Biyernes, Setyembre 30, 2011

Lawyer's attorney vows appeal

Motion to dismiss misconduct charges was turned down.

An attorney plans to appeal the denial of a request to dismiss misconduct charges against his client, a Birmingham lawyer who serves as an Oakland University trustee.

A Michigan Attorney Grievance Commission complaint filed earlier this year alleges that Henry Baskin had a sexual relationship with a woman he was representing in a divorce case, and didn't fully disclose to her "the possible effect that the conflict of interest could have on her representation."

On Friday, a three-attorney panel of the Michigan Attorney Discipline Board heard arguments on Baskin's motion for summary disposition.

The panel denied the motion without prejudice, meaning the issues he raised can still be brought up at a later time.

Baskin's attorney, Kenneth Mogill, said he plans to appeal the panel's decision to the full discipline board.

The formal complaint accuses Baskin of engaging in conduct that is contrary to justice, ethics, honesty or good morals; violating the rules of professional conduct adopted by the Supreme Court; and violating the criminal law against adultery. Baskin's answer to the formal complaint is due Nov. 15.

Baskin and the woman's alleged sexual relationship happened from late December 1999 to September 2003, according to the complaint. Mogill cited the "extreme delay" between the alleged acts and the April 2011 filing of the complaint as among the reasons why it should be dismissed.

Mogill has also said that an attorney involved in a bona fide long-term romantic relationship with a client that happens to begin during the course of an attorney-client relationship is not subject to professional discipline.

Robert Edick, deputy administrator of the Michigan Attorney Grievance Commission, said an adulterous relationship with a client in a divorce case is problematic because of the impact it could have on the divorce proceedings themselves. Continued...

Motion to dismiss misconduct charges was turned down.

An attorney plans to appeal the denial of a request to dismiss misconduct charges against his client, a Birmingham lawyer who serves as an Oakland University trustee.

A Michigan Attorney Grievance Commission complaint filed earlier this year alleges that Henry Baskin had a sexual relationship with a woman he was representing in a divorce case, and didn't fully disclose to her "the possible effect that the conflict of interest could have on her representation."

On Friday, a three-attorney panel of the Michigan Attorney Discipline Board heard arguments on Baskin's motion for summary disposition.

The panel denied the motion without prejudice, meaning the issues he raised can still be brought up at a later time.

Baskin's attorney, Kenneth Mogill, said he plans to appeal the panel's decision to the full discipline board.

The formal complaint accuses Baskin of engaging in conduct that is contrary to justice, ethics, honesty or good morals; violating the rules of professional conduct adopted by the Supreme Court; and violating the criminal law against adultery. Baskin's answer to the formal complaint is due Nov. 15.

Baskin and the woman's alleged sexual relationship happened from late December 1999 to September 2003, according to the complaint. Mogill cited the "extreme delay" between the alleged acts and the April 2011 filing of the complaint as among the reasons why it should be dismissed.

Mogill has also said that an attorney involved in a bona fide long-term romantic relationship with a client that happens to begin during the course of an attorney-client relationship is not subject to professional discipline.

Robert Edick, deputy administrator of the Michigan Attorney Grievance Commission, said an adulterous relationship with a client in a divorce case is problematic because of the impact it could have on the divorce proceedings themselves.

It would be a conflict of interest for an attorney to continue representing the client in that situation, he said.

Baskin, a well-known entertainment and family law attorney, is the chairman of Oakland University's Board of Trustees.

Source: http://dailytribune.com/articles/2011/09/25/online/srv0000014087537.txt

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Attorney: UH Football Players Not Guilty - msnbc.com








updated 9/27/2011 11:46:26 PM ET 2011-09-28T03:46:26

KITV.com

Two University of Hawaii football players pleaded not guilty to assault charges following a fight in a Waikiki nightclub.

Senior linebacker Aaron Brown and junior wide receiver Darius Bright were arrested in the early morning hours of Aug. 28, at the Zanzabar Nightclub in the Waikiki Trade Center.

Each was charged with third-degree assault after police said the two struck a 22-year-old man in the face, as the two were being escorted out of the club by security following a fight on the dance floor.

The victim is in the U.S. Army. The blow apparently knocked him to the ground, but according to police reports he refused treatment at the scene.

The 6-foot-1, 225-pound Brown led the Warriors with five sacks and ranked third with 83 tackles last season.

Bright, a 6-foot-4, 230-pound junior, redshirted last year after playing two seasons for City College of San Francisco.

Both starters were suspended for UH's season opener following the incident, but Tuesday morning the two were at football practice while their attorney was in district court for their initial appearance.

Despite his client's physical size, Paul Cunney said his clients may have felt intimidated.

"It happened in a nightclub in close quarters, and I understand there was a number of military there. So it was two against four or five. So I think this is an issue of self-defense, and I think that's what we're going to pursue," said Cunney.

Cunney said his clients realize the severity of the charge against.

Third degree assault is a misdemeanor, punishable by up to one year in jail and a $2,000 fine.

Their next hearing is scheduled for Oct. 18.

Most Popular Stories at KITV

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44694212

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Huwebes, Setyembre 29, 2011

Calif. Attorney General Won't Review Finding in Millionaire's Girlfriend's Mansion Death

The California attorney general denied a wealthy pharmaceutical executive's request to review a finding that his girlfriend killed herself by binding her wrists and ankles and hanging herself naked from a balcony at his historic mansion, according to a letter released Thursday.

The office of Attorney General Kamala Harris said it reviews cases for limited reasons, including allegations of gross misconduct by investigators, a clear conflict of interest or if a local law enforcement agency lacks resources or requests help.

Jonah Shacknai asked for a review of a San Diego County Sheriff's Department finding that his 32-year-old girlfriend Rebecca Zahau killed herself two days after his 6-year-old son suffered a fatal fall at his waterfront mansion in Coronado, a wealthy San Diego suburb.

Shacknai, 54, wrote the attorney general Monday that he had no reason to doubt the finding but that a review might put to rest questions raised by Zahau's family and others. He said Thursday that he accepted Harris' decision.

"If at any time there is new substantive evidence bearing on this case, it should be presented, not in tabloid form to fuel rumor and innuendo, but rather to appropriate law enforcement authorities who may determine whether further investigation is warranted," Shacknai said in a statement.

Sheriff Bill Gore said this week that he understood and supported Shacknai's request and would cooperate if the attorney general launched a review. His office did not immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday.

Zahau's family is seeking an independent investigation. Their attorney, Anne Bremner, said Wednesday that a neighbor heard a woman scream at the home the night before the body was found and that numerous experts have challenged the suicide ruling.

Bremner is also calling attention to an autopsy report revelation that Shacknai's brother, Adam, found Zahau's body with a shirt stuffed in her mouth. The San Diego County coroner's office said it was unclear why the cloth was there but people can put material in their mouths before hanging themselves.

Dane Gillette, chief assistant attorney general, denied the request in a letter to Shacknai that he signed on behalf of Harris. The letter was dated Wednesday.

Additional search warrants unsealed Thursday showed that investigators had seized Rady Children's Hospital surveillance recordings in an attempt to verify that Shacknai was at the hospital -- where his son was being treated -- before Zahau's body was found.

Shacknai is founder and chief executive of Medicis Pharmaceuticals Corp., a company based in Scottsdale, Ariz., that makes acne and facial wrinkle treatments.

