1. Recent Cases: Police Should Not Destroy Initial Notes.State v. W.B. 205 NJ 588 (2011)
After
producing their final reports, law enforcement officers may not destroy
contemporaneous notes of interviews and observations at the scene of a
crime. Our criminal discovery rules provide for discovery of all
statements of witnesses and police reports that are in the possession,
custody and control of the prosecutor. Rule 3:13-3 encompasses the
writings of any police officer under the prosecutors supervision as the
chief law enforcement officer of the county. If a case is referred to
the prosecutor following arrest by a police officer, or on a complaint
by a police officer, local law enforcement is part of the prosecutors
office for discovery purposes. Implementation of this retention and
disclosure requirement is deferred for thirty days to allow prosecutors
sufficient time to educate police officers. Thereafter, if an officers
notes are lost or destroyed before trial, a defendant, upon request, may
be entitled to an adverse inference charge molded to the facts of the
case.
For more information go to
http://njwillsprobatelaw.com/
E372.html?id=2786&a=
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2. Officer Not Always Permitted to Render Opinion.State v. McLean205 NJ 438 (2011)
The
opinion offered by the officer does not meet the requirements needed to
qualify it as a lay opinion and permitting the officer to testify about
his opinion invaded the fact-finding province of the jury. This case
involved a drug dealing conviction where a detective, after testifying
about transactions seen from an unmarked car while on undercover drug
surveillance, opined that they were narcotics sale.
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3. Spanish Refusal Language Required Retroactively.State v Rodriquez-Alejo419 NJ Super. 33 (App. Div. 2011)
The court affordedState v. Marquez,
202 N.J. 485 (2010) pipeline retroactivity and reversed a breathalyzer
refusal conviction because the Spanish-speaking defendant was not read
the standard form information in Spanish. Although not raised on appeal,
the court also noted that the conviction was flawed pursuant to our
recent holding inState v. Schmidt,
414 N.J. Super. 194 (App. Div.2010), because he was not read the second
portion of the standard form when he did not produce a sufficient
breath sample. |
4. Thank you to the Friends and Clients who attended our Summer Happy Hour
Friday, July 8. We plan on making this party down the shore an annual event.
5. Next Events:
7/23/11 Ocean Grove Biathlon 2M run, 300yd swim Ocean Grove fast short event. 9am
7/26/11 Tuesday night Raritan Valley Road Runners RVRR 5k summer series New Brunswick Buccleuch Park pizza
7/30/11 Sea Girt 1 mile swim
7/30/11Parker House Fun Run & Beer Party Sea Girt, NJ July 24, 20102 mile9:47 free beer
7/31/11 JFK Hospital Roosevelt Park 5k Edison 9am
8/13 Asbury Park 5k 8:30 jsrc.org [You can do both the Triathlon and 5k in same morning]
8/14/11 Ray Licata Long Branch Ocean Mile Swim 1 mile, & 100 yards for kids, 8amLong Branch NJ 8am
8/20 Bradley Beach 5k
8/28/11 CJRR Fall Classic 8:30 Cranford
Elder Law, Estate Planning & Probate- New ideas to expand & excel your practice
Saturday, August 6, 2011 at 2:00pm - 3:30pm
Metro Toronto Convention Centre
ABA Annual Meeting Toronto, Canada
Learn
from nationally recognized experts on using new techniques to improve
service to Elder Law & Estate clients. Forms & briefs will be
provided to all attendees.
Tentative Speakers:Jay Foonberg, Esq. - Author of Best Sellers How to
Start and Build a Law Practice and How to get and keep good clients, Beverly Hills, CA
Kenneth A. Vercammen, Esq. - co-author Nuts & Bolts of Elder Law, Edison, NJ
Parag Patel, Esq. Iselin, NJ
Elder Law program Primary Sponsors: General Practice Section
Co-sponsors: ABA Commission on Law & Aging, Health Law Section,YLD, Senior Lawyers Division, Real Probate & Trust Section, Tax Law Section
Topics:
Getting referrals from other professionals
The aftermath of the Terry Schiavo case and Living Wills.
Forms you can use
Email newsletters
How to manage telephone conversations with your clients
Marketing with written fee agreements
-Ethics and marketing without violating the Rules of Professional Conduct
Elder
Law may be the biggest practice area of your career. There are 50,000
baby boomers/ day turning 60 and soon to be on Social Security and will
need legal advise. Elder Law is one of the biggest growth fields.
[Contact Kenneth Vercammen, Esq. for program information 732-572-0500]
Contact American Bar Associations ITS at 800-421-0459 for ABA meeting registration
http://njwillsprobatelaw.com/toronto.htm
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Editorial
Assistance provided by Katarina Kozakova. Ms. Kozakova will be entering
her senior year at Rutgers University and is currently participating in
Kenneth Vercammens summer internship program.
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