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| A judge and defense atty. can use hypotheticals to get an idea what a defendant will get if he pleads guilty, without compromising the judge's impartiality.
For example, the def. atty. might ask, "what do you usually give for a plain vanilla fel. D.W.I., where there was no accident or resistence, and the def. gave a breath test and he blew a .12?"
The judge could safely reply, "I usually give a $1,500 fine, 10 years probated for 7, 400 hrs. of CSR, the usual DWI probation condition, 15 days in jail, and SAF-P."
In a criminal justice system which gives defendant's the right to a jury trial, plea bargaining is absolutely necessary or the system will collapse. If a prosecutor shirks his responsibility and won't make reasonable offers, then I think judges have every right to try to encourage pleas to the court by giving the def. an idea what he can expect if he pleads guilty. |
| Posts: 687 | Location: Beeville, Texas, U.S.A. | Registered: March 22, 2001 |
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| Strongly opposed or not, Professor Dix says "post-agreement participation by the trial court seems an inevitable consequence of the requirement that the agreement must be . . . approved by the trial court." sec.34.106, Texas Criminal Practice and Procedure, 43 Tex.Prac.Series at 400. He adds: "otherwise the parties must guess as to the objection the court has to the agreement and attempt to renegotiate an agreement that conforms to their best guess or else try the case without really knowing a trial was necessary." Judicial participation to this extent may still be as distasteful as hell, but it seems to make sense to me. Any other participation is a violation of judicial ethics canons and illegal according to the CCA. McDonald , 662 S.W.2d at 7. My big question remains, why give the judges the responsibility to scrutinize the plea agreement and reject it if the court finds it unfair or improvident from the public's or defendant's standpoint? They only truly do this on occasion and even then are ill-equipped. |
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| When the bargain is "busted" the defendant takes it to be an indication he must agree to a harsher punishment in order to avoid a trial. The practice may be unfair to the defendant, but the State generally benefits from it (unless you think the State benefits more from a full-blown trial). If the court should bargain down (rare in my experience), then I guess I'd be incensed. Bargaining in the dark in round two may work well enough, but when both parties have expressed an interest in settling, why not get the deal struck as quickly and easily as possible. If I pass thru Georgetown am I going to be arrested for disorderly conduct? (Remember Dix said it, not me). |
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| Even experienced judges are tempted to engage in judicial bargaining. The most extreme example ever reviewed by the Fourth Circuit is found in United States v. Bradley, Jones, and Bennett, Nos. 02-4390, 02-4393, 02-4402 (07-25-06).
Some interesting passages from the opinion:
"Even if, as the Government claims, it could have presented uncontroverted evidence of the Defendants' guilt if the trial had proceeded to verdict, we cannot refuse to notice the repeated judicial intervention in the plea negotiations. The fact is, the jury rendered no verdict in this case; there has been no 'fair and reliable determination' of the Defendants' guilt."
"[t]he unequal positions of the judge and the accused, one with the power to commit to prison and the other deeply concerned to avoid prison, at once raise a question of fundamental fairness. When a judge becomes a participant in plea bargaining he brings to bear the full force and majesty of his office. His awesome power to impose a substantially longer or even maximum sentence in excess of that proposed is present whether referred to or not." |
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| I know professor Dix is an acknowledged academic authority on criminal law, but has the man ever practiced criminal law in a significant and meaningful way? By that, I mean, not signing on as a lawyer to a dream team representing some defendant, but has he actually carried on the practice of law as a defense attorney or prosecutor for any length of time in his career? Has he ever actually tried a case? Or cases?
Just curious.
I mean, I could read about catfish noodling for all my life, read books associated with the subject, watch TV shows about it, talk to folks who had done it, and even watch folks doing it. But unless I have actually experienced something in a meaningful way on more than one occasion, I would hardly be considered an acknowledged authority on it. |
| Posts: 2578 | Location: The Great State of Texas | Registered: December 26, 2001 |
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