Source: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2011/09/22/calif-attorney-general-wont-review-finding-in-millionaires-girlfriends-mansion/

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Attorney general probes Chinese sweetener plant

Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster said Thursday that his office has opened an investigation into the financial collapse�of a Chinese-owned sweetener plant in Moberly.

"Substantial concerns have arisen regarding the entity known as Mamtek International Limited and its proposed construction and operation of a manufacturing facility in Moberly, Missouri," Koster said in a written statement.

He said that his office is collaborating with local authorities and looking into the possibility of criminal charges.

"The Attorney General's Office is assisting Prosecuting Attorney Mike Fusselman and the Randolph County Prosecuting Attorney's Office in reviewing this matter to determine whether any violations of Missouri civil or criminal laws have occurred," Koster said.

Mamtek USA, a division of Mamtek International Ltd.,��has laid off employees hired in Missouri and halted�its work on the plant, which had been heralded by public officials as an example of how foreign Chinese investment could bring new life to a depressed area.

Mamtek, a Hong Kong-based company with both U.S. and Chinese ownership, missed its first $2.2 million payment on city-backed bonds in August, which went public Sept. 1.

The Sweet O plant on the edge of Moberly�is only half built. Gov. Jay Nixon and other state and local�officials had proclaimed last year that the $46 million project would make�high-grade artificial sweetener by the truckload and pay good wages to hundreds of�workers in the old railroad town 30 miles north of Columbia.

Late Thursday, Standard & Poors dramatically downgraded the bonds that the central Missouri town�issued to pay for the sweetener plant. The credit rating agency lowered its rating on the bonds to CC from A-minus.

Moberly had guaranteed $39 million in bonds to get the plant built, and could be on the hook for the company's bad debt.

Janet Morales, editor and publisher of the former�weekly The Moberly Mirror, suggested that city and state officials failed to do their homework in vetting the company. While Mamtek�said it has a plant in Fujian Province, China, she could find no evidence of one. She also�contacted trade publications and competitors, and found no one�knew of Mamtek.�

Mamtek has told UMB Bank, which�issued the bonds, that it's�close to broke and would need�an additional $20 million to $44.5 million to finish the project.

The state of Missouri had pledged $14.4 million in tax credits to Mamtek. But despite the collapse, state officials say that Missouri taxpayers will not lose a dime. Because the company never created any jobs here, Mamtek never received any tax credits.

Peter Kravitz, a Los Angeles bankruptcy attorney and the new president of Mamtek, could not be reached for comment.

Source: http://www.stltoday.com/business/local/35840376-e618-11e0-b283-001a4bcf6878.html

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Miyerkules, Setyembre 28, 2011

Sarah Palin's attorney threatens lawsuit over book - AP - msnbc.com





updated 9/27/2011 10:11:36 AM ET 2011-09-27T14:11:36

An attorney for Sarah Palin is threatening to sue over a new book that he says defamed the Palins and contains "a series of lies and rumors."

John Tiemessen, in a letter to the publisher of Crown Publishing Group Monday, cites an email that author Joe McGinniss allegedly sent a blogger in January seeking substantiation for several rumors that have surrounded Palin's family. That email was posted online last week by Andrew Breitbart.

Tiemessen says McGinniss' book, "The Rogue: Searching for the Real Sarah Palin," contains "most of" the stories that merely "amounted to the wishful fantasies of disturbed individuals."

Emails to Crown Publishing and McGinniss, sent after hours, weren't immediately returned.

McGinniss lived next door to the Palins last year while researching the book. It was released last week.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44685526

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Attorney: Amanda Knox Is No 'Femme Fatale' - FOX News

A defense lawyer told an Italian court Tuesday that Amanda Knox, the American student convicted of killing her roommate, isn't a manipulating, sex-obsessed "femme fatale" as her accusers charge, but is rather like Jessica Rabbit -- just drawn that way.

In closing arguments before an appeals court, lawyer Giulia Bongiorno compared Knox to the cartoon character, contending that Knox had been unfairly portrayed over the course of the media-hyped, four-year case. She said the 24-year-old American is instead a loving young woman who simply displayed immaturity and naivete at the time of the 2007 slaying.

Knox was convicted of sexually assaulting and murdering Meredith Kercher, a British student in Perugia, and sentenced to 26 years in prison. Co-defendant Raffaele Sollecito, an Italian who was Knox's boyfriend at the time of the crime, was convicted of the same charges and sentenced to 25 years.

They both deny wrongdoing and have appealed their 2009 convictions. A verdict in the appeals case is expected in early October.

On Tuesday, Bongiorno likened Knox to the voluptuous character in the "Who Framed Roger Rabbit" film.

"Jessica Rabbit looks like a man-eater, but she is a faithful and loving woman," Bongiorno said. Paraphrasing a famous line from the movie, Bongiorno said Knox "is not bad, she's just drawn that way."

Bongiorno is Sollecito's lawyer, but, with the fates of the two defendants intertwined, she discussed Knox's role in the case at length.

By the media as well as in court, Knox has either been described either as a manipulative "she-devil" or as an innocent girl caught in a judicial inferno in a foreign land. Bongiorno said she was really an immature girl who had just started dating Sollecito.

"One should not mistake tenderness for sexual obsession," Bongiorno said, adding the two liked making faces at each other.

"How do you reconcile that with the 'Venus in Furs' image?" -- another reference Bongiorno threw in to a literary character who enslaved her lover. Bongiorno told reporters after the session that she had given a copy of the book -- a 19th-century Austrian novella -- to Knox, who reads avidly in prison, according to her family and supporters.

Kercher, 21, was stabbed to death in the apartment she shared with Knox, in what prosecutors say had begun like a sexual assault.

Knox and Sollecito insist they spent the night at his house the night of the murder, watching a movie, smoking pot and having sex. The movie they said they were watching, "Amelie," led Bongiorno in the original trial to compare Knox to the title character, an innocent girl intent on doing good.

Bongiorno also looked at DNA evidence linking her client to the crime, most notably an alleged trace on the bra clasp of the victim.

Prosecutors maintain that Sollecito's DNA was on the clasp of Kercher's bra as part of a mix of evidence that also included the victim's genetic profile. They also say Knox's DNA was found on the handle of a kitchen knife believed to be the murder weapon, and Kercher's DNA was found on the blade.

A court-ordered review of evidence, carried out by independent experts, said much of that evidence was unreliable. It highlighted the risk of contamination, especially on the clasp, which was collected from the crime scene 46 days after the murder.

The review significantly weakened the prosecution case, giving the defendants hope that they might be freed after four years behind bars.

Speaking of the clasp, Bongiorno said "that piece of evidence must be considered unusable."

Also convicted in separate proceedings was Rudy Hermann Guede from Ivory Coast. Italy's highest criminal court has upheld Guede's conviction and his 16-year prison sentence. Guede also denies wrongdoing.

Source: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/09/27/attorney-amanda-knox-is-no-femme-fatale/

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Martes, Setyembre 27, 2011

Dodgers ask Delaware bankruptcy judge to postpone hearing on MLB motion aimed ... - Washington Post

DOVER, Del. ? The Los Angeles Dodgers asked a Delaware bankruptcy judge on Tuesday to postpone a hearing on a motion by Major League Baseball aimed at forcing a sale of the team.

Attorneys for Commissioner Bud Selig asked the judge last week to terminate the Dodgers? exclusive rights to file a reorganization plan so that the league could file its own plan, which calls for owner Frank McCourt to sell the team.

