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Judges’ Mano A Mano Brewing In Waco Courts
Radio Legendary ^ | 3/25/2017

Posted on 04/02/2017 8:28:40 PM PDT by Elderberry

If the search warrant is not good, then evidence gained pursuant gets suppressed. – Judge Susan Criss

Waco – To get a conviction for engaging in organized criminal activity, the DA is going to have to put in the hands of the accused the weapons specified in the indictments of the defendants arrested at Twin Peaks on May 17, 2015.

That will be a difficult task if former District Judge Susan Criss’s challenge to the search warrants is successful. She objects to the method used by 19th Criminal District Court Judge Ralph Strother and a colleague, District Judge Gary Coley to issue the search warrants seeking DNA specimen from the defendants.

The dispute centers around a zealous attempt to match DNA found upon weapons confiscated as evidence at the scene of the mass killings with that of the accused.

The ex-Judge is holding in her defense of her client that the warrants of search to obtain tissue swabs for the purpose are invalid because the Courts did not ensure their execution in a way befitting the due process guaranteed by the U.S. and Texas Constitutions.

In this classic clash of constitutional conflict, hand to hand among the lions and lionesses of the courts, what could be more dramatic? For a courthouse resembles nothing so much in our American republic than a temple – a temple of justice – and who dares teach the law there?

The Judges, known in polite and professional parlance as the Courts, are the learned rabbis of the law. Who would argue that their instruction does anything less than guide and direct the very character of a community?

The Courts teach the law. All others who appear there in advocacy practice the law.

Selah!

Judge Susan Criss represents Rolando Reyes, a member of Los Caballeros Motorcycle Club of Killeen, a support club associated with Los Bandidos U.S.A. He is one of 177 persons arrested and 155 later indicted for engaging in organized criminal activity, activity that led to either capital murder, attempted capital murder, or aggravated assault on that fateful day.

As a District Judge in Galveston, she once presided over civil cases involving thousands of litigants and hundreds of lawyers, as well as one of the most complex murder cases in American history the dismemberment murder case that resulted in the acquittal of Robert Durst, a man she later described to a journalist as “very dangerous,” a “person (who) knew what they were doing and that it was not the first time.”

In this case, she has invoked the dreaded Michael Morton law regarding withholding exclupatory evidence that would tend to lead to a finding of the innocence of the accused.

Her motion before 19th Criminal District Ralph T. Strother alleges that all communications between the District Attorney, his staff, and the Judge and his staff are required by “the authority of Tex. Code. Crim. Proc. Ann. Art. 39.14, otherwise known as The Michael Morton Act.”

The invocation of that law led to a Georgetown District Judge’s felony conviction over his conduct as a prosecutor in State v. Michael Morton. District Judge Ken Anderson resigned his bench, lost his license to practice law, and served time for the crime for which he was accused and convicted, the failure to include in discovery the recollection of Mr. Morton’s little boy, who told an investigator with the District Attorney’s Office that a “monster with red hands” killed his mother with a two-by-four and “broke the bed,” then covered her body with an open suitcase, details only an eye witness would have known.

The monster was not his father, Michael Morton.

No one knew. Anderson did not allow it to be discovered as exculpatory evidence, something that could have led to his acquittal for the charge of murdering his wife and his subsequent sentence to serve out his life behind bars.

The Waco court system is extremely hostile to discovery of evidence. Most criminal defendants sign a “agreed order for discovery” promulgated by the Courts, and that’s as far as the matter goes. Court-appointed lawyers never even file a motion for discovery, much less a motion for a pre-indictment examining trial. Those who do are allowed to make an inspection of the materials at the DA’s offices under what is known as the “open file” policy; they are allowed to make no copies, and must rely upon their notes lest any of the material wind up in the hands of defendants or their associates.

In the Twin Peaks cases, there is an overkill of release of dicovery items on a serial basis that is preventing the defense bar from being prepared for trial due to their inability to absorb and catalogue all the myriad items spilling upon their desks at the odd moment.

