Pammy Maye competent to stand trial, attorney says

Maye is accused of killing the 5-year-old boy and putting his body in a sewage drain last month.

COLUMBUS, Ohio — An attorney representing the woman charged in the death of 5-year-old Darnell Taylor said she is competent to stand trial.

Pammy Maye appeared in Franklin County Court of Common Pleas on Monday for a scheduled hearing. Earlier this month, she pleaded not guilty to charges of aggravated murder, tampering with evidence and abuse of a corpse in connection with Darnell’s death.

Sam Shamansky, Maye’s attorney, said Maye is likely to change her plea to not guilty by insanity at a later date. 

Shmanksy also asked the court for a private mental evaluation. But, the judge hasn’t yet made a decision on that evaluation.

10TV’s Tara Jabour spoke to former Franklin County Prosecutor Ron O’Brien about why an attorney would ask for a private mental evaluation.

“This case involves the death of a 5-year-old by someone who was a custodian of them. So there are psychologists and psychiatrists that specialize in adults that cause harm and kill children,” said O’Brien.

On Feb. 14, an AMBER Alert was issued for Darnell after he was reported missing to police. Maye’s husband had called 911 and said that his wife had killed the little boy and had fled the home. Later that morning, Maye’s car was found abandoned in a Cleveland suburb.

Maye was found in the Cleveland area less than two days later and was taken into custody.

After interviewing Maye, detectives learned that Taylor’s body might have been placed in a sewage drain on Marsdale Avenue in Franklin County. Authorities later found his body there.

When Maye and Shamansky appeared in court earlier this month, the attorney asked the magistrate to consider transferring Maye to a secure psychiatric facility. But the

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Montrose judge wrongly terminated woman’s parental rights | Courts

A Montrose County judge terminated a woman’s legal rights over her child after improperly denying her request for an attorney, Colorado’s second-highest court decided on Thursday.

Under Colorado law, parents who are involved in child neglect cases have the right to legal representation at “every stage of the proceedings.” They can, however, choose to proceed by themselves.

A three-judge panel for the Court of Appeals acknowledged the mother, identified as M.O., was not happy with her appointed lawyer and wanted to go without representation in the near term. But M.O. did not give up her right to counsel altogether, and explicitly said she hoped she could work better with a new attorney.

“Even accepting that mother repeatedly expressed dissatisfaction with her lawyer,” wrote Judge Elizabeth L. Harris in the Sept. 7 opinion, “a parent’s mere disagreement with initial counsel and a request for new counsel months in advance of the termination hearing is not conduct that manifests an intent to relinquish the right to counsel.”

Montrose County opened a child neglect case against M.O. and her infant in May 2021, based on concerns about M.O.’s behavior and unsanitary home conditions. She received an appointed attorney, but repeatedly voiced her frustration with his assistance.

M.O. agreed to continue working with her lawyer, but in late 2021 he moved to withdraw. District Court Judge D. Cory Jackson allowed him to do so.

When M.O. asked for a new lawyer, Jackson said he would consider it, but M.O. needed to fill out an application and “indicate to me what things that you’re going to be able to do to engage with an attorney that

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Las Vegas lawyer indicted in $460M ‘slip-and-fall’ scheme

LAS VEGAS (AP) — A longtime Las Vegas attorney was indicted Wednesday on federal charges that he orchestrated a $460 million Ponzi scheme spanning multiple states, from Nevada and Utah to California and Arizona.

The eight-count indictment accusing Matthew Wade Beasley of wire fraud and money laundering comes almost one year to the day after the personal injury attorney was shot and wounded by FBI agents at his $1.1 million home in Las Vegas, leading to a four-hour standoff that ended with his arrest. He was charged with assault on a federal officer.

Beasley has been in federal custody since the standoff — during which prosecutors have said the lawyer, then 49, “repeatedly confessed” to his involvement in the investment scheme while on the phone with a negotiator. Beasley remained in the house until FBI SWAT agents entered.

Jacqueline Tirinnanzi, Beasley’s attorney, declined to comment. Beasley has not yet entered a plea in the case.

According to the indictment, Beasley enlisted investors for a company that claimed to offer short-term loans with high interest rates to clients awaiting payment after settling their personal injury “slip-and-fall” cases. Authorities have said investors were promised a return of up to 13% within 90 days of investing their money.

But there were no clients, prosecutors said. Instead, according to the indictment, Beasley used new investor money to pay his earlier investors, creating the illusion that the company had real clients who were repaying the loans with interest.

Between 2017 and March 2022, when Beasley was arrested, hundreds of people invested more than $460 million into the scheme, according to the indictment. The attorney allegedly used that money to fund what prosecutors have described as an “opulent” lifestyle, including luxury homes and cars and recreational vehicles.

