Thứ Ba, 30 tháng 10, 2012

Is Your Lawyer Making You a Participant or a Spectator in Your Case?

This is a Poster from a Local Medical Center

As the poster above illustrates, we are living in a day and age where people must ensure that their health providers (and legal providers) are doing what needs to be done.

The Medical "Speak Up" campaign highlights:

1. Ask Questions (know what's going on)
2. Pay Attention (be focused on what the doctors are doing, giving, and saying)
3. Educate Yourself (concerning diagnosis (what's wrong), tests, and your treatment)
4. Ask others You Trust to Speak Up for YOU
5. Know what your taking and why you are taking them
6. PARTICIPATE 

What is Representation?     A Representation = A Relationship

Years ago we lived in an age where people brought their problems to a professional (doctor, lawyer, CPA, financial advisor, etc.) and just let them handle it. "It" being their legal, financial, or health problem or situation. This person would just tell you what to do, where to go, what to say, and what to sign. There was little to no discussion or communication. The doctor said take this, the lawyer said do that, and so it went on and on. The basis of most of these relationships (representations) was authority to underling. This unbalanced relationship pitted the wise knower to unwise ignorant (lack of knowledge, not stupidity).

MY Holistic View or Viewpoint

I tell my clients as I told my patients (when I practiced Chiropractic) that you are not a mushroom who should sit in the dark, YOU are going to be involved in your case (and in your care) so that YOU are empowered, understand your options, and make choices (decisions) with intelligence. 


Being The Participant vs. Being the Spectator

These days we live in the age of information, the age of knowledge. It is abundant, it is accessible, and it is free. In my opinion, it is there (the internet, the library) so that people should no longer live in the proverbial darkness. We can look up people, diseases, crimes, processes, procedures, methods, philosophies, etc. It is wonderful to get answers to our questions, and even better I believe to have better questions to ask.

The dangers with too much information I see are twofold:

(1) lack of proper context (placement and perspective) for the information you gather,
(2) misinformation (too many sites, blogs, and articles written without credentials or experience)

A good advisor (navigator) will lay out the field (show you where the land mines (pitfalls) are) and help you make the best decisions about everything.

Remember that the basis of any accepted Court Plea (decision) must be threefold:

1. Voluntary (not forced or coerced)
2. Intelligent (understanding the options and it's relation to YOU specifically)
3. Knowing (the 360 degree perspective, the past, the present, and the future)

I say, You Should Speak Up to all Your Providers, of any professional service, especially legal ones.


Larry Newman, D.C., J.D.
"counsel for flowers not mushrooms"

Doctor of Chiropractic
Attorney at Law (Juris Doctor)

504 North Aurora Street
Ithaca, NY 14850

607-229-5184
newman.lawrence@gmail.com

http://www.ithacadwi.com

MY Coup D'etat: How I got Certified on the Draeger Alcotest Breath Testing Instrument


Lake Cayuga sits at the Base of Ithaca, NY

I live within Blocks of this? Amazing!

This is NOT New Jersey!

Life has a great many twists and turns. I practiced law in New Jersey (and Pennsylvania) long before I practiced in New York. I lived in N.J., worked in the NJ prosecutor's office, married a girl from NJ, and enjoyed my time there BUT I'm a New Yorker at heart. I was born and raised in the streets of Brooklyn. You can take me from those streets but they are within me everyday.

Funny how I used to make fun of people who lived in the sticks (as my dad used to quip) but I love upstate New York, and in my more mature years (chronologically not mentally or emotionally) I have grown to enjoy the wide expanses of trees, hills, and farmland.

How did I get to the New Jersey Draeger Alcotest Certification?

1. I belong to the NCDD (National College of DUI Defense) and participate in their listserve with thousands of lawyers around the country who focus their practices on DUI/DWI/OUI defense.

2. I look for seminars, conferences, and programs that can improve my ability to defend DWI cases. I have been to many courses that teach breath testing, blood testing, and police field sobriety training.