In a letter to Strother, Judge Criss expands upon her complaint of ex parte communication between the Court and the DA’s staff, something which she deems “troublesome.”

One of those troublesome details is “The State took the position of refusing to sign the agreed reset form unless our client submitted to their demand and your purported order for our client to go the D.A.’s office. Much discovery is yet to be had without the added delay the processing of this DNA will add. The attorneys are already put in a precarious position of trying to preserve our clients’ rights to a Speedy Trial while ensuring we are adequately prepared by having examined all of the evidence in the discovery process.”

Issues of malpractice may arise should a counselor assert his readiness for trial and not be aware of another thousand pages of discovery material yet to be released.

“Getting notice of the existence of a court order as a mention in an email from a staff member of the D.A.’s office is troublesome. If an order is issued by this Honorable Court then the lawyers and parties are entitled to have the written order or at least be told how to acquire it. If the order is verbal then it is not going to be enforceable without some verifiable record of exactly what is ordered. And then there is the whole isue of due process in the securing of an order without prior notice to the other side.

“We have been put in a position of not really knowing if an order was issued by the Court, what the exact order was, what the circumstance of the order being rendered were and how to acquire any more information about the supposed order. This makes it impossible to advise our clients and render effective representation. This makes it impossible to make an effective record. Our adversary cannot serve as our intermediary with the Court. Furthermore our not being able to provide input to the Court prior to court orders being rendered causes multiple problems.”

Quite simply, she states in her letter to Judge Strother, “more than one employee” of the DA’s office told her that he, Strother, ordered her client to appear at the DA’s office on February 16, 2017 to help the prosecutors execute a search warrant signed by a judge other than yourself. To this day I do not know if that is true.”

Though Judge Criss makes no objection to a judge ordering defendants on bond to make appearances in court in pereson, “I do strenuously object to ‘court’ being held in the prosecutor’s offices. I object to a status conference being parlayed into a mechanism for the Court to assist the prosecution in executing a search warrant issued by another judge.”

Had Strother signed the warrant it would still not be appropriate “for the Court to participate in any way shape or form in the execution of said warrant. Again I have only the word of the prosecutor that the Court was ordering our appearance at the D.A.’s office. And I am not at all confident that the Court rendered any such order.”

One acidic comment in Judge Criss’s letter to Judge Strother recalls the adage that most of what we know we learned before we were five years of age:

To add the indignity of having the prosecution demand we play in their sandbox to avoid further waiving our clients’s Constitutional rights is problematic on many ethical, constitutional and appellate levels.

Asked about the ramifications of her filings, Judge Criss responded, If the search warrant is not good, then evidence gained pursuant gets suppressed.

We the People may well witness law at is it being made, here, in this city, Jerusalem-on-the-Brazos.

One may read the Original DNA Search Warrant by clicking here: https://www.dropbox.com/s/xwlok2p2pp41dy9/Original%20DNA%20Search%20Warrant%20-%20Reyes.pdf?dl=0

To read the Second Search Warrant, click here: https://www.dropbox.com/s/ev602j2lirgz8lo/2nd%20DNA%20search%20warrant%20-%20Reyes.pdf?dl=0

In an open records request to the District Attorney’s Office, Judge Criss made certain to “request a waiver of all fees in that the disclosure of the requested information is in the public interest and will contribute significantly to the public’s understanding of the issues involved here.”

“An enlightened citizenry is indispensable for the proper functioning of a republic. Self-government is not possible unless the citizens are educated sufficiently to enable them to exercise oversight. It is therefore imperative that the nation see to it that a sustainable education be provided for in all its citizens.” ~~~Thomas Jefferson


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: biker; texas; waco; zimbabwaco
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1 posted on 04/02/2017 8:28:40 PM PDT by Elderberry
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To: Elderberry


2 posted on 04/02/2017 8:41:58 PM PDT by Chode (My job is not to represent the world. My job is to represent the United States of America-#45 DJT)
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To: Elderberry; ExTexasRedhead

I never ceased to be amazed at the “legal system” in Whacko! They aren’t even subtle about their criminal behavior. Just wonder, in Texas, what level of judicial malfeasance does it take to get the State involved. What is going on in Whacko would be grounds for removing judges elsewhere. And there I though, based on what I read here from Texans, that Texas is the “Land of Milk and Honey,” where the Rule of Law prevails. Texans should be ashamed of Whacko.