In asking for an Oct. 12 hearing on their motion, league attorneys said McCourt was driving the team to destruction and using the Chapter 11 case to try to resolve his own personal financial problems. They simultaneously filed court papers seeking to disqualify the Dodgers? bankruptcy attorneys, saying they have been working to advance the interests of McCourt instead of the interests of the team.

Attorneys for the Dodgers fired back Tuesday, accusing the league of engaging in ?heavy handed? and ?abusive? litigation tactics to try to cripple the team?s reorganization efforts, which center on an auction of the television rights to future games.

The Dodgers? attorneys asked the judge to hold a telephone conference Wednesday on their request to postpone a hearing on the league?s motion to force a sale. They argued that the hearing should be delayed until after the judge hears arguments on MLB?s motion to disqualify the Dodgers attorneys and after the team gets the information it needs from the league to challenge the arguments MLB is making in trying to force a sale.

Bruce Bennett, an attorney for the Dodgers, said the team has been trying to work cooperatively with the league, including in filing its motion for approval of a media rights sale process. That motion is also scheduled to be heard at the Oct. 12 hearing.

But in an email response to a request for comment, Thomas Lauria, an attorney for the league, described the Dodgers? court filing Tuesday as ?ridiculous.?

?They purport to use the fact their counsel is conflicted as a basis for delaying the relief MLB seeks (permitting MLB to file plan pursuant to which the team is sold) while permitting the relief they seek (auctioning off the ?media rights?) to go forward,? he wrote.

The Dodgers sought bankruptcy protection in June, blaming Selig for refusing to approve a multibillion-dollar TV deal with Fox Sports that McCourt was counting on to keep the troubled franchise afloat.

The league has said that the Dodgers? plan to sell television rights to future games without league approval as part of its bankruptcy reorganization is ?dead on arrival? and would spell the end of the ball club. League attorneys argue that such a sale would breach the Dodgers? existing contract with Fox Sports, leaving it subject to substantial legal claims, while also providing grounds for termination from the league.

But Bennett said the agreements governing the league?s relationship with its teams are no different from other business contracts, and that Selig?s interpretation of them is not subject to any greater deference by the bankruptcy court.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNHr6f1PbuiUhFsMbmosyzW2Fcui9Q&url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/industries/dodgers-ask-delaware-bankruptcy-judge-to-postpone-hearing-on-mlb-motion-aimed-at-forcing-sale/2011/09/27/gIQA1oTf2K_story.html

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Attorney vows appeal; motion to dismiss misconduct charges was turned down

Henry Baskin

An attorney plans to appeal the denial of a request to dismiss misconduct charges against his client, a Birmingham lawyer who serves as an Oakland University trustee.

A Michigan Attorney Grievance Commission complaint filed earlier this year alleges that Henry Baskin had a sexual relationship with a woman he was representing in a divorce case, and didn?t fully disclose to her ?the possible effect that the conflict of interest could have on her representation.?

On Friday, a three-attorney panel of the Michigan Attorney Discipline Board heard arguments on Baskin?s motion for summary disposition.

The panel denied the motion without prejudice, meaning the issues he raised can still be brought up at a later time.

Baskin?s attorney, Kenneth Mogill, said he plans to appeal the panel?s decision to the full discipline board.

The formal complaint accuses Baskin of engaging in conduct that is contrary to justice, ethics, honesty or good morals; violating the rules of professional conduct adopted by the Supreme Court; and violating the criminal law against adultery. Baskin?s answer to the formal complaint is due Nov. 15.

Baskin and the woman?s alleged sexual relationship happened from late December 1999 to September 2003, according to the complaint. Mogill cited the ?extreme delay? between the alleged acts and the April 2011 filing of the complaint as among the reasons why it should be dismissed.

Mogill has also said that an attorney involved in a bona fide long-term romantic relationship with a client that happens to begin during the course of an attorney-client relationship is not subject to professional discipline.

Robert Edick, deputy administrator of the Michigan Attorney Grievance Commission, said an adulterous relationship with a client in a divorce case is problematic because of the impact it could have on the divorce proceedings themselves.

It would be a conflict of interest for an attorney to continue representing the client in that situation, he said. Continued...

Henry Baskin

An attorney plans to appeal the denial of a request to dismiss misconduct charges against his client, a Birmingham lawyer who serves as an Oakland University trustee.

A Michigan Attorney Grievance Commission complaint filed earlier this year alleges that Henry Baskin had a sexual relationship with a woman he was representing in a divorce case, and didn?t fully disclose to her ?the possible effect that the conflict of interest could have on her representation.?

On Friday, a three-attorney panel of the Michigan Attorney Discipline Board heard arguments on Baskin?s motion for summary disposition.

The panel denied the motion without prejudice, meaning the issues he raised can still be brought up at a later time.

Baskin?s attorney, Kenneth Mogill, said he plans to appeal the panel?s decision to the full discipline board.

The formal complaint accuses Baskin of engaging in conduct that is contrary to justice, ethics, honesty or good morals; violating the rules of professional conduct adopted by the Supreme Court; and violating the criminal law against adultery. Baskin?s answer to the formal complaint is due Nov. 15.

Baskin and the woman?s alleged sexual relationship happened from late December 1999 to September 2003, according to the complaint. Mogill cited the ?extreme delay? between the alleged acts and the April 2011 filing of the complaint as among the reasons why it should be dismissed.

Mogill has also said that an attorney involved in a bona fide long-term romantic relationship with a client that happens to begin during the course of an attorney-client relationship is not subject to professional discipline.

Robert Edick, deputy administrator of the Michigan Attorney Grievance Commission, said an adulterous relationship with a client in a divorce case is problematic because of the impact it could have on the divorce proceedings themselves.

It would be a conflict of interest for an attorney to continue representing the client in that situation, he said.

Baskin, a well-known entertainment and family law attorney, is the chairman of Oakland University?s Board of Trustees.

Source: http://dailytribune.com/articles/2011/09/24/news/doc4e7e3d46c28b2418574731.txt

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Lunes, Setyembre 26, 2011

Source:

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Calif. Attorney General Won't Review Finding in Millionaire's Girlfriend's Mansion Death - FOX News

The California attorney general denied a wealthy pharmaceutical executive's request to review a finding that his girlfriend killed herself by binding her wrists and ankles and hanging herself naked from a balcony at his historic mansion, according to a letter released Thursday.

The office of Attorney General Kamala Harris said it reviews cases for limited reasons, including allegations of gross misconduct by investigators, a clear conflict of interest or if a local law enforcement agency lacks resources or requests help.

Jonah Shacknai asked for a review of a San Diego County Sheriff's Department finding that his 32-year-old girlfriend Rebecca Zahau killed herself two days after his 6-year-old son suffered a fatal fall at his waterfront mansion in Coronado, a wealthy San Diego suburb.

Shacknai, 54, wrote the attorney general Monday that he had no reason to doubt the finding but that a review might put to rest questions raised by Zahau's family and others. He said Thursday that he accepted Harris' decision.

"If at any time there is new substantive evidence bearing on this case, it should be presented, not in tabloid form to fuel rumor and innuendo, but rather to appropriate law enforcement authorities who may determine whether further investigation is warranted," Shacknai said in a statement.

Sheriff Bill Gore said this week that he understood and supported Shacknai's request and would cooperate if the attorney general launched a review. His office did not immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday.