3. My Coup D'etat!

I found out that the New Jersey Supreme Court has mandated that the Draeger company (which manufactures the Alcotest 7710 and 9510) has to provide assess to the defense bar (criminal defense lawyers) once per year the same test training and certification as it provides to the New Jersey law enforcement breath test instructors (called the coordinators). This is since 2006, so I am one of about 115 (120 took the course since 2006 but some are repeaters) certified by Draeger on the Alcotest.

The course I took was limited to 20 participants. Many of them were experts who testify in Courts on the Draeger instrument, breath testing, and blood testing. There were some Phd. pharmacologists from Ohio, a few expert certified State Troopers, and a bunch of us defense lawyers. I was the only DWI defense lawyer from New York State.

I was trained and certified on the Draeger Alcotest (the only unit used in New Jersey) in the software, the analytical system, components and peripherals, as well as how to operate the instrument and perform a specific breath test sequence.

Me and the VP of Draeger, Hansueli Ryser

A lot harder to blow into than I imagined


All pictures taken with my new SONY Cybershot DSC- RX100
Absolutely a fabulous camera (recommended by David Pogue, New York Times tech genius)

Dr. Lawrence (Larry) Newman
Doctor of Chiropractic
Attorney and Counselor at Law

504 North Aurora Street
Ithaca, NY 14850

607-229-5184
newman.lawrence@gmail.cm

http://www.ithacadwi.com

New York State Police Use the Draeger Alcotest for DWI Arrests: Potential Defense Issues

2012 Certification on the Draeger

DOWNSTATE DWI TESTING

New York State uses a variety of breath alcohol testing devices to prove DWI (Driving While Intoxicated) crimes. In the Boroughs, and downstate (Queens, Manhattan, Brooklyn, the Bronx, Staten Island, Long Island) they utilize the Intoxilyzer 8000.

UPSTATE DWI TESTING
Law enforcement in Upstate New York Towns, Villages, and Cities use the Datamaster DMT. The state police love the Draeger Alcotest, which comes in two models the 7110 and 9510. By far the Draeger is the state of the art unit. It has dual sensor technology (two forms of testing) consisting of an electrochemical (fuel cell) system and an Infrared System.

What's in a name?Is it an Instrument, a Device, or a Machine?

The police, the prosecutors, and the manufacturers love to call them "instruments" but many of us in the defense community just loosely refer to them as "machines." At the certification class I just attended the instrument creator, and vice president of Draeger, Hansueli Ryser (I kept thinking Hans Solo from Star Wars) got upset that I referred to it as a machine, he said "Larry it's an instrument not a machine." I can understand the sensitivity, afterall I would not want my instrument which measures blood alcohol concentration to an accurate degree referred to as a mere machine just as the late Steve Jobs would not want his iphone referred to as a phone. 
Evidential Breath Testing BUT does it Equal "Valid" and "Accurate" Evidence 

They are technically and more importantly legally recognized as evidential breath alcohol testing units. The evidential means that they have been approved, certified, and most importantly recognized to yield results that can be used in Court as "evidence" and as "proof" of the BAC (blood alcohol concentration) at the time (or there abouts) of testing.

This proof can be used against you to prove you were Driving While Intoxicated or Driving While Impaired in New York State. The list of approved devices is huge. These are just the best of the lot and the ones used in New York State. 

The Issues with Breath Testing

As great as these units are they have their limitations and issues. Just like any computer or microprocessor based system, garbage in yields garbage out. 

1. Must have a Good Sample of Breath.

One of the most important aspects of breath testing is gathering a sufficient, clean, and accurate sample of breath. There is a mandatory period of uninterrupted and continuous observation of the person before blowing into the unit. This is a big point of contention (defense) in many states with breath testing. Police observation in the back of police car (cruiser) prior to testing does not count. Leaving the subject in the room unattended does not count. Turning around to do paperwork does not count. 

Uninterrupted means uninterrupted.
Continuous means continuous.
In New York State it is a 20 minute period of time for this observation and not one minute less.

2. Biological Variables Person to Person

The units are set for the average person with an average basal (body) temperature with an average breath. Even the best of units will have a range of error just based upon this. They say the average person is Chinese, a female, and dead so averages can be deceiving and wrong.

