Well, he talks about fear being a big problem, and then sandwiches that bit of ham with all sorts of skeery talk.
If you'd like to read what former Federal Reserve King Alan Greenspan said to the Economic Club of New York today, Yahoo News has most of his speech here.
Here are the tidbits that everyone is going with (IHT, Bloomberg, Financial Times):
... the current worldwide recession will "surely be the longest and deepest" since the 1930s ...(I read this to mean that it's going to be as bad or worse as that of the Great Depression)
"[t]o stabilise the American banking system and restore normal lending, additional TARP funds will be required ..." (how many trillions is he thinking about? Does no one remember the German printing presses?)
the plummet "cannot persist indefinitely...." (this too shall pass?)
the housing market must recover for this horror to end, and "the prospect of stable home prices remains many months in the future...." (wasn't this the guy that everyone's blaming for the housing bubble mess?)
The stock market is being impacted by "a degree of fear not experienced since the early 20th century .... Certainly by any historical measure, world stock prices are cheap. But as history also counsels, they could get a lot cheaper before they turn."(I read this as please, people, keep buying cuz that's all that's keeping this thing afloat.))
2/18/2009
1/16/2009
No Matter What, You're Having a Better Month Than Judge Samuel Kent. Here's Why
Judge Samuel Kent is the first federal judge in HISTORY to be charged with sex crimes, and he's coming up for trial on January 26th. Seems the prosecution not only has two former employees willing to testify against him, but they've added an Obstruction of Justice charge. Wo Nelly.
That obstruction charge kicks it over the fence in my book. But, why drone on here, when Mike Lowe's Criminal Lawyer blog does it so well?
Go read all about Ol' Judge Kent at the Lowe blog. Kent is done.
That obstruction charge kicks it over the fence in my book. But, why drone on here, when Mike Lowe's Criminal Lawyer blog does it so well?
Go read all about Ol' Judge Kent at the Lowe blog. Kent is done.
1/15/2009
Who Is Jose Baez Besides Being Casey Anthony's Attorney?
After reading today at Examiner.Com that Jose Baez's past experience involves winning 32 out of 34 trials while working as an intern at a Public Defender's Office as well as doing internet training at Lexis-Nexis, I was shocked.
How did this guy get to be the lead counsel on the biggest case of the year? And however snooty this may sound, Casey Anthony BETTER have a dream team if this is the type of experience we're talking about here.
Most defense attorneys work years before they take on felony cases of this magnitude, where the death penalty is involved. And that's before you add in all the media hoopla. What gives?
Here's what I found out about Jose Baez.
1. First of all, his website doesn't allow you to read his bio page - it just clicks back to the home page when you attempt to go there. Nice, expensive website.
2. WESH-TV in Orlando reports that it has checked out his recent past experience in their records; however when you compare this to the Baez site with its four "success stories," it's duplicative.
Plus, there's only FOUR and they are the kind of wins you'd expect an aggressive, Young-Turk type of defense attorney to have on his site at this point. NOTHING near to the complexity of the Anthony matter.
3. You can't pull up his information at Martindale, when is a site owned by Lexis - purportedly, his former employer. He's not in Martindale???? What??????
4. The Florida Bar Association shows Jose Angel Baez to be in good standing with them, with offices in Kissamee, Florida. He was admitted to practice in September 2005.
5. I found a site, avvo.com, that reports Jose Baez got his law degree from St. Thomas School of Law - while Investigation Discovery quotes Baez's web site as Baez having a Bachelor's of Science Degree in Criminology from Florida State University. Same source also quotes the Baez site as Baez working for the Public Defender's Office since 1995.
Okay.
We know that he's been licensed to practice for around 3 years when he takes the Casey Anthony case.
We know that he's got an office in Kissimmee, and he's paid for a very nice website.
We know he's not listed in Martindale (a real red flag to lawyers out there).
Today, I can't get anything off the website. However, it appears that those seeking information about Baez have had access to it, and it's been from his own website that they've reported his "success stories" as well as his background and experience.
Personally, I'll give Jose Baez this: as a trial lawyer, you go into a courtroom and take responsibility for another human being.
It takes a whole lot of chutzpah to do that job. Courage, huevos, whatever you want to call it.
And it's clear that Jose Baez has that in spades.
What's not clear is what the heck Jose Baez thinks he's doing, representing Casey Anthony. Her defense is something that even the most seasoned of advocates would find challenging.
He's gone out and got himself some co-counsel. Good. Great.
Because there's a thing called "ineffective assistance of counsel" that every jailhouse lawyer can chant like a mantra upon appeal and if my search of the web is all we've got to put in an appellate brief here, well - Katie Bar the Door.
Point of Error comin'.
Unless, of course, on the first day of trial we get a Surprise Change in Lead Counsel -- a Mystery Lawyer who reveals himself or herself as things tee up (wouldn't that make a great Nancy Grace Bombshell?)....
Update: After a self-imposed gag order on posting regarding the Casey Anthony Case, I have begun posting again beginning June 3, 2011. For reasons on the gag, and why I decided to lift it, you can read my June 3d post.
You May Also Be Interested in Elements State Must Prove to Win - Three Prongs to First Degree Murder in Florida and Circumstantial Evidence vs. Direct Evidence.
How did this guy get to be the lead counsel on the biggest case of the year? And however snooty this may sound, Casey Anthony BETTER have a dream team if this is the type of experience we're talking about here.