Beasley is scheduled to be arraigned Friday afternoon in

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Troconis attorney wants state’s attorney’s office, CSP investigators disqualified from case

The attorney for Michelle Troconis, who’s charged in connection to the disappearance and death of Jennifer Dulos, wants the entire Stamford/Norwalk State’s Attorney’s Office disqualified from her case and the future trial moved to a new venue. Attorney Jon Schoenhorn filed a motion for that during a brief hearing at the Stamford courthouse Tuesday. It comes in response to prosecutors’ attempt to remove Schoenhorn as Troconis’ counsel.

Troconis arrived at court Tuesday morning with her parents, sisters and other supporters. It was her first time appearing in person, rather than virtually, in about two years since she no longer lives in Connecticut. Presumably, it was to watch Schoenhorn fight the disqualification motion filed by the state last week, which said Schoenhorn may be called as a witness to testify at his client’s trial, creating a conflict of interest. Instead, that will be addressed at a hearing Nov. 29, along with Schoenhorn’s reciprocal motion to disqualify, not just the state’s attorney’s office, but also the Connecticut State Police Western District Major Crime Squad.

At issue is how Schoenhorn obtained a box of potential evidence with a sweatshirt that may be connected to Jennifer Dulos’ presumed murder by her estranged husband, Fotis Dulos, who killed himself in January 2020 while pending trial. He was Troconis’ boyfriend at the time. His suicide left her and fellow co-defendant Kent Mawhinney to be prosecuted in the case. Troconis is charged with conspiracy to commit murder, evidence of tampering, conspiracy to commit evidence of tampering and hindering the prosecution.

“The motion to disqualify that was filed against me last week was based on a clearly attorney client privileged statement that was given to an attorney. The state police took that statement, photographed it, made use of it, and that is the sole basis for the motion

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Trump Attorney Reportedly Blames Other Trump Attorney, Hires Her Own Attorney

one of Donald Trump‘s attorneys has reportedly hired an attorney of her own and is pointing the finger at yet another of the ex-president’s lawyers about an alleged false statement made earlier this year.

According to NBC News, Trump attorney bobb” data-ylk=”slk:Christina Bobb” class=”link “Christina Bob spoke to federal investigators last week about the June statement she signed that claimed Trump had turned over all documents related to a subpoena, and no longer had any classified material at Mar-a-Lago.

As the FBI search of Mar-a-Lago in August revealed, he still possessed hundreds of files.

Bobb told investigators she didn’t write the statement she signed, NBC News reported. She claimed it was drafted by Evan Corcoran, another Trump attorney. She signed it only after adding a disclaimer that said it was “based upon the information that has been provided to me.”

news/2022/oct/10/trump-lawyer-christina-bobb-mar-a-lago-certify-documents” data-ylk=”slk:The Guardian confirmed” class=”link “The Guardian confirmed that Bobb said she was instructed to sign the document at the direction of Corcoran despite not actually conducting the search for those records herself, and that she had insisted on the disclaimer.

Bobb was Trump’s custodian of records at the time. Both news organizations also reported that she said another Trump attorney, Boris Epshteyn, was involved.

In addition, NBC News reported that Bobb had retained Tampa-based criminal defense attorney John Lauro.

After the FBI discovered highly sensitive documents at Mar-a-Lago in August, former federal prosecutor Andrew Weissmann warned that both Bobb and Corcoran could face potential perjury and obstruction charges over the statement. He urged them to get “the best defense counsel you can possibly get.”

Now, according to the new reports, at least one of those attorneys is following his advice.

Legal minds on social media responded to the latest developments:

This

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Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is ordered to testify in abortion case after fleeing home to avoid subpoena

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxtonhas been ordered by a federal judge to testify in a high-profile abortion case just a week after he fled his home to avoid receiving a subpoena for the lawsuit.

The paxton-to-testify-in-an-abortion-lawsuit/” data-ylk=”slk:Dallas Morning News” class=”link “Dallas Morning News reports that US District Judge Robert Pitman ordered Mr Paxton to testify on Tuesday. He’s asking the attorney general’s office to explain how it plans to enforce the state’s wide-ranging abortion ban that threatens violators with prison time and hundreds of thousands in fines.

The case in question involves a group of Texas abortion funds that filed a lawsuit seeking legal protection for their work, which includes paying for flights, hotels, and other expenses of Texan women seeking to travel out of state for abortions.

The groups had to halt their work after the overturning of Roe v Wade earlier this year, which — due to Texas trigger laws — created a near total abortion ban in the state.

Mr Paxton has tried to avoid having to testify in the case. Last week Mr Paxton fled his home to avoid being served a subpoena related to the lawsuit. The process server said he witnessed Mr Paxton turn and run into his house when he approached and called the attorney general’s name.