3. The BIG Assumption

The biggest assumption with evidential breath testing is that the subject is done metabolizing alcohol. In other words you (and your body) are beyond the absorption phase. Your body has completely absorbed all the alcohol consumed and NOW you are completely in the elimination phase of alcohol. Why is this fact so important? Because prior to complete elimination your body will have varying concentrations of alcohol between the breath, the blood, the lungs, and cardiovascular system.

All of this is based upon Henry's Law which basically states that in a closed system of liquid and gas eventually the concentration of the molecules of a substance in the liquid will be equal to the concentration of the molecules of the substance in the gas above it. In the realms of breath alcohol testing we have BREATH (the gas) and BLOOD (the liquid).

From thescubastop.com

For illustration, #1 is one to one ratio (balanced), then #2 we have increased alcohol concentration in the lung (breath) tissues during the alcohol absorption phase, then #3 balanced alcohol in lung (breath) and blood in elimination (expiration) phase.

So in the absorption phase (#2) we have an unequal concentration of alcohol in gas (breath) and alcohol in blood (blood alcohol concentration). In fact in the absorption phase (#2) we have a higher BAC in the breath (cardiovascular/lungs/heart) area of the body and a lower BAC in the blood system.

So no matter how good a machine/instrument/unit/device we have these areas of contention. The human variables are always present without even getting into the problems with an accurate measurement.

Dr. Lawrence Newman
Doctor of Chiropractic
Attorney and Counselor at Law

504 North Aurora Street
Ithaca, NY 14850

  





Chủ Nhật, 28 tháng 10, 2012

NY County Judicial Candidates' Voter Guide: You Have No Choice



2012 Voter Guide
NEW YORK COUNTY
We have been advised of the following judicial candidates for election in your county. Candidates whose names are underlined have opted to participate in this voter guide.
Click on underlined names to see biographical information provided by participating candidates.

LINK

Supreme Court
1st Judicial District

Vote for 4:
Shlomo Hagler
Manuel J. Mendez
George Silver
New York City 
Surrogate's Court

Vote for 1:
Rita Mella

New York City 
Civil Court
(New York County)

Vote for 3:
Anil C. Singh

New York City 
Civil Court
(2nd District)
Vote for 1:
Debra Rose Samuels
New York City 
Civil Court
(3rd District)

Vote for 1:
New York City 
Civil Court
(6th District)

Vote for 2:
Arthur F. Engoron
Shawn T. Kelly
New York City 
Civil Court
(8th District)

Vote for 1:
Jeanette Rodriguez-Morick

Please note:
Candidates are solely responsible for the content and accuracy of their information.

Candidates whose names are not underlined have opted not to participate in this voter guide.

Applicable voting rules will determine which registered voters in your county may be eligible to vote for candidates to courts of limited jurisdiction (e.g., City Courts, District Courts, or New York City Civil Courts).

From Betsy Combier:

Also make note that NYSUT Attorney Shawn Kelly is now a judge!!!

Kelley has been responsible for falling in line behind Mayor Bloomberg in destroying the careers of excellent, caring teachers. When Chris Asch went to him to ask for his help in responding to the Appeal of the New York Law Department (they want to overturn the thorough and fair decision of Judge Manuel Mendez to vacate Arbitrator David Hyland's penalty of Chris' 6 month's suspension) he told Chris that Mendez's decision was terrible, and fellow NYSUT Attorney Aileen Naughton did an awful job at the 3020-a, but as Adam Ross, Claude Hersh, and Mike Mulgrew asked him to do the Response papers, he would do it.

I suggested that Chris ask NYSUT to help him, and felt very sorry for doing that when Chris called me immediately after he left Shawn's office. Chris hired Fred Aaron and me to help him instead. 

Just watch for bias and prejudice if you are a teacher and you end up before Judge Shawn Kelley. 