Zahau's family is seeking an independent investigation. Their attorney, Anne Bremner, said Wednesday that a neighbor heard a woman scream at the home the night before the body was found and that numerous experts have challenged the suicide ruling.

Bremner is also calling attention to an autopsy report revelation that Shacknai's brother, Adam, found Zahau's body with a shirt stuffed in her mouth. The San Diego County coroner's office said it was unclear why the cloth was there but people can put material in their mouths before hanging themselves.

Dane Gillette, chief assistant attorney general, denied the request in a letter to Shacknai that he signed on behalf of Harris. The letter was dated Wednesday.

Additional search warrants unsealed Thursday showed that investigators had seized Rady Children's Hospital surveillance recordings in an attempt to verify that Shacknai was at the hospital -- where his son was being treated -- before Zahau's body was found.

Shacknai is founder and chief executive of Medicis Pharmaceuticals Corp., a company based in Scottsdale, Ariz., that makes acne and facial wrinkle treatments.

Source: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2011/09/22/calif-attorney-general-wont-review-finding-in-millionaires-girlfriends-mansion/

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Linggo, Setyembre 25, 2011

Fugitive attorney involved in corruption case back in custody - Las Vegas Review - Journal

Posted: Sep. 24, 2011 | 3:03 p.m.
Updated: Sep. 24, 2011 | 7:51 p.m.

Lawrence Davidson, a disbarred attorney who failed to show up for his money laundering trial five years ago and fled the country, is back in federal custody in Las Vegas.

Davidson, who also was charged in a sweeping political corruption probe that resulted in the convictions of four Clark County commissioners, voluntarily agreed to return to the country from Israel, according to federal court documents.

His return marks the final chapter in the high-profile corruption case that revolved around former strip club operator Michael Galardi, who pleaded guilty and cooperated with prosecutors.

FBI agents arrested Davidson in Newark, N.J., upon his arrival Sept. 8, and he was transported to Las Vegas, the court documents said. He is to appear at a detention hearing in federal court on Wednesday.

A bench warrant was issued for Davidson in October 2006 after he failed to show up for the money laundering trial.

Nearly two years later, while he was still at large, prosecutors secretly obtained a new indictment charging Davidson with failing to appear at the trial, obtaining a false passport and engaging in identity theft to flee the country.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Dan Schiess, who is prosecuting Davidson, filed court papers Sept. 8 seeking to unseal the new case, as FBI agents took Davidson into custody in New Jersey.

U.S. Magistrate George Foley Jr. ordered the case unsealed the same day.

In his papers, Schiess said Davidson had "arranged to voluntarily return to the United States."

Davidson, who once practiced personal injury and medical malpractice law, was accused in the money laundering case of negotiating settlements on behalf of his clients without their permission. The 2005 indictment alleged that he fraudulently negotiated 17 settlements totaling $936,300 during a 14-month period.

At the time of his disappearance, Davidson also was facing an upcoming trial on mail fraud and money laundering charges in the political corruption case. He and his father, former developer Donald Davidson, were charged in a bribery scheme that involved getting a CVS Pharmacy placed in a neighborhood.

The elder Davidson was accused of paying former County Commissioner Erin Kenny $200,000 after she helped push through the necessary zoning changes for the pharmacy. Lawrence Davidson was alleged to have created the bank account to conceal the illicit payments. Kenny cooperated with prosecutors in the case.

In July 2007, a federal jury was hung on the charges involving Kenny, but convicted Donald Davidson of trying to pay off former City Councilman Michael McDonald. Davidson later was sentenced to two years in prison.

His sentence followed prison terms handed out to Galardi, Kenny and three other former county commissioners: Mary Kincaid-Chauncey, Dario Herrera and Lance Malone.

The younger Davidson had skipped town once before to avoid a federal charge of forging a judge's signature on bankruptcy documents. But he returned in 2005 to plead guilty and surrender to authorities.

He later was sentenced to six months behind bars and placed on three years of supervision.

In September 2006, probation officials reported that Davidson had quit his job and moved out of his apartment in Arizona, court documents said.

Authorities said they lost track of him, as his first money laundering trial was to get under way in October.

Contact Jeff German at jgerman@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-8135.

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNGhqi5fgPA18cRvqkr1ZfI1FVakIQ&url=http://www.lvrj.com/news/fugitive-attorney-involved-in-corruption-case-back-in-custody-130505228.html

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Calif. Attorney General Won't Review Finding in Millionaire's Girlfriend's Mansion Death - FOX News

The California attorney general denied a wealthy pharmaceutical executive's request to review a finding that his girlfriend killed herself by binding her wrists and ankles and hanging herself naked from a balcony at his historic mansion, according to a letter released Thursday.

The office of Attorney General Kamala Harris said it reviews cases for limited reasons, including allegations of gross misconduct by investigators, a clear conflict of interest or if a local law enforcement agency lacks resources or requests help.

Jonah Shacknai asked for a review of a San Diego County Sheriff's Department finding that his 32-year-old girlfriend Rebecca Zahau killed herself two days after his 6-year-old son suffered a fatal fall at his waterfront mansion in Coronado, a wealthy San Diego suburb.

Shacknai, 54, wrote the attorney general Monday that he had no reason to doubt the finding but that a review might put to rest questions raised by Zahau's family and others. He said Thursday that he accepted Harris' decision.

"If at any time there is new substantive evidence bearing on this case, it should be presented, not in tabloid form to fuel rumor and innuendo, but rather to appropriate law enforcement authorities who may determine whether further investigation is warranted," Shacknai said in a statement.

Sheriff Bill Gore said this week that he understood and supported Shacknai's request and would cooperate if the attorney general launched a review. His office did not immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday.

Zahau's family is seeking an independent investigation. Their attorney, Anne Bremner, said Wednesday that a neighbor heard a woman scream at the home the night before the body was found and that numerous experts have challenged the suicide ruling.

Bremner is also calling attention to an autopsy report revelation that Shacknai's brother, Adam, found Zahau's body with a shirt stuffed in her mouth. The San Diego County coroner's office said it was unclear why the cloth was there but people can put material in their mouths before hanging themselves.

Dane Gillette, chief assistant attorney general, denied the request in a letter to Shacknai that he signed on behalf of Harris. The letter was dated Wednesday.

Additional search warrants unsealed Thursday showed that investigators had seized Rady Children's Hospital surveillance recordings in an attempt to verify that Shacknai was at the hospital -- where his son was being treated -- before Zahau's body was found.

Shacknai is founder and chief executive of Medicis Pharmaceuticals Corp., a company based in Scottsdale, Ariz., that makes acne and facial wrinkle treatments.

Source: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2011/09/22/calif-attorney-general-wont-review-finding-in-millionaires-girlfriends-mansion/

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Sabado, Setyembre 24, 2011

Fugitive attorney involved in corruption case back in custody - Las Vegas Review - Journal

Posted: Sep. 24, 2011 | 3:03 p.m.
Updated: Sep. 24, 2011 | 7:51 p.m.

Lawrence Davidson, a disbarred attorney who failed to show up for his money laundering trial five years ago and fled the country, is back in federal custody in Las Vegas.

Davidson, who also was charged in a sweeping political corruption probe that resulted in the convictions of four Clark County commissioners, voluntarily agreed to return to the country from Israel, according to federal court documents.

His return marks the final chapter in the high-profile corruption case that revolved around former strip club operator Michael Galardi, who pleaded guilty and cooperated with prosecutors.