3 posted on 04/02/2017 8:43:09 PM PDT by vette6387
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To: Elderberry

What the hell is this article about?


4 posted on 04/02/2017 8:52:08 PM PDT by jiggyboy (!qa)
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To: All

Sounds like she knows actual law; what an extremely rare things for judges and lawyers today.


5 posted on 04/02/2017 8:54:17 PM PDT by veracious (UN = OIC = Islam ; Democrats may change USAgov completely, just amend USConstitution)
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To: veracious

Between this case, the Branch Davidian disaster and Baylor University’s murdering basketball player and multiple football rapists, there must be something very, very wrong in the water in Waco, Texas.


6 posted on 04/02/2017 9:27:10 PM PDT by Eleven Bravo 6 319thID
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To: jiggyboy

Trying to get murderers set free.


7 posted on 04/02/2017 9:30:23 PM PDT by TexasGator
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To: Elderberry; jiggyboy
Judge Criss;

"If the order is verbal then it is not going to be enforceable without some verifiable record of exactly what is ordered. And then there is the whole issue of due process in the securing of an order without prior notice to the other side."

[snip]

“We have been put in a position of not really knowing if an order was issued by the Court, what the exact order was, what the circumstance of the order being rendered were and how to acquire any more information about the supposed order. This makes it impossible to advise our clients and render effective representation. This makes it impossible to make an effective record. Our adversary cannot serve as our intermediary with the Court. Furthermore our not being able to provide input to the Court prior to court orders being rendered causes multiple problems.”

[snip]

"To add the indignity of having the prosecution demand we play in their sandbox to avoid further waiving our client's Constitutional rights is problematic on many ethical, constitutional and appellate levels."

[from the article at Radio Legendary, with a bit more quoted from https://www.dropbox.com/s/p0u3ok6ezr4ojf4/Strother%20letter.pdf?dl=0]

Paul Looney (experienced, veteran criminal defense attorney, Houston);

"I am spending all of my hours shopping bookstore to bookstore for the Book of Waco," Looney said, "because the criminal procedures being followed in Waco are not in any of the $400,000 worth of books I have in my law library."

Sound of silence in Twin Peaks biker case drawing ire


Sounds of Silence
[Simon & Garfunkle]
(names sound like a
law firm, doesn't it?)

8 posted on 04/02/2017 9:49:55 PM PDT by BlueDragon (they were not listening then, they're not listening still...)
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To: TexasGator

Trying to get murderers set free.


If this is so true, why does the prosecution keep delaying going to trial?


9 posted on 04/02/2017 10:16:32 PM PDT by chaosagent (Remember, no matter how you slice it, forbidden fruit still tastes the sweetest!)
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To: Elderberry

Sounds like she has been busy


10 posted on 04/02/2017 10:29:30 PM PDT by easternsky
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To: Elderberry

That was painful to read. Really bad writing style in need of a serious editor.


11 posted on 04/02/2017 10:49:42 PM PDT by Reno89519 (Drain the Swamp is not party specific. Lyn' Ted is still a liar, Good riddance to him.)
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To: BlueDragon; Elderberry
I had left out a potion I'd copied from the dropbox link to former Judge Criss (acting as defense attorney) letter to Judge Strother, and DA Renya.

"I take no issue with the Court's authority to have defendants on bond make appearances in court in person. I do strenuously object to "court" being held in the prosecutor's office. I object to a status conference being parlayed into a mechanism for the Court to assist the prosecution in executing a search warrant issued by another judge.

[bold font for emphasis, added]

Some 'money quote' there, eh? The Book of Waco. What store do they sell that law-book in? 'Local rules of the Court' can't be going against normal, widely known-of law pertaining to criminal procedure, one would think. But if I say such things, then -- according to some jackwagons around here-- I'm a 'jailhouse lawyer'.