 



Representing the Accused: A Practical Guide to Criminal Defense

Readers of this blog know that Jill Paperno, the Second Assistant Monroe County Public Defender, is a frequent contributor. Jill’s posts typically provide practical advice to defense attorneys on how to defend a particular type of case (see or see or see)  or  how to deal with a trial or evidentiary issue (see  or see). Jill has recently authored a book, Representing the Accused: A Practical Guide to Criminal Defense (Thomson Reuters Westlaw), which is aimed at providing meaningful guidance to criminal defense attorneys as to how to handle each stage in a criminal case from arrest to final disposition.  It is available as both a book and an e-book at Amazon (see) and directly from the publisher (see).

The book is full of practical advice on topics such as holding the first interview with a client, maintaining files, conducting investigations, and preparing for hearings, trials, negotiations, and pleas. This book, based on Jill’s experience in thousands of cases, provides useful answers to the questions attorneys, particularly inexperienced attorneys, often face, of what needs to be done next and how should it be done. For a dtailed review in the New York State Defender Association's Report, see.


Following the book’s advice will help attorneys provide high quality representation to their clients.

Criminal Law Slanguage of New York, 5th edition

A new edition of a dictionary of New York legal expressions was just released:  Criminal Law Slanguage of New York, 5th edition. Glenn Murray and Gary Muldoon are the coauthors. The book has definitions for federal and state-specific terms, such as Miranda warnings, hate crime, falsus in uno falsus in omnibus, opening the door, choice of evils defense, voice stress analysis, Adam Walsh Act, cryptanalysis, best evidence rule: about 1,500 entries, in all. 

It is available from
Barnes and Nobles (see) and Amazon (see) or directly from the publisher:
Bridge Publishing Group, LLC, 39 Concetta Court, Getzville, NY 14068
800.758.3010    
mail @bridgepg.com
http://www.bridgepg.com


Gary Muldoon is also the author of  the excellent Handling a Criminal Case in New York, 2012-2013 edition (see).


Thứ Sáu, 26 tháng 10, 2012

Bob Kappstatter on Maria Baez' Payback and Bronx Surrogate Court Race

Councilwoman behind Dem Boss downfall slapped with 73G campaign tab

Bob Kappstatter

Defending Burglary Charges

by
Jill Paperno,  Second Assistant Monroe County Public Defender
and Brian Shiffrin

The Monroe County District Attorney usually indicts burglaries using the language that the defendant "entered or remained" unlawfully in the building or dwelling.  Yet in 1989, in People v Gaines (74 NY2d 358 [1989]), a case prosecuted by the Monroe County District Attorney, the Court of Appeals held that entering burglaries are actually quite distinct from remaining burglaries and that one cannot simultaneously engage in both.

An entering burglary is committed when one knowingly enters unlawfully, with the intent to commit a crime inside. A remaining burglary is the type of burglary in which someone may enter when they had license or privilege to do so, but remains past that time unlawfully for the purpose of committing a crime. That doesn't mean staying too long at the party, when the hosts want to go to sleep.  It means, as an example, staying without permission in a store after the store has closed in order to commit a crime. As stated in Gaines, “[i]n order to be guilty of burglary for unlawful remaining, a defendant must have entered legally, but remain for the purpose of committing a crime after authorization to be on the premises terminates. And in order to be guilty of burglary for unlawful entry, a defendant must have had the intent to commit a crime at the time of entry. In either event, contemporaneous  intent is required.”  People v Gaines, 74 NY2d 358, 363 (1989).

In Gaines, the Court held that it was reversible error for the trial court to “have referred to unlawful remaining in its burglary charge, since the situation to which that language applies was not present in the case." Id. at 363. Thus, as the trial attorney did in Gaines,  in cases in which there is no proof of lawful entry, counsel  must request that the jury strike the "or remaining" language from the description if your client's charge and from from both the jury instruction on burglary and, if a lesser of criminal trespass is being charged, from the lesser, too.  Indeed, one wonders how a properly charged grand jury can charge, based on the same conduct,  that the defendant entered illegally to commit a crime and that at the same time he entered lawfully, but remained after his license to be in the building expired, for the purpose of committing a crime.

The Court in Gaines also held that "[m]ost importantly, defendant was entitled to a charge clearly stating that the jury must find that he intended to commit a crime at the time he entered the premises unlawfully.” Id. at 363. Thus, counsel must makes sure that the jury is so instructed.