FBI agents arrested Davidson in Newark, N.J., upon his arrival Sept. 8, and he was transported to Las Vegas, the court documents said. He is to appear at a detention hearing in federal court on Wednesday.

A bench warrant was issued for Davidson in October 2006 after he failed to show up for the money laundering trial.

Nearly two years later, while he was still at large, prosecutors secretly obtained a new indictment charging Davidson with failing to appear at the trial, obtaining a false passport and engaging in identity theft to flee the country.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Dan Schiess, who is prosecuting Davidson, filed court papers Sept. 8 seeking to unseal the new case, as FBI agents took Davidson into custody in New Jersey.

U.S. Magistrate George Foley Jr. ordered the case unsealed the same day.

In his papers, Schiess said Davidson had "arranged to voluntarily return to the United States."

Davidson, who once practiced personal injury and medical malpractice law, was accused in the money laundering case of negotiating settlements on behalf of his clients without their permission. The 2005 indictment alleged that he fraudulently negotiated 17 settlements totaling $936,300 during a 14-month period.

At the time of his disappearance, Davidson also was facing an upcoming trial on mail fraud and money laundering charges in the political corruption case. He and his father, former developer Donald Davidson, were charged in a bribery scheme that involved getting a CVS Pharmacy placed in a neighborhood.

The elder Davidson was accused of paying former County Commissioner Erin Kenny $200,000 after she helped push through the necessary zoning changes for the pharmacy. Lawrence Davidson was alleged to have created the bank account to conceal the illicit payments. Kenny cooperated with prosecutors in the case.

In July 2007, a federal jury was hung on the charges involving Kenny, but convicted Donald Davidson of trying to pay off former City Councilman Michael McDonald. Davidson later was sentenced to two years in prison.

His sentence followed prison terms handed out to Galardi, Kenny and three other former county commissioners: Mary Kincaid-Chauncey, Dario Herrera and Lance Malone.

The younger Davidson had skipped town once before to avoid a federal charge of forging a judge's signature on bankruptcy documents. But he returned in 2005 to plead guilty and surrender to authorities.

He later was sentenced to six months behind bars and placed on three years of supervision.

In September 2006, probation officials reported that Davidson had quit his job and moved out of his apartment in Arizona, court documents said.

Authorities said they lost track of him, as his first money laundering trial was to get under way in October.

Contact Jeff German at jgerman@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-8135.

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNGhqi5fgPA18cRvqkr1ZfI1FVakIQ&url=http://www.lvrj.com/news/fugitive-attorney-involved-in-corruption-case-back-in-custody-130505228.html

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Mass. Attorney General Seeks Answers from Apple After iTunes Fraud - DailyTech

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DailyTech

Mass. Attorney General Seeks Answers from Apple After iTunes Fraud
DailyTech
Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley announced Tuesday that her office will be questioning Apple about stolen credit card information and fraudulent purchases made on its iTunes store. Coakley was the victim of identity theft where her credit ...
Massachusetts Attorney General investigating iTunes scamstuaw.com
Scam alert issued by TransUnionBoston Globe
Massachusetts Attorney General to investigate iTunes fraudNaked Security
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all 79 news articles »

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNGTcrbaHgWcHDLC3-1ikSqftV8_uw&url=http://www.dailytech.com/Mass+Attorney+General+Seeks+Answers+from+Apple+After+iTunes+Fraud/article22813.htm

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Huwebes, Setyembre 22, 2011

Corpus Christi, attorney discussing concerns about Padre Island road project - Corpus Christi Caller

Read the lawsuit filed against the city.

? City officials and attorney Mike Hummell have agreed to continue discussions about concerns that a Padre Island road expansion could be unsafe for residents and differs from what voters approved.

The two sides held a closed-door meeting Wednesday to discuss the concerns, which were brought up in a lawsuit Hummell filed last week.

The city offered to conduct a preliminary traffic study of Aquarius Street to determine how much traffic residents can expect after a 2,100-foot extension is added from Dasmarinas Drive to Commodores Road. Another study also would be done after the road is finished, City Attorney Carlos Valdez said.

Those studies could lead to a reduced speed limit, stop signs or speed bumps, he added.

Hummell, an attorney who filed the lawsuit and also is a plaintiff, said he asked the city to hold off on road construction until residents' concerns are addressed. Valdez said that is under discussion. The City Council is expected to approve construction bids for the project late this month or early next month.

Hummell doesn't live on Padre Island, but he represents several residents who live on or near Aquarius Street. He filed a lawsuit last week after residents said the city hadn't addressed their concerns.

"The road's a good idea," he said. "I don't think anyone disagrees on that. The problem is with what (my clients) perceive to be a substantial lack of planning in putting the road together."

The project was approved during a 2008 bond election when Hummell served on the City Council. Language included in the bond package said the Aquarius Street extension would be a 31-foot wide, two-way street.

A new design calls for a 60-foot wide road with a median, Hummell said. Residents are concerned a larger road would increase traffic and cause safety problems for people who live there. Hummell said his main concern is making sure voters are getting what they agreed to pay for.

Councilwoman Nelda Martinez, who also served on the council in 2008, said residents have valid concerns for their safety. She attended the meeting Wednesday and said she believes there can be a compromise.

"I feel that addressing their concerns is achievable and also keeping with what the voters expected as well," she said. "I think we heard them loud and clear today and we will definitely work toward a resolution."

Voters agreed to set aside about $950,000 for road construction. The road extension actually will cost about $200,000 less because of economic conditions, Assistant City Engineer Dan Biles said. The total expected expense for the project, including engineering fees and utility work paid for by utility fees, is about $1.9 million.

Residents also are concerned about traffic because developer Paul Schexnailder wants to develop a resort water park with Schlitterbahn on property east of Aquarius Road.

Schexnailder and the city are negotiating who would build a waterway between Lake Padre and the island canal system after the city builds a bridge along Park Road 22.

Source: http://www.caller.com/news/2011/sep/21/city-attorney-discussing-concerns-about-padre/

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Miyerkules, Setyembre 21, 2011

Attorney general rips San Diego pollution-reduction plan - San Diego Union-Tribune

The state attorney general issued strong criticism of the San Diego region?s draft transportation plan for the next several decades because it ?sets too low a bar? in reducing pollution and contains ?significant legal problems.?

The target of Kamala Harris? critique is the 2050 Regional Transportation Plan and its companion piece, the Sustainable Communities Strategy, as well as the underlying draft environmental impact report. These documents, drafted by the San Diego Association of Governments, are a roadmap for the next 40 years of transportation and residential/commercial development in the county.

Within hundreds of pages of documentation, the plans lay out the county?s strategy for meeting state-mandated reductions in greenhouse gases, which are widely believed to contribute to global warming.

The reductions, under the plan, would be 7 percent by 2020 and 13 percent by 2035 through land use policy and expansion of public transit and highways.

Among the criticisms outlined by the attorney general in her 12-page letter to SANDAG are:

? That by merely conforming to state standards, SANDAG?s plan fails to address a region ?already overburdened with pollution.?

? That SANDAG needs to identify minority and disadvantaged communities and better-analyze how their health would be affected by the transportation plan.

? That pollution will ultimately increase over the 40 years covered by the plan.

? That a ?suite of strategies? outlined by SANDAG (roadway expansion, more public transit) do not deliver long term reductions in pollution.

? That SANDAG fails to fully disclose some of the methodology and models used to come up with its predictions.

Harris calls upon SANDAG to rework a number of parts of the plan to meet the state standards for air quality.

