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Minnesota Sex Offender Program Found Unconstitutional

A federal judge has ruled that Minnesota's civil-confinement program for sex offenders violates the constitution, The Star Tribune's Chris Serres reports. U.S. District Judge Donovan Frank opined the civil-commitment program "'is a punitive system that segregates and indefinitely detains a class of potentially dangerous individuals without [legal] safeguards.'"

One issue is that there are no periodic assessments to determine whether offenders are dangerous enough to be confined, Serres reports.

More than 700 men have been locked up after serving their prison terms. Minnesota civilly commits more sex offenders per capita than any other state, Serres reports.

The Fallacy of Bite Mark Evidence

The Marshall Project's Beth Schwartzapfel has written a piece questioning the use of bite mark evidence in criminal cases. Bite mark comparison, which aims to match a bite wound on a victim with a suspect's teeth, is misleading, Schwartzapfel reports.

Fourteen men have been exonerated after being convicted of crime on the basis of bite mark analysis.  The National Academy of Science has found that the field of "forensic odontology" has never been scientifically proven. The academy also found that "'bite marks on the skin will change over time and can be distorted by the elasticity of the skin, the unevenness of the surface bite, and swelling and healing. These features may severely limit the validity of forensic odontology.”'

Schwartzapfel reports that the California Supreme Court, courts in Mississippi and a judge in Ohio are weighing whether bite mark evidence in contested convictions can be upheld.

Contempt Ordered for Parole Board for Failure to Explain Denial

The New York Board of Parole has been held in contempt for failing to give an explanation as to why it denied parole for a convicted murderer, The New York Law Journal's Ben Bedell reports. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Sciortino had already vacated the 2013 denial of parole to convicted murderer Michael Cassidy. When the parole board denied Cassidy release a second time, Sciortino said their explanation of why restated "'the usual and predictable language with no specificity or other explanation to justify parole denial."'

Texas Makes Post-Conviction DNA Testing Easier

Texas has enacted a law making it easier for convicted defendants to get DNA testing, according to the Innocence Project.

People who have been convicted of crimes now have to show that there a reasonable likelihood that evidence contains DNA, Texas Lawyer's Angela Morris reports. The law was enacted in response to Texas Court of Criminal Appeals rulings strictly interpreting Texas' "post-conviction DNA testing statute 'to require proof that biological evidence exists before a judge can allow testing to see if exculpatory biological evidence exists. This new interpretation severely restricts a judge's ability to order DNA testing … which in turn prevents the discovery of exonerations in cases where exculpatory evidence is often microscopic,'" Morris reports.

Law-Breaking Company Offers to Build Houses for Habitat for Humanity

Submitted by Amaris Elliott-Engel on Tue, 05/26/2015 - 11:14

Here's a piece I wrote for the Connecticut Law Tribune about an unusual sentencing request:

The normal drill for punishment in federal court is prison time, fines or probation. But a North Branford-based construction company that ran afoul of the law is asking U.S. District Judge Janet Bond Arterton to consider sentencing the company to build two homes.

The hook is that the houses wouldn't be sold for profit. They would be constructed for Habitat for Humanity, and the efforts would be considered community service.

Cherry Hill Construction Co. pleaded guilty to filing a false tax return and a making a false statement in connection with the documents required by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, which sets out a minimal standard for retirement plans. The company stated that its contributions to the retirement plans needed to be only $52,198 when they should have totaled nearly $580,000.

The company faces a $500,000 fine and five years' probation. But instead of paying the fine, Cherry Hill wants to build two new family homes in New Haven on behalf of Habitat and donate all the labor and materials. The company placed the value of such an effort at $155,000 to $200,000.

The government is opposing the proposal for several reasons. U.S. Attorney Deirdre Daly and Assistant U.S. Attorney Douglas Morabito said in court papers that Cherry Hill should be made to pay the full $500,000 because corporations can't be imprisoned and fines are the principal deterrent against criminal behavior by corporations.

The government officials said they also oppose providing a benefit to just one organization, rather than society in whole. "The proposal puts the court in the unusual position of directing that community service be done for the benefit of a specific entity," prosecutors said. "Although Habitat for Humanity is a wonderful organization, to some extent this proposal puts the court in the position of picking and choosing beneficiaries of a criminal sentence."

The government also had qualms about the possibility of Cherry Hill reaping positive news from the proposal even though it has promised not to seek any such publicity for any court-ordered community service.

Cherry Hill owner Robert Sachs, who authorized the guilty plea of his family's firm, said in a statement to the court that the 42-year-old company's financial problems started because an employee embezzled money. With the economy in a tough spot in 2010, the company's cash flow dried up. That led to the company underfunding its employee benefit plans and submitting false paperwork to the plan's administrator, Sachs said. The company also falsely claimed a tax deduction for more than the company actually paid into the plan.

