Underdog Blog – Fairfax Criminal Defense Lawyer | Virginia DUI Attorney
Fairfax Criminal Lawyer / Virginia DUI Attorney- Highly-Rated
Pursuing Your Best Defense Since 1991
Supreme Court oral argument season starts with critical Fourth Amendment case
Usually I am in trial court when Supreme Court oral arguments are held. Somehow, ordinarily with trial date continuances, court proceedings ending unexpectedly early, and matters scheduled for the afternoon (leaving me available for morning Supreme Court oral argument), I get a chance to observe at least...
Documents and links for my clients
Here in one location are some essential links and documents that my law firm uses to assist our clients: –General information release form. – HIPAA release form. –Sign-in log for attending such self-help groups as Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous. – Suggestions for taking mouth temperature, for challenging the Intox EC/IR...
Treating criminal defendants as individuals: The military court and immigration consequence examples
Too many criminal court judges and prosecutors see criminal defendants more as numbers than individuals. To treat them as individuals might incline them to allow more time for each case in the face of bursting court dockets, and will make them have to more directly confront...
Va. Supreme Court reverses sentence that eviscerated convict’s Fourth Amendment rights
Praised be Virginia’s top court for reminding the lower courts that even the most heinous crimes do not rob convicts of all rights against government searches while on probation. Last Friday, the Virginia Supreme Court reversed a child rape convict’s probation conviction allowing police and...
Transcending anger and roles to persuade on the soul level
A dog does not betray anyone. Humans have the ability to betray, and too many people betray others. A dog does not form sinister plans, but too many humans do. A dog does not lie; too many humans do. Maybe that helps explain why so...
The risk of federal financial aid loss from a drug conviction
My 2007 blogposting on the above-referenced topic merits updating, as follows: The financial aid analysis must include a review of the federal financial aid statute, at 20 U.S.C. § 1091(r), which says in relevant part: A student who is convicted of any offense under any Federal or State law...
Staying connected to why I attended law school in the first place
Law school is not for everyone. I found law school in large part to be a necessary, time-consuming and money-consuming pain in the ass — and sometimes worse — for finding a way to use the law to help make the world a better place....
Michael Brown and the subsequent events in Ferguson, Missouri
I was on vacation and not following the news as much as otherwise when Michael Brown, unarmed, was shot dead in Ferguson, Missouri on August 9. I posted a handful of Twitter entries about events in Ferguson, and here make a few observations about Mr. Brown’s...
Of empowering storytelling, restorative justice and listening
The cashier who recently sold me a lemonade at a carryout restaurant told me simply to return the cup to the cashier for a free refill. I returned around thirty minutes later requesting a refill to the now-different cashier. She went off into a mantra that the...
Prosecutors must not tell witnesses not to talk with defense lawyers
Prosecutors must NOT tell or even hint at cops and other witnesses not to talk with defense lawyers. Specifically, in a criminal matter, a lawyer "shall not" request "a person other than a client to refrain from voluntarily giving relevant information to another party." Va....
