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How Should I Start Jury Selection? The Court of Appeals Just Told Me.by: Henry Oostrom-Shah • August 17, 2025 • no comments How should I start jury selection? The Court of Appeals just told me—and maybe you, too. Yes, you heard that right. As a new guy who graduated law school in 2023, I’ve often struggled with breaking the ice during jury selection—and doing so in a way that advances my trial theory. Thankfully, the Court of Appeals (O’Connor, J.) just released an opinion that tells trial lawyers how to pick a jury. Specifically, the opinion in State v. Pugh suggests how we can set up voir dire to ensure the trial judge strikes unfriendly jurors. 341 Or. App. 435, 439–40 (2025). And, if the trial judge denies our for-cause challenges, how we can get the appellate court to reverse a guilty verdict. Pugh reminds us to sprint to bias as soon as we stand up in front of the panel. → continue reading...Primer on Preserving As Applied Challenges to Gun Lawsby: Henry Oostrom-Shah • July 30, 2025 • no comments The State has charged your client with felon in possession of a firearm where their only felonies are old or non-violent crimes. File a pre-trial motion to dismiss. Demand a hearing. At that hearing, show the judge that your client is no longer a danger to others. Call witnesses to talk about how safe and law-abiding your client is. Bring in employment, treatment, and schooling records. Talk about the lack of subsequent violent criminal history. Because your client is no longer a danger, they still have a constitutional right to bear arms. More follows below, including helpful federal and state cases to support your arguments. → continue reading...Does the Lack of a Mental State Render Most Major Sex Crimes Unconstitutional?by: Ryan Scott • July 17, 2025 • no comments The Oregon Supreme Court is going to hear argument in September in the case of State v. Monaco. The conviction was for felony murder. One of the "questions presented and proposed rules of law" identified in the opening brief is as follows:
My question, which is in the larval stage of development, is this: Are any of the constitutional principles on which the Monaco argument relies applicable to major sex crimes where no mental state at all applies to the element that makes a defendant guilty (the age of the victim in a Jessica's Law case) or where no mental state applies but the defendant has the ability to raise an affirmative mental state defense (sex with a sleepy or intoxicated person)? → continue reading...Article I, Section 16, Opportunitiesby: Ryan Scott • June 17, 2025 • no comments Article I, section 16, of the Oregon Constitution states:
The proportionality provision requires a “comparative relationship” between punishments and the offenses for which they are imposed:
State v. Wheeler, 343 Or 652, 655-56, 175 P3d 438 (2007) The test for making proportionality determinations has “at least three factors” to consider, including: “(1) a comparison of the severity of the penalty and the gravity of the crime; (2) a comparison of the penalties imposed for other, related crimes; and (3) the criminal history of the defendant.” State v. Rodriguez/Buck, 347 Or 46, 58, 58 n 6, 217 P3d 659 (2009). Buck/Rodriguez involved Measure 11 crimes, requiring a 75 month mandatory minimum sentence. But the actual behavior was rather minor, and therefore the 75 month sentence was overly severe. In addition, the Oregon Supreme Court has held that characteristics of the defendant plays a significant role in determining if a sentencing is disproportionate. In State v. Ryan, the Court held:
Id. at 620-21. In State v. Gonzalez, the Oregon Supreme Court held that other characteristics other than intellectual disability may be relevant, but rejected the argument that the defendant's mental health attributes rendered a M11 sentence unconstitutional. I think, however, the case law has only scratched the surface of situations where Article I, section 16, would come into play. What follows are some ideas for when the constitutional protections of the proportionality clause might be triggered. → continue reading...Is A Defendant Entitled to a Jury Trial On Restitution?by: Ryan Scott • June 13, 2025 • no comments Today, the OSC issued a press release that announced one case it was granting review on, and a number of cases it was not. Among those cases where the court was not granting review, individual justices either said they would have granted review or, more likely, concurred in the denial of review but felt the issue was worth addressing in a future case. In other words, the individual justices were alerting lawyers -- defense lawyers in particular -- of issues they