The staff of the California Air Resources Board, which is charged with setting and enforcing pollution reduction standards, is submitting a report Thursday which says the SANDAG plan does meet state standards.

In the largely positive report, the air board staff indicates that if SANDAG approves its own draft plan substantially as is in October, it should also be approved by air board. The San Diego regional plan is the first in the state to reach this level.

Lynda Gledhill, a spokeswoman for Harris, said Wednesday that the attorney general?s office has been monitoring the SANDAG plan because it is the first of its kind in the state.

While the tone and concerns of the letter may echo similar comments submitted by groups including the Sierra Club and the Cleveland National Forest Foundation, Gledhill said the report was generated internally.

The attorney general reviewed the plan, in part, to make sure it complied with state law.

SANDAG executive director Gary Gallegos expressed disappointment that the letter was received four weeks after a specially extended deadline for comments. But he added that Harris? ?comments will help us strengthen the air quality portion of the plan.?

He said that part of the concern results because SANDAG?s plan extends 15 years beyond the 2035 date set by the Air Resources Board. This is unchartered territory for air pollution modeling, noted Gallegos. ?This one reason why the plan will get reviewed every four years. It will be reviewed 10 times by 2050,? he said.

Gallegos also noted that technological developments ? much like the introduction of the electric car today ? and alternative fuels of the future could dramatically change their projections in coming decades.

SANDAG board chair Jerome Stocks was less generous. ?We just spent three years in a very public process to reach this draft,? he said. ?If the attorney general wants to talk with us at this late hour ? if they want to talk about the next RTP, good ? we?re talking about in 2012.?

Stocks said he is ?deeply troubled by the attorney general stepping out of the role as the state?s top cop and into the role of regulator. (The air board) is the regulator.?

Contact: bob.hawkins@uniontrib.com ? (619) 718-5253 ? Twitter: @sdutTransport

Source: http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2011/sep/21/state-ag-critical-regional-plan-pollution-reductio/

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Attorney for condemned Ga. inmate says he has asked officials to allow a ... - Washington Post

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Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNEmD3R6kIDK_ZBPCVAyfrVCVuX3Zg&url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/attorney-for-condemned-ga-inmate-says-he-has-asked-officials-to-allow-a-polygraph-test/2011/09/20/gIQAvE3ijK_story.html

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Martes, Setyembre 20, 2011

NY Asst. Attorney General a Fetish Worker? - ABC News

A New York assistant attorney general who has brought lawsuits against Bank of America and Royal Bank of Canada has come under fire for her salacious personal life--one that involves whips, dominating, and S&M.

Alisha Smith, 36, who won a $5 billion combined settlement from the banks through her work in the Investor Protection Bureau of the AG's office, has been suspended from work without pay for possibly earning money in her side-job as a dominatrix performer, according to the NY Post.

A story in the Post alleges that Smith works as a performer at S&M events and may have violated internal rules of the department that require employees to consult with supervisors when earning more than $1,000 for outside work.

A spokesman for the attorney general's office confirmed that the employee has been suspended without pay.

Smith would not return calls for comment.

It is unclear whether Smith was actually paid for performing. The NY Post cites an anynonymous source that claims she was; ABC News was unable to verify that claim.

The story cited a Twitter message posted by Alisha Sparks, which they claim is Smith's stage name, to a well-known S&M worker, Jade Vixen. The message was deleted by Monday, and Vixen did not return an email request for an interview.

The story also claimed Smith posted photos of herself wearing a see-through latex dress with heart-shaped pasties.

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNFCiX51rldtZGO7qZaDpxOkm8qJVQ&url=http://abcnews.go.com/US/nyc-asst-attorney-general-suspended-dominatrix-controversy/story?id=14556081

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NY Asst. Attorney General a Dominatrix?

A New York assistant attorney general who has brought lawsuits against Bank of America and Royal Bank of Canada has come under fire for her salacious personal life--one that involves whips, dominating, and S&M.

Alisha Smith, 36, who won a $5 billion combined settlement from the banks through her work in the Investor Protection Bureau of the AG's office, has been suspended from work without pay for possibly earning money in her side-job as a dominatrix performer, according to the NY Post.

A story in the Post alleges that Smith works as a performer at S&M events and may have violated internal rules of the department that require employees to consult with supervisors when earning more than $1,000 for outside work.

A spokesman for the attorney general's office confirmed that the employee has been suspended without pay.

Smith would not return calls for comment.

It is unclear whether Smith was actually paid for performing. The NY Post cites an anynonymous source that claims she was; ABC News was unable to verify that claim.

The story cited a Twitter message posted by Alisha Sparks, which they claim is Smith's stage name, to a well-known S&M worker, Jade Vixen. The message was deleted by Monday, and Vixen did not return an email request for an interview.

The story also claimed Smith posted photos of herself wearing a see-through latex dress with heart-shaped pasties.

Source: http://abcnews.go.com/US/nyc-asst-attorney-general-suspended-dominatrix-controversy/story?id=14556081

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Lunes, Setyembre 19, 2011

Two Candidates Announce Run for District Attorney


Two candidates have announced they are running for Brazos County District Attorney, and they both have ties to the office.

David Hilburn has been an assistant district attorney with Brazos County, and more recently a criminal defense lawyer with the law office of James and Reynolds.

Jarvis Parsons currently works as a Brazos County Assistant District Attorney. He's held that position for nine years.

Current District Attorney, Bill Turner, has announced that he will not be running for re-election.

Here are the two candidates announce speeches

Jarvis Parsons Speech:

"My name is Jarvis Parsons and I stand before you to announce my intention to run for the REPUBLICAN nomination for District Attorney of Brazos County.

I married the love of my life 10 years ago and am the proud father of a 2 year old girl. For almost a decade we have been firmly planted here in this community and we love it. It is a great place to live. A great place to raise a family. A great place to enjoy life.

I AM RUNNING FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY BECAUSE I WANT TO KEEP OUR COMMUNITY SAFE.

? Safe from Criminals who take the lives of other human beings

? Safe from criminals who physically and sexually abuse children

? Safe from Criminals who use violence as a means of intimidation

I want a safe community not just for my family but for everyone in Brazos County. I want to continue in the tradition of being tough on crime. This is a great place to live because we do hold people accountable for their actions. And when those actions hurt others, then the District Attorney?s office will step in and send a strong message that this conduct won?t be tolerated.

For almost a decade I have been in these Brazos County courts, in front of Brazos County Juries trying Brazos County cases. From thefts to death penalty cases I know that Brazos County juries want to keep this county safe. I want to continue the tradition of putting violent criminals behind bars. I have been on the front lines for almost a decade, making sure that when a crime is committed, criminals get the punishment they deserve.

IN ORDER TO DO THAT WE HAVE TO BE EFFECTIVE ADVOCATES IN THE COURTROOM. Nothing has made that more clear to me than sitting down with parents like Wayne and Shirley Joiner, who lost two children to senseless violence. While we can?t comprehend their loss, we can make sure the person who caused that pain is dealt with. I think my track record in the courtroom speaks for itself. I believe that the district attorney not only has to lead by example in the courtroom, but has to train others to do the same. That is one reason why I have helped train many of our new attorneys in our office as well as new attorneys throughout the state.

I?M RUNNING FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY because I believe in my heart of hearts that justice should be blind. It should not matter who you are or where you?re from. And politics will never play a role in this office. Those principles were passed down from Travis Bryan, to Bill Turner and they will be guiding principles for myself and my office.

