TDCAA Community
Motion to Suppress

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https://tdcaa.infopop.net/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/157098965/m/2733060007

February 19, 2003, 09:12
Gordon LeMaire
Motion to Suppress
A judge hears a pre-trial motion to suppress and denies same.

During trial he sua sponte revives the motion to suppress and grants same. Directed verdict is then granted.

What rule/case law allows him to do this?
February 19, 2003, 12:45
david curl
I think that would be the rule of might makes right. I recall something similar happened when Judge Onion took a similar approach in the Kay Bailey Hutchinson case. Something about she had a privacy interest in the documents of a state agency?

It would be ideal to have a statute that required suppression motions and rulings to take place before trial.
February 19, 2003, 13:27
Martin Peterson
"A supression ruling is not a final judgment. * * * A trial court may reconsider its pretrial suppression order." 11 S.W.3d at 322. Its the pits when it happens, but must have been a close question all along. This is one reason why I think Mercado is unfair. The defendant gets a second opportunity to exclude the evidence. No estoppel and apparently no limitation on raising a new legal theory. Most judges do not change their mind very often, but I guess you can lay behind the log or treat the suppression motion as a trial balloon if you are really gutsy.
February 20, 2003, 10:22
Gordon LeMaire
Thanks Martin, I didn't think it was but, of course, the judge did. And his vote counts more.