Defenders in the News
Hello and welcome to the first edition of Defenders in the News.
On the last Friday of every month we will publish a list of news items, awards or big decisions involving anyone under the CPCS banner. If we missed anything, or if you spot an article that needs to be included in the weeks ahead, feel free to send it to CPCS Communications Director Bob McGovern at: [email protected].
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James Doyle, a private panel attorney, had two pieces published in The Crime Report, a nonprofit multimedia information and networking resource based at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York. In one article, Doyle discusses the importance of conviction integrity units, and in the other he examines what effects – if any – punishing prosecutors can have on the system.
Cristina Rodrigues and Connor Barusch, CPCS staff attorneys, were referenced in a Boston Globe article about one of their clients and how community groups, including the Bail Fund, helped her pay high bail.
Michael Waryasz, a private panel attorney, was quoted in a Boston Globe story about one of his clients, Antonio Cruzado Jr., in which the newspaper examined Massachusetts’ controversial three strikes law. The Globe also spoke to Cruzado’s supporters, who “say his punishment is unjustly harsh and shows how habitual offender laws can reinforce racial disparities that run through the criminal justice system.”
CPCS joined a group of organizations in a letter to the Boston Globe pushing back on a Globe article that was critical of compassionate release. CPCS joined Prisoners’ Legal Services, Real Cost of Prisons Project, Coalition for Effective Public Safety, Criminal Justice Policy Coalition, The F8 Foundation, Northeastern University School of Law Prisoners’ Assistance Project and the Massachusetts Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers in signing the letter.
Lisa Steele, a private panel attorney, did an interview with The Connecticut Case Law Podcast about the recent decision in State v. Gomes and her role in the case. In Gomes, the Connecticut Supreme Court ordered a new trial in a case where a jury instruction about inadequate investigation by police. Steele also had a piece on alibi defenses featured as the cover article for Champion, a National Association for Public Defense publication. (Click here for the article)
Anthony Benedetti, chief counsel for CPCS, was quoted in a CNN story about Suffolk District Attorney Rachael Rollins’ “Hinton Lab Initiative,” which is geared toward vacating the drug convictions for all whose evidence certifications were conducted in the William A. Hinton State Lab between May 2003 and August 2012. Benedetti also wrote a column in CommonWealth Magazine on Public Defender Day discussing the pandemic and the inequities in the criminal legal system.
Anne Bader-Martin, a private panel attorney and founder of One Can Help, won the second annual Massachusetts Bar Association Juvenile & Child Welfare Award “in recognition of her tireless work on behalf of the juvenile and child welfare community.” Bader-Martin also had an article published in the ABA Journal about the inextricable connection between poverty and the juvenile court system. One Can Help, the nonprofit Bader-Martin leads, is featured in the article. The nonprofit “exists to provide the missing resources foster children, at-risk youth and underserved families urgently need to remedy court concerns, improve difficult lives and build better futures.”
Rebecca A. Jacobstein, Director of Strategic Litigation at CPCS, was referenced in a Mass Lawyers Weekly article about a single justice Supreme Judicial Court hearing in which she and other advocates argued that the county houses of correction are restricting attorney access and failing to provide comprehensive COVID-19 testing to asymptomatic prisoners. Jacobstein and attorneys for the Massachusetts Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers have argued “the Houses of Correction (HOCs) failure to conduct routine, comprehensive COVID-19 testing and to meaningfully reduce their populations, as well as five HOCs’ failure to provide meaningful, timely, and confidential modes of communication between incarcerated individuals and their lawyers, violate constitutional guarantees concerning cruel and unusual punishment, due process, and the right to counsel.” Jaconstein and staff attorney Dave Rangaviz are also referenced in this iPondr piece about COVID-19 in jails and prisons.
Barbara Munro, a private panel attorney, recently had second degree murder conviction vacated by the Massachusetts Appeals Court in Commonwealth v. Fahey. The court found that a new trial was warranted “based on the cumulative effect of the prosecutor’s improper cross-examination and inflammatory closing argument.
Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly recognized private panel attorneys Elliot Weinstein, Victoria Kelleher, Patricia DeJeunas, John Barter and John Warren on its list of 2020 Lawyers of the Year.
In memoriam: John Dingee was a CPCS Bar Advocate in Bristol and Plymouth Counties. He passed away recently at the age of 48. Two months prior to his diagnosis, he achieved his career goal and was appointed to the Superior Court Murder List. Colleagues say he was a zealous and passionate attorney but he was always polite, respectful and a joy to work with whether you were working on his team or as an adversary.
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