I love this community. I love this office. I am humbled that Bill Turner has trust and faith in me to lead this office. And I want to see it grow and get even better.

So stand with me if you want to keep this community safe.
Work with me to make sure all of our neighborhoods are great places to live.
Fight with me, to ensure that victims will have a voice .

I?m Jarvis Parsons and with your help we will keep Brazos County Safe. Thank you and God Bless."

David Hilburn Speech:

"Thank you all for coming out this afternoon. As you know, my name is David Hilburn. I am very excited to announce that I intend to run in the March Republican primary for Brazos County District Attorney. For those of you who know me, you may not be surprised. For those of you who do not, let me explain who I am.

In my sophomore year as a student at Texas A&M, I had the opportunity to work at the DA's office in Lockhart, where I went to high school. At the time, I did not have any idea what I wanted to do in life. After four (4) weeks of work, I knew. I wanted to be a prosecutor. While I finished my bachelor's degree at A&M, I worked during the Christmas and summer breaks at the Caldwell County DA's office. During my senior year, I had the opportunity to work here in Brazos County District Attorney's Office. After graduating in 1997, I began law school at South Texas College of Law in Houston. I was fortunate to obtain employment at the Harris County District Attorney's Office, working as an intern in the grand jury division. I continued working there throughout law school, solidifying my desire to have career in prosecution.

After graduating, I had the opportunity to stay in Houston, working for the next 5 years as a prosecutor Harris County. During that time, I worked in the Misdemeanor, Family Violence, Juvenile, and Felony Divisions, as well as supervising eight (8) attorney's while a chief in the chief of the Justice of the Peace Division. In September 2005, I had the opportunity to move back to Brazos County and continue working as a prosecutor here. I served four years as an assistant district attorney here, trying felony cases and working in the juvenile division. During my time as a prosecutor, I tried more than 75 jury trials, including offenses such as murder, aggravated robbery, sexual assault, drug offenses, and driving while intoxicated.

After serving the first nine (9) years of his career as a prosecutor, I have spent the past two (2) years as a criminal defense attorney with the Law Office of James & Reynolds.

I explain all that to you to emphasize one of the key points of reasons why I am the choice to be the next District Attorney: Experience.

Before I graduated law school, I had experience in 3 different district attorney's offices in Texas, working as a clerk or intern in Caldwell, Brazos, and Harris Counties. Having prosecuted in two different counties, I recognize that things that work in other offices can work here.

Specifically, one thing that I would look into implementing is a direct filing system. In a direct filing system, the DA's office files a criminal information with the District Clerk soon after the arrest. This allows the case to come before the court before the case is indicted, which can speed up the entire process, from appointing lawyers, and it could give defense attorneys earlier access to the information in the State's file, which, in some cases, would allow for a quicker resolution to the case.

I also have experience in leading. From going through the Corps of Cadets at A&M, to leading a court in the misdemeanor division in Houston, as well as 8 prosecutors in the JP division, to being a past president of the Children's Museum of the Brazos Valley, I have the experience in leading people. The DA's office has a staff of over 30 people. Being good lawyer does not equal being a good leader. I am both. I have experience trying cases, as well as the leadership history that will guide the office in the right direction.

Part of my experience includes the past 2 years working as a defense attorney with the Law Firm of James & Reynolds. While I believe I possessed a great deal of this before, my experience will let me bring common sense with me as the elected District Attorney. The District Attorney's office prosecutes some of the toughest criminals on our streets. They also prosecute a lot of individuals that made poor decisions. One of the difficult parts about prosecuting is making sure you know the difference. My experiences in Harris County and Brazos County as a prosecutor, and working the past two years in private practice have given me the tools and ability to evaluate and decide what to do with each individual case. Every case is different. And each case must be evaluated individually to determine the proper result. I have developed the common sense to to do that, and to lead the office to do that in each case.

I have a good relationship with the District Attorney's Office, in fact I worked side-by-side with many of them during the four (4) years. The people who work in the DA's Office are a great group of people, and I look forward to leading them as the elected District Attorney. Bill Turner has done a great job over the past 28 years as the District Attorney of Brazos County. I look forward to continuing and improving on what he has helped build.

I have a family. My wife and I love this community, and look forward to raising our family here. In that, I want a safe community for my family.

I have a passion about prosecution. Since 1994, as a sophomore in college, my career has led me to this point. I am looking forward to leading the District Attorney's Office with experience and common sense that I have gathered since my passion for prosecution began. Thank you all for being here."

Source: http://www.kbtx.com/home/headlines/Two_Candidates_Announce_Run_for_District_Attorney_130168018.html

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Linggo, Setyembre 18, 2011

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Van Buren attorney sees license pulled

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Source: http://www.arkansasonline.com/news/2011/sep/17/van-buren-attorney-sees-license-pulled-20110917/

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Sabado, Setyembre 17, 2011

Respected Attorney At AG's Office Suspended For Being A Dominatrix - Gothamist.com

A respected prosecutor specializing in securities fraud has been suspended from the New York Attorney General's office after it was revealed that she moonlights as a dominatrix. 36-year-old Alisha Smith, or "Alisha Spark" to those that know her in the BDSM community, was commended just three years ago by then-Attorney General Andrew Cuomo for her $5 billion dollar settlement she extricated from Bank of America due to securities fraud allegations. "They pay her to go to the events. She dominates people, restrains them and whips them," a "fetish source" breathlessly tells the Post.

"They" presumably refer to Smith's alleged clients who pay her to perform legal acts on them. It's unclear which law, if any, she has broken, except an executive order at the Attorney General's Office which mandates that employees "obtain prior approval from the [Employment Conduct Committee] before engaging in any outside pursuit�from which more than $1,000 will be received or is anticipated to be received." A spokesman from Attorney General Schneiderman's office says, "The employee has been suspended without pay, effective immediately, pending an internal investigation." Smith's yearly salary is $78,825.

We've yet to hear back from the AG's office, but the rule is vague as to whether the $1,000 refers to each "outside pursuit" or the total amount earned. We contacted a prominent NYC dungeon and was told that the going rate was around $240 for true novices, and $200 after that, so getting to $1,000 may not be too difficult.

Smith is also believed to be friends with another brainy dominatrix, former chemistry Ph.D student Edythe Maa AKA Jade Vixen, whose boyfriend was recently found dead in his attic due to what police believe was a case of "self-suffocation." Maa's previous boyfriend, a prominent Manhattan attorney, was shot dead by an obsessed loved in 2008.

Source: http://gothamist.com/2011/09/17/respected_attorney_at_ags_office_su.php

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Third instance of police brutality alleged in California town - CNN

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Officer Kenton Hampton is accused of brutality in three arrest cases, an attorney says
  • Hampton is placed on paid leave, a police spokesman announces Friday
  • The third allegation was made Friday by a 27-year-old man who says he was falsely arrested
  • One of the three cases involves the death this summer of Kelly Thomas, a homeless man

Los Angeles (CNN) -- A police officer in Fullerton, California, whom an attorney accuses of brutality in the death of a homeless man this summer and two arrest cases last year, has been placed on paid leave, a police spokesman announced Friday.

Sgt. Andrew Goodrich identified the officer as Kenton Hampton, but he declined to confirm whether Hampton is among six officers involved in the arrest of Kelly Thomas, a 37-year-old homeless man who died five days after allegedly being beaten by police this summer. That death is under investigation by the FBI and the Orange County District Attorney.