In court papers, Cherry Hill's counsel, Robert Casale, argued that community service should be substituted for a monetary fine because the diversion of funds from the employee benefit plan was not driven by corporate greed but because the company's cash flow was eaten up from embezzlement and poor conditions in the construction market.

Robert Santillo, who worked as Cherry Hill's manager, pleaded guilty in 2012 to two counts of tax evasion. He had received more than $790,000 from a subcontractor used by Cherry Hill on asbestos removal projects and created a limited liability company to conceal his taxable income. Casale said in court papers that Santillo is also estimated to have stolen between $1 million and $2 million from Cherry Hill, eating "away at the company like an intestinal parasite."

"Cherry Hill is a defendant in this case because it made a bad decision during a time of crisis," Casale wrote. "There is no question that the company appreciates the wrongfulness of its actions and has taken steps to ensure that this will not happen again."

The company also agreed to make full restitution to the retirement plan funds and to pay back the taxes it owes to the Internal Revenue Service.

Casale declined to comment. Morabito did not respond to a request for comment.

Alan Sobol, chairman of Pullman & Comley's white collar, criminal defense and corporate investigations practice, said the defense strategy was interesting, but not likely to succeed. For one thing, he said, fines are meant to benefit all of society, not just one particular cause. He called Cherry Hill's idea an "interesting and creative approach. [But] it's not likely to carry the day with the court."

Sobol said he would instead recommend arguing that the sentencing guidelines for white-collar crimes regarding financial fraud are not based on empirical data and can be set aside altogether since sentencing guidelines are no longer mandatory.

An example of guidelines that are based on data are the drug offenses involving powder cocaine, Sobol said. But he argues the guidelines regarding financial fraud and drug offenses involving crack cocaine were developed out of knee-jerk reactions to, respectively, financial scandals over the last three decades and fears about the increasing use of crack in the 1980s. That is a strong reason, he said, that one could argue against the $500,000 fine in the Cherry Hill case.

Texas Moves to Reform Grand Jury Selection

Who knew? Texas is the last state in the country to have a "pick-a-pal" system in which grand jurors are selected through a list of individuals prepared by an acquaintance chosen by a local judge. Texas legislators have approved bills to end this method of selecting grand juries, the Houston Chronicle's Brian Rosenthal reports.

The difference between the state House and state Senate versions is a provision requiring courts empaneling grand juries to consider '"the county's demographics related to race, ethnicity, sex and age,'" Rosenthal further reports.

Houston Chronicle columnist Lisa Falkenberg won a Pulitzer for revealing the problems with Texas' method of selecting grand juries, including "instances of judges' friends sitting on multiple grand juries and potential conflicts of interest going undetected, such as allowing former police officers to hear a case in which a lawman is accused of a crime."

Confessions in China Obtained Through Coercion

The New York Times' Andrew Jacobs had an unsettling feature on the Chinese criminal justice system, writing that many convictions in China depend on confessions that are obtained through coercion. Even though President Xi Jinping has made legal reform part of his effort to boost support for the Communist Party and China's highest court have ruled against using evidence obtained through abuse, "Chinese lawyers and human rights advocates say these measures have had limited impact on a police system that for decades has made obtaining a confession the centerpiece of its efforts."

Human Rights Watch found that judges excluded evidence in just 23 cases of 432 in which defendants said they have been abused.

Why Do We Shackle Kids When They Go to Court?

Robert May, the director of a documentary about the corrupt Pennsylvania judges convicted of wrongdoing regarding juvenile crimes, writes in the Washington Post that children should not be shackled when brought into courtrooms if adults are not. He notes the U.S. Supreme Court has consistently "held that shackling adult defendants in handcuffs, leg irons and belly chains should be limited to the most extreme cases. The court, however, has remained silent on restraining juveniles." He notes that mental health experts say that automatic juvenile shackling is inconsistent with the goals of rehabilitation within the juvenile justice system and can do permanent harm to children, especially those who are already traumatized. If defendants accused of murder can be left unshackled in court, then children should be too, May said.

PA Supreme Court Reinstate Church Official's Conviction

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has reinstated the conviction of the first Catholic Church official to be convicted criminally for the sexual abuse of children for whose welfare he was responsible for but who he did not directly abuse, The Legal Intelligencer's Gina Passarella and Lizzy McLellan report.

The intermediate appellate court found that Monsignor William Lynn could not have been convicted for endangering the welfare of children he never supervised. But Justice Max Baer, writing for the majority of the Supreme Court, found that Lynn"'was a person supervising the welfare of many children because, as a high-ranking official in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, he was specifically responsible for protecting children from sexually abusive priests,"' The Legal reports.

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