[Consecutive_Sentences|Consecutive Sentences]], [[Sentencing#Mandatory_Minimum_Laws|Mandatory Minimums]], [[Sentencing#Probation|Probation]], [[Sentencing#Restitution|Restitution]], [[Sentencing#Collateral_Consequences|Collateral Consequences]]
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</gallery>
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|-
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| '''[[Dependency_category|Dependency]]'''<br>Under Construction
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| '''[[Investigation|Investigation]]'''<br> Under Construction
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| '''[[Appeals,_PCR_%26_Habeas|Appeals/PCR/Habeas]]'''<br> Under Construction.
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| '''[[Delinquency]]'''<br> Not Yet Created
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|- 
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|}
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<h2>'''The Pool'''</h2>
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This spot will be the entry point to the OCDLA online forum, the next generation of The Pond
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[[File:Fish.jpg|thumb|center]]
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<td valign="top" rowspan=2 style="background-color: #FEFDF9; border: 4px solid #16759A;">
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<h2>'''You, yes YOU can Edit This Website'''</h2>  
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The OCDLA Library of Defense is a digital manual for criminal defense built by the collective contributions of OCDLA members. Ultimately, it will contain every law, every case, every expert, every resource and every good idea an Oregon defense attorney might need.  But only if you help us out. If you visit a page on this website that is missing a case or has a typo, please [[How_To_Edit|edit the page]]. You can even reorganize or rewrite the page if you're feeling ambitious. If you have any questions or suggestions, please email '''Alex Bassos at abassos@gmail.com'''
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<h2>'''Recent [[The_Blog|Blog]] Posts'''</h2>
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* [https://libraryofdefense.org/content/ninth-circuit-thinks-da-should-just-give-you-file-already The 9th Circuit Thinks The DA Should Just Give You the File Already] | Rankin Johnson IV
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* [https://libraryofdefense.org/content/why-you-should-be-filing-more-demurrers Why You Should Fie More Demurrers] | Brook Reinhard
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* [https://libraryofdefense.org/content/criminal-defense-news-week-24 News of the Week] | Stacy DuClos
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* [https://libraryofdefense.org/content/reporting-ocdla-search-and-seizure-conference Reporting From the OCDLA Search and Seizure Conf] | Erick and Stephanie
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<h2>'''This Week's Cases'''</h2>
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[[File:Banksy-graffiti-street-art-maidinlondon.jpg|thumb|right]]
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'''Mens Rea Jury Instruction Must be Statute Specific'''
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The state must prove mens rea with regard to the specific elements of the substantive criminal statute. Here, defendant was charged with second-degree criminal mischief requiring “damages.” Damages are a result not a circumstance Thus, a jury instruction defining reckless as awareness and conscious disregard of “a risk that a result will occur or that a circumstance exists” was reversible error. State v. Davis, __ Or App __ (2012).
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'''Officer’s Decision to Impound Vehicle, And Thus Conduct Inventory, May Be Discretionary'''
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An officer’s decision to impound a vehicle may involve the exercise of discretion, even though that discretion will determine whether an inventory of the vehicle occurs. The Portland Police Bureau towing policy mandates towing and inventorying a vehicle when citing a driver for driving uninsured, but not when citing for failure to carry proof of insurance. An officer may constitutionally choose which citation to issue. State v. Penney, __ Or App __ (2012).
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'''First Degree Criminal Misconduct Not Applicable to Affirmative Conduct'''
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"Withholding necessary and adequate…physical care" under ORS 163.205(1)(a) does not apply to affirmative conduct or a failure to stop engaging in that affirmative conduct. Here, defendant’s act of placing her hand over the victim's mouth leading to victim’s death did not constitute first-degree criminal mistreatment. State v. Kaylor, ­__Or App__ (2012).
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'''Theft by Receiving – Defendant “Knows” Property Was Subject of Theft Where He Knew the Victim Disputed His Right to Possess the Items'''
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“[I]n order to be found guilty of theft by receiving, defendant must have known or believed that the articles of personal property at issue were the subject of theft.” Here, the victim was in the hospital and asked defendant to sell his property and give the money to victim’s wife.  Instead, the defendant retained the property to settle a debt that the defendant felt victim owed to him.  A year later, the victim tried to recoup the property, and the police contacted defendant.  The court holds that a rational trier of fact could have found that the defendant knew the property he retained was the subject of theft. State v. Smith, __ Or App __ (Oct 2012).
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'''Relevancy of “Delayed Reporting” Testimony in Sexual Abuse Cases'''
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Expert testimony regarding “delayed reporting” in a child sexual abuse case may be relevant even when defendant does not intend to impeach the complainant’s credibility based on that delay. Here, testimony on delayed reporting was relevant to explain the five-year reporting delay and to counter any inference that the delay was indicative of fabrication. State v. White, __ Or App __ (2012).
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Latest revision as of 08:57, August 5, 2023

Blog


Don't Ask for Jury Instructions You Don't Want

by: Ryan Scott • July 16, 2024 • no comments

This is a small bit of advice that won't matter most of the time, but every now and then it might.

