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| When I was in Hood county, we'd have a before trial setting where any defendant that wanted a jury trial could meet with myself, the officer, and the defense attorney should there be one. The officers hated it, but it gave me a chance to meet with the defense attorney prior to the actual jury trial.
If the defendant has an attorney, it usually didn't take long to explain to the lawyer what we had. Often, it was the first time the lawyer would talk to his/her client.
If the defendant didn't have an attorney and found out that they weren't entitled to a court appointed attorney on a citation, often they'd just want the best deal they could get.
As far as non-jury trials: I found the officers appreciated the presence of a prosecutor just to add credibility and rapport between the two offices. I enjoyed the one day a month we'd run traffic court as I'd get to know all the patrol deputies and PD officer's as well as the troopers. It seemed worthwhile to me, but I was and am just an assistant. |
| Posts: 764 | Location: Dallas, Texas | Registered: November 04, 2003 |
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| I'm an elected CA myself, with no assistants. With around 1900 Class A & B cases a year and over 100 juvenile felonies there is precious little time for JP Court. One of my four JP Courts receives about 5,000 of the 6,000 total Class C cases a year because of our location on I-35 south of Dallas-Ft. Worth. He began having pre-trial hearings, without having the officer present, several years ago. At least 95% of those who previously entered a plea of not guilty change their mind. Many just wanted someone to let them have a voice, others didn't understand their options, etc. The number of trials dropped dramatically and has stayed low. Deferred works great for both efficiency and generating funds for the county, but with the changes this last legislative session it is no longer available in the cases where it was most effective. More CDL holders are beginning to ask for trial, and probably will subsequently appeal, as DSC and deferred are prohibited for their moving violations. However, it appears that deferred is still available for them in County Court, as the new legislation did not specifically address it. Anyone else seeing similar increases in trial requests? |
| Posts: 48 | Location: Hill County | Registered: February 12, 2004 |
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| I am an elected CA, no assistants, a JP, CCL, Co Ct, and assorted civil work for the county. Needless to say, my plate, also, is full!
While I cannot say that I enjoy my days in JP court, we do seem to have things worked out relatively efficiently. The docket is for pretrials. Most of the defendants plead out for the original charge, or as suggested, for a "lesser included". We do offer that "deferred adjudufucation" stuff, as well as defensive driving. Some just want us to know how rude the trooper was...... We can normally work through 30 cases in a morning with conferences at the bench.
On the CDLs, I think we can do a deferred on those on appeal, at least until someone closes that loophole. My JP came back from school and indicated that some jurisdictions are allowing a maximum fine for FTA and a dismissal on the speeding. |
| Posts: 736 | Location: Sweetwater TX | Registered: January 30, 2001 |
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| David, I think that's how this thread got started to begin with. |
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