Since Gaines is the decision in which the Court of Appeals explains what constitutes burglary and what distinguishes burglary from mere commission of trespass and a crime, it is essential that an attorney defending a burglary case read and be familiar with the various parts of the holding in Gaines. (In Gaines the defense was that there was a trespass and a larceny and not a burglary, since the intent to commit larceny was formed after the unlawful entry.)

Another issue that arises in burglaries is the confusing state of the law with respect to what crime is intended at entry or unlawful remaining. The law simply requires that a defendant have the intent to commit any crime inside the building.  Often, defense counsel serve a request for bill of particulars seeking...well...particulars, about the offense, including what crime the defendant allegedly intended to commit.  Prosecutors respond that they don't have to specify.  And strangely, they're right. “(T)o secure a conviction for burglary the State 'need not establish what particular crime the intruder intended to commit’ (cite omitted), nor is it necessary that the intended crime in fact be committed (cite omitted).” People v Mackey, 49 NY2d 274, 279 (1980). (However, the Court of Appeals has also held that if the indictment does specify which crime the defendant intended to commit, the People must prove that crime, not a different one. People v Barnes, 50 NY2d 375, 379, n.3 [1980]).

But if, as is typically the case, a prosecutor does not specify the intended crime, there are problems that arise at the time the jury gets charged.  The jury is instructed that in order to convict they must find proof beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant intended to commit a crime inside the building.  But if the crime is not specified, what exactly is the jury going to think?  How do the jurors know what is merely obnoxious behavior, what is a violation, and what is a crime (which is defined as a felony or misdemeanor in the Penal Law)?

If the prosecutor has not specified, then defense counsel should consider submitting an instruction for the judge to read to the jury.  One that Jill drafted recently, in a case involving a physical confrontation in a dwelling, is set forth below. The prosecutor argued that a problem with this  instruction is that the word crime includes felonies and misdemeanors, but the words “felony” and “misdemeanor” are defined by the potential sentence one can receive. And a jury is not supposed to consider sentencing. But how else can the judge properly define what constitutes a “crime” when none is specified and the jury needs to know that certain conduct does not constitute a crime? Although the judge to whom this proposed charge was submitted did not read the entire instruction, the judge did note that our Penal Law contains three types of offenses - violations, misdemeanors and felonies.  And the judge noted that violations are not crimes.
 
But what if the jury had asked about whether particular conduct was a crime or violation?  Or whether they could hear a list of crimes that might have applied?  There is a serious problem with this statute and the state of the law as it stands now.  Perhaps defense counsel need to start more vigorously objecting to the refusal to specify the underlying charge, pointing out to the court the possible problems with jurors being left to speculate what constitutes the crime that may have occurred when no crime is specified.

Defense counsel also needs to be very familiar with the states of mind - that's right, plural - required for conviction in a burglary case.  Although we often refer to the entry (or remaining) in burglary as being unlawful entry, it's actually knowing unlawful entry (or remaining).  So not only does the prosecutor have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt the entry was unlawful, but also that your client knew at the time it was unlawful.  In the New York Criminal Jury Instructions Charges of General Applicability, there is a charge on what "knowing" means.  Consider requesting it to emphasize the importance of that element.

The other requisite state of mind is intent to commit a crime inside, as discussed above.  So there's an awful lot of stuff about what was on your client's mind at the time of entry or remaining that must be proven.  This is often the basis of a defense.  If you have an argument that there is reasonable doubt on the intent to commit a crime on a burglary in the second degree, you may wish to ask for the lesser included misdemeanor of criminal trespass in the second degree.  But be aware - the lesser of a burglary third is not criminal trespass in the second degree or criminal trespass in the third degree, since those statutes have additional elements, and you might be able to commit the higher offense without committing the lesser.