There are jury instructions given in every case. If you don't specifically want them, don't ask for them.

For example, in a kidnapping case, why ask for the standard instructions? Oh sure, you may want to modify those instructions. You may want to add additional instructions. But why ask for the standard ones? The state will ask for them. If you don't object, the judge will give them.

Why does it matter? Because let's say by the time your case is briefed, the appellate courts have ruled that the standard instruction is wrong. You didn't preserve the argument, which happens. Maybe it was a genuinely unexpected change, which somebody else preserved but didn't tell anyone else about. The appellate attorney in your case nevertheless briefs the issue as plain error. There's no dispute it's error. There's no dispute it's harmful. So your client wins, right? Not if you invited error. And how would you have invited error? You specifically asked for the erroneous instruction.

Would the COA agree that it was invited error? I don't know. But you could avoid that by not asking for the state's instructions. And if nothing else, it's less work.

Can sentencing arguments that don't win still impact the overall sentence?

by: Ryan Scott • July 14, 2024 • no comments

Judges really don't like being reversed. I base this on the fact that judges who were rarely reversed and who I thought wouldn't have cared about the occasional, inevitable reversal will still complain about it when it does happen.

Consequently, I believe it's always a good thing at any sentencing to have the judge take into account the possibility that even if I'm wrong about the law, there's a chance the COA will think I'm right.

What am I talking about? Let me provide a couple of examples. If you've read many of my blog posts, or read me on the defense lawyer listserve, you know that I believe that when the gun minimum is charged on multiple counts, it must be imposed on the primary offense and only the primary offense. For example, if the defendant is charged with murder with a firearm and felon in possession of a firearm with a firearm, the gun minimum of five years must be imposed on the murder charge (assumingf it's the first gun minimum that defendant has ever faced -- if it's the second gun minimum, it gets a little complicated, in some ways good for the defendant, in other ways bad.) (Why does it matter if it's imposed on the murder charge or, say, the felon in possession? Because if imposed on the felon in possession, the judge has the ability to impose a longer sentence than if it's imposed on the murder charge.)

I have argued this at the trial level, and no judge has expressly said I'm right about the law, but some of them haven't said I was wrong either. The judge simply chose to impose the gun minimum on the most serious count, simply because they wanted to (or so they said) and not because I told them they legally had to. From a judge's point of view, this had the advantage of avoiding the possibility of reversible error. At the same time, it didn't bind them to a legal outcome they would have to follow in future cases.

I personally think in some of the cases at least, the judge was motivated in part to avoid reversible error. Maybe not. There's no way to know for certain. (Incidentally, this issue has been preserved in a number of cases by a number of great attorneys, so we should have a definitive answer within two years.)

I want to give another example of a legal argument that didn't win, yet maybe influenced the outcome of a sentencing. I had a client back for re-sentencing. He was already servicing a life/25 sentence for murder, but that case wasn't back for re-sentencing. It was a separate case in which he got twenty years to be served consecutively to the murder charge that was back for re-sentencing.

As it turned out, the client had done great in prison. Truly impressive stuff. I used that information to argue why she shouldn't run twenty years consecutively to the murder sentence. But I also argued at re-sentencing that any sentence run consecutively to a murder charge was subject to the proportionality analysis under Article I, section 16, of the Oregon Constitution. Specifically, I noted that my client wouldn't serve any of the consecutive sentence unless the parole board had found his rehabilitation was imminent. (And they would likely make that finding, given how well he had done in the past ten years, but who knows.) If Article I, section 16, requires that courts take into account the personal characteristics of the defendant when determining the constitutionality of the long sentence, the fact that rehabilitation is imminent certainly should impact whether the additional twenty years was proportionate.

On the law, the judge disagreed. But she only ran eight years consecutively to the life/25 he was already serving, a substantial reduction to what she had imposed the first time around. Was it due entirely to my client's remarkable accomplishments while in prison? Or did she worry that an additional twenty-year sentence might trigger the proportionality analysis and have the case sent back for a third sentencing? Or was it simply that she recognized the absurdity -- even if it were constitutional -- of adding another twenty years to be served -- and only served -- after the defendant was rehabilitated?