Most defense attorneys work years before they take on felony cases of this magnitude, where the death penalty is involved. And that's before you add in all the media hoopla. What gives?
Here's what I found out about Jose Baez.
1. First of all, his website doesn't allow you to read his bio page - it just clicks back to the home page when you attempt to go there. Nice, expensive website.
2. WESH-TV in Orlando reports that it has checked out his recent past experience in their records; however when you compare this to the Baez site with its four "success stories," it's duplicative.
Plus, there's only FOUR and they are the kind of wins you'd expect an aggressive, Young-Turk type of defense attorney to have on his site at this point. NOTHING near to the complexity of the Anthony matter.
3. You can't pull up his information at Martindale, when is a site owned by Lexis - purportedly, his former employer. He's not in Martindale???? What??????
4. The Florida Bar Association shows Jose Angel Baez to be in good standing with them, with offices in Kissamee, Florida. He was admitted to practice in September 2005.
5. I found a site, avvo.com, that reports Jose Baez got his law degree from St. Thomas School of Law - while Investigation Discovery quotes Baez's web site as Baez having a Bachelor's of Science Degree in Criminology from Florida State University. Same source also quotes the Baez site as Baez working for the Public Defender's Office since 1995.
Okay.
We know that he's been licensed to practice for around 3 years when he takes the Casey Anthony case.
We know that he's got an office in Kissimmee, and he's paid for a very nice website.
We know he's not listed in Martindale (a real red flag to lawyers out there).
Today, I can't get anything off the website. However, it appears that those seeking information about Baez have had access to it, and it's been from his own website that they've reported his "success stories" as well as his background and experience.
Personally, I'll give Jose Baez this: as a trial lawyer, you go into a courtroom and take responsibility for another human being.
It takes a whole lot of chutzpah to do that job. Courage, huevos, whatever you want to call it.
And it's clear that Jose Baez has that in spades.
What's not clear is what the heck Jose Baez thinks he's doing, representing Casey Anthony. Her defense is something that even the most seasoned of advocates would find challenging.
He's gone out and got himself some co-counsel. Good. Great.
Because there's a thing called "ineffective assistance of counsel" that every jailhouse lawyer can chant like a mantra upon appeal and if my search of the web is all we've got to put in an appellate brief here, well - Katie Bar the Door.
Point of Error comin'.
Unless, of course, on the first day of trial we get a Surprise Change in Lead Counsel -- a Mystery Lawyer who reveals himself or herself as things tee up (wouldn't that make a great Nancy Grace Bombshell?)....
Update: After a self-imposed gag order on posting regarding the Casey Anthony Case, I have begun posting again beginning June 3, 2011. For reasons on the gag, and why I decided to lift it, you can read my June 3d post.
You May Also Be Interested in Elements State Must Prove to Win - Three Prongs to First Degree Murder in Florida and Circumstantial Evidence vs. Direct Evidence.
1/14/2009
ABA's Latest Ethics Opinion on Contract Attorneys or Outsourcing Lawyers
The American Bar Association has issued a new ethics opinion dealing with outsourcing lawyers as well as freelancing lawyers aka contract attorneys (not the agency temps). To read the full document, you can see it as either html or pdf at the ABA site. To read what the talking heads are telling you that ABA Ethics Opinion 08-451 means, check out:
The Long View
Criminal Lawyer Library Blog
Legal Ethics Forum
Bottom Line: As shocking as it may be, the American Bar Association is giving its okey-dokey to outsourcing legal services (read that, INDIA) as well as giving a big thumbs-up to contract attorneys, or freelance lawyers. As someone who has been a freelance attorney for many years, it's about time. This outsourcing thing, though: scary stuff - on so many levels. Stupid, really.
The Long View
Criminal Lawyer Library Blog
Legal Ethics Forum
Bottom Line: As shocking as it may be, the American Bar Association is giving its okey-dokey to outsourcing legal services (read that, INDIA) as well as giving a big thumbs-up to contract attorneys, or freelance lawyers. As someone who has been a freelance attorney for many years, it's about time. This outsourcing thing, though: scary stuff - on so many levels. Stupid, really.
12/29/2008
Will Casey Anthony's Brother Lee Anthony Be Charged?
My Fox Orlando is reporting today that there's talk Lee Anthony may face criminal charges as well as his sister, Casey Anthony: "Casey Anthony's Brother Could Also Face Charges." They are reporting it's gonna be "aiding and abetting" or "obstruction of justice."
Personally, I think this is just rumor right now. And, while there are folk that think Casey Anthony had to have an accomplice, I don't know that Lee Anthony would fit that role.
From the videos and interviews that I've seen, it looked like Lee Anthony was undertaking his own informal investigation into Caylee's whereabouts -- and if there's anything to this rumor, I'm betting it has something to do with Lee acting as an "investigator" in this case and getting in the way of the law enforcement authorities.
Personally, I think this is just rumor right now. And, while there are folk that think Casey Anthony had to have an accomplice, I don't know that Lee Anthony would fit that role.
From the videos and interviews that I've seen, it looked like Lee Anthony was undertaking his own informal investigation into Caylee's whereabouts -- and if there's anything to this rumor, I'm betting it has something to do with Lee acting as an "investigator" in this case and getting in the way of the law enforcement authorities.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)