Another thing to keep in mind is the language of the indictment.  In the case just tried, the indictment specified both the address of the building and the apartment within it. In other words, the entering and knowingly remaining unlawfully charge related to a particular apartment.  The judge read the instructions, initially inadvertently leaving out the apartment number. So the jury could have concluded that upon entry to the building with the intent to commit a crime inside, the burglary had been completed. But in this case, there were intervening circumstances that affected the defendant's state of mind inside. So it was very important that the jury focus on what happened at the threshold to the apartment - not the entrance to the building. The judge quickly corrected the charge once this was pointed out. But it's yet another lesson in why it is so important not to take that well deserved and desperately needed nap during the jury charge.

The charge of burglary in the second degree has two subdivisions. The first relates to knowingly unlawfully entering or remaining in a building with the requisite intent either armed with one of several specified weapons or causing injury.  The second subdivision relates to entry into a building when the building is a dwelling.  Penal Law § 140.00(3) defines a “dwelling”as “a building which is usually occupied by a person lodging therein at night.” What constitutes a dwelling under this provision is an issue that is often litigated in these cases.  Unoccupied dorm rooms during the summer break?  Homes where occupants are vacationing?  Motel rooms?  Hallways of apartments?  Vacant homes?  The following three Court of Appeals cases discussing and deciding what constitutes a dwelling need to be reviewed if the issue of whether a building is a dwelling is going to be raised at trial:  People v Barney, 99 NY2d 367 (2003) (evidence that house defendant entered at night was a “dwelling” was sufficient to support conviction of burglary in the second degree, where house was fully furnished with working utilities, it could have been occupied overnight, and it ordinarily was occupied by resident who had died three days earlier); People v Sheirod, 124 AD2d 14 (4th Dept.1987) (house remained a dwelling even thought the inhabitants had been absent for more than a year];  People v Quattlebaum, 91 NY2d 744 (1998) (school building with an office on the fifth floor containing a bed that was sometimes used for overnight stays was not a dwelling). 

Make sure you investigate your case and do the legal research when handling a case in which the alleged dwelling might not be one. Burglary in the third degree is simply knowing unlawful entry or remaining in a building with the requisite intent.  If one of the issues in your case is whether the building was a dwelling, you might be asking the court to charge burglary third as a lesser included offense. The difference is sentences that can be imposed on burglary in the second degree, a class C violent felony offense, and  those available for burglary in the third degree, a class D non- violent felony offense, is a big one.

Another issue you may encounter in handling burglary cases is whether a partial entry into a building is enough to constitute a burglary, rather than an attempt. 

Finally, in a case decided this week, the Court of Appeals decided that entry for the purpose of engaging in otherwise legal conduct made illegal solely because it is prohibited by an order of protection can be the basis for the intent element.  See,  People v Cajigas, __ NY3d __, 2012 WL 5131395, 2012 NY Slip Op 07049 [10/23/12].  Thus, one fact - the existence of an order of protection - may satisfy the knowing unlawful entry as well as the intent elements.  However, the mere entry into a building  at the time an order of protection is effect cannot be the basis for the intent element. See,  People v Lewis, 5 NY3d 546 (2005) ("Unlawful entry cannot itself be used as the sole predicate crime in the "intent to commit a crime therein" element of burglary. If it could, every violation of a do-not-enter provision of an order of protection would become a burglary the instant defendant knowingly entered upon the banned premises"). In other words, it appears that a burglary charge should not be based solely on the double counting of the order of protection - unlawful entry based on the order, and intent to commit a crime based on a claim that the intent was to violate the order.


REQUEST TO CHARGE – DEFINITION OF CRIME

I have read you my instruction defining burglary in the second degree.  I will now turn to the meaning of the word crime.

 As I have instructed you, in order for you to find the defendant guilty you must conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant unlawfully entered a dwelling and that at the time of such unlawful entry he intended to commit a crime therein.

 Not all conduct which is offensive or annoying constitutes a crime.  Thus, a person may engage in an argument or other behavior that may be offensive, but not necessarily be guilty of committing a crime.