That last question is key. Even if I'm wrong about the application of Article I, section 16, in that situation, there is something totally absurd about a lengthy sentence that's only served after rehabiliation. Even my pro-prosecution, non-lawyer family members think that's crazy.

Again, there is no way of knowing why the judge reduced the sentence or if she would have reduced it to the same degree minus the proportionality argument. That's sorta my point. Judges may reject legal arguments but still be swayed, by either the logic of the legal argument or the risk of reversal, to end up at the same place.

And if the legal arguments don't seem to make a difference at all at sentencing, then at least your client has a shot at re-sentencing, which, per my first post today, can also lead to a much better outcome down the road.

Resentencing Observations

by: Ryan Scott • July 14, 2024 • no comments

This is the first of two blog posts I want to write today regarding sentencing.

I've handled my share of re-sentencings, sometimes after I handled the original sentencing, sometimes when I hadn't. The observation I most want to make is that judges often won't impose the same sentence even when they could.

That hasn't always been true in my cases but it's been more true than not. The reasons vary. One is that the defendant has done very well in prison and there is a record of it. Other times it is because the defendant is able to express remorse that they weren't able to right after the trial. At least one time I think it was merely because enough time had passed that the judge had forgotten about the trial that had originally inspired enough feeling that she hammered the defendant originally out of anger or at least pique. Without that emotion behind it, the sentence came back down to earth.

It's impossible to know how much of a role I played, but I did a lot of work in all of those cases. I never treated a re-sentencing as pro forma, except when there really was only one sentence the court could impose at re-sentencing. But more likely, re-sentencings that went well probably did so because of the defendant and things they had done since the original sentencing.

My second observation is this. It wasn't always predictable which clients would do well in prison. I was often surprised by the clients who did truly wonderful and impressive things while incarcerated.

Have these observations changed my practice in any way? Not that I've noticed, but it has reaffirmed my belief in the importance of making as many legal arguments at sentencing as possible, even if the benefit of winning isn't always obvious. So, for example, I'll argue for merger of UUW and Murder with a Firearm. In such cases where merger is appropriate, the merger won't reduce the overall sentence because separate sentences would run concurrently. But by making the argument, either (1) the trial judge will agree and my client will have one fewer convictions, which is always better than more convictions, or (2) the judge will disagree and if the COA says I'm right, my client will have a shot at a re-sentencing that might reduce his sentence. (In theory, any re-sentencing might have no chance at reducing the original sentence, if the judge ran all counts concurrently to the mandatory murder sentence, but in my experience, most judges are constitutionally incapable of not tacking on an additional sentence to run consecutively to even a life/25 sentence. There must be some additional cost for going to trial.)

I think there are lawyers who are hesitant to make legal arguments at sentencing, murder sentencings in particular. They want the focus to be on a just and fair sentence, and arguing about the statutes will distract from their argument why life/25 is more than sufficient to satisfy the ends of justice. I think this attitude constitutes gross malpractice, and fortunately I think it's relatively rare.




Next 20 Articles

Case Reviews


Oregon Supreme Court, July 11th, 2024

by: Rankin Johnson

KIDNAPPING - Asportation

→ read the full summaries...

Oregon Court of Appeals, July 10th, 2024

by: Rankin Johnson

INFERENCES -

SEARCH AND SEIZURE - Inventory

MENTAL HEALTH DEFENSES - GEI

SEX OFFENDER REGISTRATION - Classification

→ read the full summaries...

Oregon Supreme Court, July 5th, 2024

by: Rankin Johnson

EVIDENCE - Other bad acts

→ read the full summaries...

Oregon Court of Appeals, July 3rd, 2024

by: Rankin Johnson

SENTENCING - Restitution

SENTENCING - Double-counting departure factors

→ read the full summaries...

Oregon Court of Appeals, June 26th, 2024

by: Rankin Johnson

DEFENDANT'S STATEMENTS - Compelling circumstances

SEARCH AND SEIZURE - License plate covers

SENTENCING - Consecutive sentences

CHARGING DOCUMENTS - Sufficiency

DEFENDANT'S TESTIMONY - Impeachment

SEX OFFENDER REGISTRATION -

→ read the full summaries...

Oregon Court of Appeals, June 20th, 2024

by: Rankin Johnson

CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE OFFENSES - Frequenting

→ read the full summaries...

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