Archive for December, 2009

Judge Donald Jackson Resigns After Conviction

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

We told you last week that Judge Donald Jackson was convicted of official oppression after offering a defendant a better Houston criminal attorney if she agreed to date him. Now Judge Jackson has decided to resign from his position after the scandal. Since the accusation arose, Jackson has remained on administrative suspension from his position.

He resigned on Tuesday, only a few days after the jury decision and two days before the sentence is scheduled to take place. He was sentenced to the maximum punishment for the charge, including 30 days in jail, 200 hours community service, two years probation, $4000 in fines and a legal course on ethics.

For now, he is still remaining free, as his conviction is under appeal.

To read more on the on-going story, see the article in the Houston Chronicle. Image Via hyku [Flickr].

Judge Jackson Convicted of Official Oppression

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

We covered the story of Judge Donald Jackson and the DWI defendant Ariana Venegas last week, when we told you that Venegas accused Jackson of offering her a better Houston criminal lawyer in exchange for her agreeing to become involved with him romantically.

On Friday, Jackson was officially found guilty of the crime of official oppression and was sentenced to two years probation, 200 hours of community service, $4,000 in fines and 25 hours of mandatory state-approved legal ethics courses. He remains on administrative suspension for the time being. The judge hearing the case seemed to be personally offended by Jackson’s actions, stating, “we are all tarnished by your stupidity.”

To read more, see the article in the Dallas Morning News. Image Via St A Sh [Flickr]

Woman Testifies Regarding Judge’s Solicitations

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

hans sAriana Venegas says that when she was accused of drunk driving, Judge Donald Jackson, told her he could ensure she would win her trial if she dated him –and would lose if she resisted. She claims she felt she had no choice but to comply.

“He told me that if I wasn’t going to get interested, that I would get convicted because he’s the judge,” she said, tearfully, while testifying against Jackson in trial this week.

Venegas claims she did go out on a date with Jackson, only because she believed she had no other option. Jackson, currently suspended from his duties, is now being tried with misdemeanor official oppression. He claims that Venegas approached him about her poor court-appointed attorney and he offered to call her later that day to help. One of Jackson’s lawyers says that he acted foolishly, but only because he was tempted by the younger woman who was trying to manipulate her way out of a DWI. His other Houston criminal attorney says there was no sexual harassment nor any deprivation of the woman’s rights as a defendant, which are two critical aspects of an official oppression charge.

To read more about the issue, see the article in the Houston Chronicle. Image Via Hans S [Flickr].

Justices Bothered By Vague Law Used Against Ex-Enron Exec

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

480px-Stephen_Breyer,_SCOTUS_photo_portraitThe blog has previously mentioned Enron chief Jeffrey K. Skilling’s appeal to the Supreme Court about the vagueness of the “honest services” law he was convicted under. As it turns out, the court seems inclined to agree with Mr. Skilling and his Houston criminal lawyer.

The law in question was enabled as a federal statute in 1988 and it criminalizes the act of “depriving another of the intangible right of honest services.” The 28 word-long law has the justices scratching their heads as it could technically be used against any worker who has committed mild transgressions such as calling in sick in order to have a day off. Justice Stephen Breyer (pictured at right) has said “Perhaps there are 150 million workers in the United States, I think possibly 140 million of them would flunk” a vague honest services test. Justice Scalia called the statute a “mush of language.”

The deputy solicitor general representing the government in the case, Michael Dreeben, argued that the crime is only created for cases where the defendant had an “intent to defraud” their employer or the public and where the breach of conduct was significant.

Skilling’s appointment with the high court is still waiting to be heard, but his arguments are expected to center around the concept of private gain. He does not believe the honest service law should apply to someone who was not working to their own personal ends.

Decisions for all three cases related to the law will likely be issued in June.

To read more about the hearings, see the article in the Houston Chronicle.

Ex-Consulate Worker Charged With Stealing From Immigrants

Friday, December 4th, 2009

borman818A Colombian consulate worker was recently fired and arrested after bilking immigrants out of over $100,000. Maria Hurtado was offering paid legal services to help obtain green cards and other immigration documents that she could not actually help provide. 25 cases have been filed against Hurtado, who will be charged in the federal courts, as she is a Colombian national, legally living in Houston.

With over 95% of all immigration trials resulting in guilty verdicts, Hurtado will require a top Houston criminal lawyer if she hopes to not be tried, punished and deported for her crimes.

To read more about the investigation, see the article on ABC. Image Via borman818 [Flickr].