Former Judge Criss. Jailhouse lawyer! (?)

Defense Attorney Looney. Jailhouse lawyer! (?)

I've been enjoying how the jackwagons keep having the wheels come off little crap-wagon loads of "stories" (loaded with the filth of false accusation -- against FREEPERS) they keep dragging through FR threads...


12 posted on 04/02/2017 11:02:26 PM PDT by BlueDragon (they were not listening then, they're not listening still...)
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To: Elderberry

The soup sure is getting thick in wacko town of Waco and they haven’t even addressed the swat team like staging of all the police presence there that day.

This probably won’t be said and done for quite a few more years. Until then; pass the popcorn and say a prayer thanking God you weren’t there by chance that day.


13 posted on 04/02/2017 11:41:42 PM PDT by Boomer (The modern day leftist dems are the party of criminally insane propagandists.)
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To: Elderberry

Sounds like a “Good Old Boys” network that bit off more than it can chew; it appears to be deparately trying to delay, obfuscate, and muddy the waters to protect its members.


14 posted on 04/03/2017 4:24:25 AM PDT by marktwain (President Trump and his supporters are the Resistance. His opponents are the Reactionaries.)
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To: Salamander

More of the Texas Two-Step. Who would have thought bringing these subhumans to justice would be so fraught with difficulty? These bikers must be millionaire geniuses! Evil people . . .


15 posted on 04/03/2017 4:30:23 AM PDT by BraveMan
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To: Elderberry

This has to be one of the most poorly written documents I have ever seen. It is simply not worth the time to attempt to decipher.


16 posted on 04/03/2017 5:01:36 AM PDT by norwaypinesavage (The stone age didn't end because we ran out of stones.)
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To: Elderberry

When a FORMER judge, now a hire-by-the-hour criminal defense lawyer, challenges a warrant for DNA, you know the defs are in deep trouble.

#1, If the DNA did not link her client to the gun used to murder others, she would not be challenging the warrant to obtain the DNA.

#2, In a case such this, expecting an appeals court to reverse such a search warrant is a Hail Mary, but she has to burn the retainer hours somehow.

#3, Even if she won, they would simply draw more DNA under a new warrant.

#4, If this is all she has, the def is in big trouble.

All the jailhouse lawyer / motorcycle scum loving people here will reply to this post saying I’m wrong, how this is all a miscarriage of justice, etc.

But here is the reality. Many dozens of motorcycle club members, defined by Texas law as a criminal street gang, got into a shootout in a rural Texas county. 9 people ended up dead.

Many here cry about the DA throwing the book at all involved. Sorry, but he is simply following Texas law.
Already lawyers for some minor defs are cutting deals for reduced sentences in exchange for testimony.

Despite all the BS, with 9 people dead, 4 to 7 of these defs will get Death or LOWP, as they deserve, a dozen or so will get 3-5, and many more 180 days in County.

Sorry, but the defs came to McClennon County looking for trouble.... and they found it... in the law.


17 posted on 04/03/2017 5:10:24 AM PDT by Strac6 ("We sleep safe in our beds only because rough men stand ready to visit violence on the enemy.")
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To: TexasGator

If that’s all she has, her Def is in deep trouble.


18 posted on 04/03/2017 5:11:59 AM PDT by Strac6 ("We sleep safe in our beds only because rough men stand ready to visit violence on the enemy.")
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To: Reno89519

Probably written quickly as the lights were dim and the bartender had announced last call.


19 posted on 04/03/2017 5:13:58 AM PDT by Strac6 ("We sleep safe in our beds only because rough men stand ready to visit violence on the enemy.")
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To: jiggyboy; P-Marlowe

It sounds like this judge is opposed to secret or verbal or any other search warrant or evidence that isn’t readily known and knowable to all interested parties.


20 posted on 04/03/2017 5:26:02 AM PDT by xzins (Retired US Army chaplain. Those who truly support our troops pray for their victory.)
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