But Hampton was involved in two incidents last year in which two men are accusing Hampton of brutality and false arrest, Goodrich told CNN.

"I can't comment as to the type of leave or the reason or the length," Goodrich said of Hampton being placed on paid leave. In making the announcement Friday, Goodrich declined to state when the leave became effective.

Hampton and his attorney couldn't immediately be reached for comment Friday.

Goodrich confirmed that Hampton was the officer involved in a new allegation of brutality made Friday by Edward Miguel Quinonez, 27, of Anaheim, California, who is planning to file a lawsuit against Hampton for "slamming" his head against a wall in a June 27, 2010, incident. His attorney, Garo Mardirossian, who's also the lawyer in the two other alleged brutality cases, announced the plans in a press conference Friday.

Fullerton police investigated a police misconduct complaint filed by Quinonez shortly after the arrest, Goodrich said.

"That complaint was investigated, and there was a disposition on the complaint, and I can't talk about the disposition," Goodrich said.

Quinonez's case marked the third case of alleged brutality by the Fullerton police. Those three accusations emerged this summer in the wake of the death of Thomas, a homeless man who was diagnosed as a schizophrenic.

Quinonez accused Hampton of assaulting him and falsely accusing him of being drunk in public, said Mardirossian.

Coincidentally, Quinonez happened to be one of about 100 witnesses to the police struggle with Thomas and even saw Hampton's involvement in that incident, Quinonez said. Quinonez was interviewed by prosecutors investigating the homeless man's death, his attorney said.

In the 2010 incident, the officer was writing a ticket to a motorist for bouncing his lowrider and displaying its hydraulics as Quinonez happened to be on the sidewalk, waiting outside a bar, Quinonez told reporters Friday.

The officer told Quinonez not to interfere with the investigation, and Quinonez then responded: "Get away from me because cops killed my dad," who was shot to death by Riverside, California, police on September 1, 2008, Quinonez said.

That remark was apparently interpreted by the officer as "contempt of cops," Mardirossian said.

The Fullerton officer then arrested Quinonez and slammed his head against the wall, Quinonez said.

A blood test later showed that Quinonez had no alcohol in his system at the time of the arrest, he and his attorney said.

Quinonez filed a police misconduct complaint just days after the incident, but he said he didn't know if anything ever became of the complaint, though he made several follow-up phone calls.

"As it says on the side of the patrol car, they are there to serve and protect us, not harass us," Quinonez said. "He acted out of the heat of passion by throwing that charge at me, which was very unethical for him to have done, to take his personal issues out on me.

"He threw handcuffs on me and he slammed my head up against the wall, and he applied pressure to my head, which made my head hurt worse," Quinonez said. The officer spoke in "like a sarcastic tone when I asked him what I was going to jail for, and he laughed and said, 'drunk in public.' He had to think about it."

The other two instances of alleged police brutality occurred after Quinonez's complaint, he said.

"If they would have taken care of the matter when I filed the complaint, then this wouldn't have happened," Quinonez told reporters, referring to the two other alleged instances of brutality.

During the press conference, Quinonez was seated next to another alleged victim of police misconduct, Veth Mam, who is suing the Fullerton police for an incident that occurred four months after Quinonez's experience.

Added Mam: "If (Fullerton police) would have taken action on (Quinonez's) behalf, I probably wouldn't be in this mess, and Mr. Kelly Thomas wouldn't have passed away."

Mardirossian, who's the attorney representing the alleged victims in all three instances, said the cases show "a pattern" of police misconduct. "We need to identify rogue cops and get them off the street. These few bad apples give the entire department a bad name," he said.

In the Thomas incident on July 5, Quinonez happened to witness police "beating on Kelly Thomas" as Quinonez was boarding his bicycle on a bus near the altercation, he said.

Quinonez said he heard Thomas crying for his father, Ron, who also was at Friday's press conference.

As he witnessed the encounter between police and Kelly Thomas, Quinonez saw the same officer from his arrest "walking up, and that's when the whole beating process started" in the Thomas arrest, Quinonez said.

The officer was also allegedly involved in a third case of suspected police brutality last year in which Mam, 31, of Baldwin Park, California, has filed a civil lawsuit against Fullerton police, said Mardirossian.

Mam's altercation with Fullerton police officers was recorded on his iPhone and posted on YouTube. Mam wasn't seriously injured, Mardirossian said.

During the early morning hours of October 23, 2010, Mam was recording the arrest of a friend on his iPhone camera.

Instead of documenting what Mam described as a case of excessive force, the 31-year-old factory worker was himself arrested and charged with assaulting a Fullerton police officer.

Last month, Mam filed a civil lawsuit, claiming that Hampton and other officers falsely arrested him, conspired to violate his civil rights and committed perjury during his misdemeanor trial. Mam, who lives with his girlfriend in nearby El Monte, was acquitted of battery against an officer and resisting arrest last month.

On Friday, police spokesman Goodrich confirmed that Hampton was one of the officers involved in Mam's arrest.

Fullerton acting Police Chief Kevin Hamilton has launched an internal affairs investigation into the incident, and police have said there is "a strong possibility" they wrongly arrested Mam, a spokesman said.

In the Thomas case, medical records made public this month by Madirossian show that Thomas died from brain injuries as a result of head trauma.

The records were compiled by physicians at the University of California Irvine Medical Center while Thomas remained on life support after the violent struggle.

"By the time he got to the hospital he was already brain dead," Mardirossian said earlier this month.

Thomas was a diagnosed schizophrenic who was homeless at the time of the altercation, his attorney said.

The medical records showed that Thomas suffered blunt head trauma with multiple broken bones in his face, and with rib fractures, according to Mardirossian. Thomas died five days after what the Orange County district attorney has called "a violent and desperate struggle" with Fullerton police.

Thomas was shocked multiple times near his chest cavity and on his back with a Taser stun gun, said Mardirossian.

According to the medical records, Thomas also suffered nose and brain trauma, and smashed cheekbones.

Mardirossian claimed that officers used their Taser guns to deliver some of the head and face blows.

The examination also concluded that Thomas had no narcotics or prescription medications in his body, Mardirossian said.

Several bystanders witnessed the encounter and others recorded portions of the beating on cellular phones, according to Mardirossian.

According to the medical report, Thomas suffered severe internal bleeding. "The medical evidence will show that all that blood is what he ended up choking on," the attorney said.

Thomas' father, Ron, who once worked briefly as a law officer, has filed a claim against the city of Fullerton.

The Orange County Coroner's office has not determined the official cause of death, pending toxicological findings, officials said. The Fullerton police department has declined to comment about the medical reports.

Since the Thomas incident, six officers allegedly involved have been placed on involuntary paid administrative leave. City officials have not released their names.

Police Chief Michael Sellers has taken a paid medical leave, and two of the city's five council members have called upon him to resign.

Meanwhile, there are two external investigations into the death by the FBI and the Orange County district attorney's office. The FBI is looking at possible civil rights violations.

The Thomas incident began when police responded to reports that a man was trying to break into cars near a bus depot three blocks from City Hall.

Following the beating, there was no evidence that vehicles were burglarized nor was Thomas in possession of any stolen property, according to Mardirossian.

CNN's Stan Wilson contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNFsx-NwXgxBhJ4Xw-x44j13UvPZ-A&url=http://www.cnn.com/2011/US/09/16/california.fullerton.police.brutality/

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