THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2015
Social Media and risk of Public Inconvenience
The Oregon Court of Appeals decided today that someone posting obnoxious thoughts on social media sites to private groups of friends about potentially illegal behavior does NOT create a risk of "Public inconvenience," for the crime of 1st Degree Disorderly Conduct. The COA also helpfully noted "Katy testified, and everybody who might appear on MySpace or Facebook knows, that "lol" is an abbreviation of "laughing out loud."
Congrats to trial attorney Noah Horst & appellate attorney Erik Blumenthal for the win!
Full slip opinion here:
Posted At 10:01 AM
Labels: Appeals
THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 2015
Court of Appeals reversal: State v. Marquez-Vela
In Oregon it is improper for 1 witness to offer an opinion on whether another witness is telling the truth."We have said before, and we will say it again, but this time with emphasis--we really mean it.... The assessment of credibility is for the trier of fact[.]" State v.Milbradt.
Today the Court of Appeals reinforced that rule with its opinion in State v. Marquez-Vela, which reverses a conviction for murder. The COA found that failure to exclude a police officer's opinion testimony that "defendant, during the interrogation, "was dishonest[,]" "was untruthful[,]" "was lying about the whole situation[,]" and "was selectively leaving out details that he thought [were] harmful to him"--may have "colored the jury's consideration of that issue." And, "Thus, the erroneous admission of evidence in this case relates to a central factual issue that was the lynchpin of the defense--whether defendant had "blanked out" and was too intoxicated to form the intent to commit murder. The jury's determination of that issue hinged on defendant's credibility, and we conclude that the trial court's error was not harmless."
Congrats to appellate lawyer Robin Jones and trial lawyer John Kolega!
Full slip opinion here:
Posted At 10:01 AM
Labels: Appeals Reversal Witness