The CNMI Bar Association has announced that Judge Mark W. Bennett will present a CLE presentation on implicit bias in jury selection at our Thursday bar meeting. The Bar Association also circulated his article, Unraveling the Gordian Knot of Implicit Bias in Jury Selection: the Problems of Judge-Dominated Voir Dire, the Failed Promise of Batson, and Proposed Solutions, published in Harvard Law and Policy Review in February 2010.
I think most lawyers are aware of implicit bias--by themselves and their colleagues, from judges, clients, witnesses, and jurors. It's somewhat a human phenomenon to engage in racial, gender, language, and other stereotyping, even when we fight against it.
The article mentions the IAT, an online "test" to help measure your hidden tendencies. The Implicit Association Test may hold surprises for you, if you dare take it. It seems very simplistic in its premises, but I think it can be used as a personal tool for exploring one's own potential for implicit biases.
The most positive note in the article by Judge Bennett is the power of professionalism and training to reduce and eliminate the implicit-preference tendencies. This effect was seen in both emergency room professionals and police. As Judge Bennett mentions, it is imperative that we achieve similar results in the justice system/judiciary.
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Monday, April 5, 2010
Open for Domestic Intake
The Marianas Office is open this week (April 5-9, 2010) for intake of domestic cases. These typically include divorce, paternity and child support, adoption, and guardianship.
Intake hours are from 8 AM to noon and 1 PM to 4 PM Monday through Thursday; and 8 AM to 9 AM Friday.
Intake hours are from 8 AM to noon and 1 PM to 4 PM Monday through Thursday; and 8 AM to 9 AM Friday.
Thursday, April 1, 2010
New Case, New Duty
The U.S. Supreme Court issued a decision dated March 31, 2010 that recognizes for the first time a constitutional duty of criminal defense counsel to advise their clients of possible immigration consequences of plea agreements. Padilla v. Kentucky involved a situation where the attorney misinformed the criminal defendant, advising him not to worry about immigration consequences of a plea agreement because he had been in the US for a long time (40 years).
The majority opinion (Justices Stevens, Kennedy, Ginsburg, Breyer, and Sotomayor) places on criminal defense counsel a duty to not only refrain from giving misinformation, but to actively provide a warning that is accurate about the possible immigration consequences of a guilty plea (or conviction). The majority held that
In reaching the decision, the majority found that informed consideration of possible deportation can be helpful to both prosecution and defense, as it will give leverage to the prosecution to convince a defendant to avoid the risk of deportation by pleading guilty to non-deportable crimes, and aid the defense counsel by giving them the opportunity to provide a real benefit to their clients if they can come up with a deal that avoids deportation.
The concurring opinion (Justices Alito and Roberts) enumerates some of the very real difficulties counsel will have in living up to such obligation. It also notes how this is a "dramatic departure from precedent" and cites a Cornell Law Review article by Chin and Holmes that found that "virtually all jurisdictions--including eleven federal circuits, more than thirty states, and the District of Columbia--hold that defense counsel need not discuss with their clients the collateral consequences of a conviction, including deportation."
The CNMI Supreme Court was one such court that had considered the issue in the case CNMI v. Shaunglan Chen and ruled against the alien defendant who sought to withdraw her guilty plea for ineffective assistance of counsel when counsel had not provided information about the deportation consequences of her plea agreement.
Obviously, this case will mean some changes by criminal defense counsel are necessary when representing alien defendants. Because the CNMI is under US immigration now, (although in the transition stage), the consequences for aliens pleading guilty or being found guilty of crimes here will be the same as for aliens in the rest of the US. No doubt there will be useful resources (like books, magazine articles, and online articles) to aid criminal lawyers with their duty.
Keeping up-to-date will be the real challenge.
And just to be complete, there was a dissent (Justices Scalia and Thomas).
The majority opinion (Justices Stevens, Kennedy, Ginsburg, Breyer, and Sotomayor) places on criminal defense counsel a duty to not only refrain from giving misinformation, but to actively provide a warning that is accurate about the possible immigration consequences of a guilty plea (or conviction). The majority held that
"counsel must advise her client regarding the risk of deportation...
We too have previously recognized that "preserving the client's right to remain in the United States may be more important to the client than any potential jail sentence."
In reaching the decision, the majority found that informed consideration of possible deportation can be helpful to both prosecution and defense, as it will give leverage to the prosecution to convince a defendant to avoid the risk of deportation by pleading guilty to non-deportable crimes, and aid the defense counsel by giving them the opportunity to provide a real benefit to their clients if they can come up with a deal that avoids deportation.
The concurring opinion (Justices Alito and Roberts) enumerates some of the very real difficulties counsel will have in living up to such obligation. It also notes how this is a "dramatic departure from precedent" and cites a Cornell Law Review article by Chin and Holmes that found that "virtually all jurisdictions--including eleven federal circuits, more than thirty states, and the District of Columbia--hold that defense counsel need not discuss with their clients the collateral consequences of a conviction, including deportation."
The CNMI Supreme Court was one such court that had considered the issue in the case CNMI v. Shaunglan Chen and ruled against the alien defendant who sought to withdraw her guilty plea for ineffective assistance of counsel when counsel had not provided information about the deportation consequences of her plea agreement.
Obviously, this case will mean some changes by criminal defense counsel are necessary when representing alien defendants. Because the CNMI is under US immigration now, (although in the transition stage), the consequences for aliens pleading guilty or being found guilty of crimes here will be the same as for aliens in the rest of the US. No doubt there will be useful resources (like books, magazine articles, and online articles) to aid criminal lawyers with their duty.
Keeping up-to-date will be the real challenge.
And just to be complete, there was a dissent (Justices Scalia and Thomas).
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