would like to see raised in future cases. One of those cases was State v. Anne. Justices DeHoog and James both concurred in the denial of review "but observed that the petition raised an important legal issue that the Court should consider in an appropriate case." Do they say what that issue is? Nope, I had to look up the case to find out what the issue was. And let me tell you, it's a doozy. → continue reading...How to Keep Out The Forensic Interviewby: Ryan Scott • May 21, 2025 • no comments For the past couple of years, I have encouraged a variety of arguments for keeping out the forensic interview in child sex cases. Not a lot of appellate success so far. Right now, though, I want to focus on excluding it under OEC 403. I've made the argument a couple of times myself, I've written an appellate brief on the issue, I've read other appellate briefs on the issue, and I've read trial transcripts where the arguments were raised. Here is a step-by-step process for what I think is the best way to maximize your chances of either keeping out the interview or winning on appeal. → continue reading...Failure to Register Argumentby: Ryan Scott • May 20, 2025 • no comments Assume a car is pulled over for a traffic stop on August 1st. It turns out the driver was supposed to register as a sex offender on January 1st, but he had not. When taking him into custody, the police find a baggie of cocaine. He is subsequently charged with both crimes in a single indictment. I previously wrote a blog post -- and a demurrer, available upon request -- arguing that the indictment should be dismissed because the counts are improperly joined. The "failure to register" did not occur during the traffic stop. It occurred seven months earlier. For that reason, the two crimes are not from the same criminal episode. The two crimes are not part of a common scheme or plan. They are not same or similar. Because the improper joinder is plain on the face of the indictment and regardless of any joinder language in the indictment, the proper vehicle is a demurrer, and the proper remedy dismissal. But that's not why I'm writing this post. Rather, this post is based on the news that the Oregon Supreme Court has granted review to a case with the following issues:
The Court of Appeals' opinion is State of Oregon v. Edwardo Luis Ribas, 333 Or App 789, 554 P3d 280 (2024) (A178917) (S071443) (on review from the Linn County Circuit Court) Technically, not the same legal issues as the demurrer described above, but the two are highly interrelated. Are police inventory policies unconstitutional?by: Ryan Scott • May 20, 2025 • no comments The Supreme Court recently took review of a case where the question presented is:
The Court of Appeals opinion the higher court is reviewing is State of Oregon v. Jason Thomas Wilcox, 335 Or App 743, 560 P3d 91 (2024) (A175891) (S071582) (on review from the Washington County Circuit Court) The unlawfulness of UUV license suspensions: back from the deadby: Ryan Scott • May 20, 2025 • no comments The Oregon Supreme Court has decided to review a Court of Appeals decision that held a license-suspension statute applied to convictions for UUV. From the press release:
Three Challenges to Felony Murderby: Ryan Scott • May 18, 2025 • no comments Felony murder occupies an unusual place in the murder firmament. It does not require an intent to kill. Nor does it require the defendant kill the victim. Yet it carries the exact same sentence as any other murder in the 2nd degree (life, with a 25-year mandatory minimum before eligibility for parole). Given that significantly less culpability is built into the offense, it seems to me that every felony murder sentence is vulnerable to a challenge under Article I, section 16. But that's not the point of today's post. Instead I want to discuss three challenges to felony murder. The first applies to every felony murder. The second is limited to those situations where the defendant's only role is as an accomplice to the predicate felony. And the third applies to a very specific theory of felony murder: when a child dies from injuries sustained during an assault in the first or second degree. → continue reading...Next 20 Articles _________________________________ _________________________________ |
Oregon Appellate Court, January 5, 2022by: Rankin Johnson • January 7, 2022 • no comments EVIDENCE - Child-sexual-abuse hearsay exception INTERFERENCE WITH MAKING A REPORT - Sufficiency EVIDENCE - Business-records hearsay exception → read the full summaries...Oregon Appellate Court, December 29, 2021by: Rankin Johnson • December 31, 2021 • no comments ACCUSATORY INSTRUMENTS - Dates → read the full summaries...________________________________________________ |