 According to our Penal Law, the word crime is defined as a misdemeanor or felony Penal Law Section 10.00(6).  A misdemeanor is “an offense, other than a ‘traffic infraction,’ for which a sentence to a term of imprisonment in excess of fifteen days may be be imposed.” Penal Law Section 10.00(4)  A felony is “an offense for which a sentence to a term of imprisonment in excess of one year may be imposed.” Penal Law Section 10.00(5)

Our law also recognizes a third level of offenses, not classified as crimes, which are called violations. A violation is “an offense, other than a ‘traffic infraction,’ for which a sentence to a term of imprisonment in excess of fifteen days cannot be imposed.” Penal Law Section 10.00(3)

 Harassment in the Second Degree is a violation.  The definition of harassment in the second degree is as follows:
A person is guilty of harassment in the second degree when, with intent to harass, annoy or alarm another person: (1) He or she strikes, shoves, kicks or otherwise subjects such other person to physical contact, or attempts or threatens to do the same; or (2) He or she follows a person in or about a public place or places; or (3) He or she engages in a course of conduct or repeatedly commits acts which alarm or seriously annoy such other person and which serve no legitimate purpose.” Penal Law section 240.26

Thus, if you conclude that the prosecution has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant entered the apartment unlawfully, and that at the time he entered unlawfully he intended to commit therein a crime as defined by our penal law, you must find him guilty of burglary in the second degree.  If, on the other hand, you conclude that the prosecution has failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant entered the dwelling unlawfully, or that the prosecution has failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that at the time of such entry the defendant intended to commit a crime therein as defined by our Penal Law, you must find the defendant not guilty of Burglary in the Second Degree.

Disclosure: Brian argued Gaines on a brief written by Howard Broder and argued Sheirod on a brief written by Janet Somes.

Thứ Năm, 25 tháng 10, 2012

Cassirer Case Stays the Dispute Between The Getty and Armenian Church over the Zeyt'un Gospel Pages


The Los Angeles County Superior Court has agreed to follow a joint stipulation filed by the Getty Museum and the Western Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America by ordering a suspension of the court case between the parties.

In June 2010 the Armenian Church sued the J. Paul Getty Museum for the return of seven missing pages from an illuminated Bible created in 1256.  The court last year ordered the parties to mediate the dispute. As recently as August 8, the parties told the court that they needed additional time to mediate. The parties earlier informed the court that they were discussing a possible solution to the Zeyt'un Gospel pages controversy, saying that a May 10, 2012 mediation session resulted in "substantial progress . . . toward a potential voluntary resolution of this dispute . . . ."

In their stipulation to stay the proceedings filed on October 19, the litigants both conclude that the case should be placed on hold pending the outcome of Claude Cassirer et al. v. Thyssen-Bornemisza CollectionFoundation.

Before he died, Cassirer filed a lawsuit in 2005 in the United States District Court for the Central District of California for the return of a painting titled “Rue Saint-Honoré, Afternoon, Rain Effect.” Cassirer's attorneys argue that the painting, now in Spain, was taken unlawfully from his grandmother.

The Cassirer case focuses on the same statute of limitations relied on by the Armenian Church in its dispute with The Getty, specifically Cal. Code. Civ. Proc. §338(c). Signed into law in 2010, the statute was primarily designed to allow lawsuits for the recovery of Nazi looted art by extending the time period that stolen art claims could be filed--from a six year statue of limitations to a statute of limitations that begins from the time of the actual discovery of the elements of a claim.  The federal district court struck down this statute in May 2012 because the law unconstitutionally intrudes upon the federal government’s exclusive power to conduct foreign affairs, according to the reasoning of the lower court.  The matter is on appeal in the Ninth Circuit.

Given that "the resolution of that appeal may determinethe outcome of this case," the Armenian Church and The Getty have agreed in writing to suspend their court proceedings so as "to avoid potentially unnecessary litigation efforts and expenses pending the outcome of that appeal."

This post is researched, written, and published on the blog Cultural Heritage Lawyer Rick St. Hilaire at culturalheritagelawyer.blogspot.com. Text copyrighted 2012 by Ricardo A. St. Hilaire, Attorney & Counselor at Law, PLLC. Any unauthorized reproduction or retransmission of this post is prohibited. CONTACT: www.culturalheritagelawyer.com

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