“A few minutes later I saw Mr Paxton RAN from the door inside the garage towards the rear door behind the driver side,” the process server, Ernesto Martin Herrera, wrote in the affidavit. “I approached the truck, and loudly called him by his name and stated that I had court documents for him. Mr Paxton ignored me and kept heading for the truck.”

After Mr Paxton received negative press coverage for running away from the lawsuit, he claimed he felt threatened by the

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Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton Used His Wife as a Decoy to Avoid Being Served Abortion-Suit Subpoena

Ken Paxton is the attorney general of Texas, making him the top legal officer in the state. Given that title, you might think Paxton cares deeply about the law and takes great pains to set a good example for all Texans re: following it. But apparently, not so much! and not just because he loves to distort the law to make life miserable for countless residents of the Lone Star State!

The Texas Tribune paxton-subpoena-abortion-lawsuit”reports that the AG “fled his home” on Monday in order to avoid being a served a subpoena for a lawsuit over Texas’s draconian abortion law, according to an affidavit filed in federal court. According to process server Ernesto Martin Herrera, when he first knocked on Paxton’s door and said that he was there to deliver a legal document to the attorney general, the woman who answered told him that Paxton was on the phone and unavailable, to which Herrera responded that he would wait. About one hour later, “a black Chevrolet Tahoe pulled into the driveway, and 20 minutes after that, Ken Paxton exited the house.”

At that point, Herrera says he walked up the driveway and called Paxton by name. “As soon as he saw me and heard me call his name out, he turned around and RAN back inside the house through the same door in the garage,” Herrera recounted in the sworn affidavit. But it gets better!

Per the Tribune:

Angela Paxton, [the attorney general’s wife and a state senator] then exited the house, got inside a Chevrolet truck in the driveway, started it and opened the doors. “A few minutes later I saw Mr. Paxton RAN from the door inside the garage towards the rear door behind the driver side,” Herrera wrote. “I approached the truck, and loudly

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New city attorney chosen for Champaign | keeping watch

CHAMPAIGN — A lawyer who has worked for the city of Champaign for five years has been chosen to serve as the new city attorney.

Thomas Yu, currently an assistant city attorney, will start in his new position Sept. 12, City Manager Dorothy David announced Tuesday.

Yu replaces Fred Stavins, city attorney for more than four decades, who retired May 20.

Yu has been practicing law for 21 years, and came to work for the city of Champaign in 2017.

He provides legal counsel for such city departments as planning and development, public works, police, human resources and METCAD and for the city Plan Commission, Zoning Board of Appeals and METCAD Policy Board, according to David.

Yu’s primary responsibilities as an assistant city attorney have been in the areas of litigation, zoning, subdivisions, public right-of-way, utilities, risk management, insurance and police matters, and he further manages claims, drafts contracts, develops land-use documents and negotiates intergovernmental agreements, David said.

Yu holds a bachelor’s degree from the University of Illinois and a law degree from Northern Illinois University College of Law.

Prior to working for the city, Yu was a senior associate for Thomas, Mamer & Haughey, Champaign, general counsel for Rotec Industries Inc. in Hampshire, senior associate for Jeep & Blazer, Hillside, and assistant state’s attorney for the Kane County State’s Attorney’s Office.

“In the history of the city of Champaign, there have only been four city attorneys — Al Tuxhorn, Kurt Froehlich, Dean Sweet and Frederick Stavins,” Yu said. “It is both an honor and a privilege to join this distinguished group and serve as the city’s next city attorney.”

David said Yu has been “an amazing asset” to the city.

“Tom’s extensive legal expertise, comprehensive knowledge of the responsibilities of municipal government and his ability to provide thoughtful

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Disney+’s New Marvel Series Leans into Silliness, for Better and Worse

Disney+’s She-Hulk: Attorney at Law is a very, very silly show.

Don’t get me wrong. She-Hulk: Attorney at Law is exactly the sort of silly show you should be expecting from a series called She-Hulk: Attorney at Law. It’s broad, bright and eager to serve the audience with a wink and a nudge. It’s loose to the point of near formlessness, boasting a clear theme and a savvy feminist streak, but it doesn’t seem to even be aspiring to stakes or a distinctive style.

More from The Hollywood Reporter

Based on the four half-hour episodes sent to critics, She-Hulk is more Ally McBeal than The Good Fightas legally focused comedies go, closer to the sort of relentlessly meta tweaking of classic sitcom tropes characteristic of the early episodes of WandaVision than the darker, richer undercurrents characteristic of the later episodes. Approached on its own terms, She-Hulk: Attorney at Law is zippy, amusing and laden with Easter eggs, but anybody looking for “more” — more darkness, more drama, more cohesion — will be frustrated.

That frustration could come almost immediately, because Jessica Gao’s pilot, working with a character created by Stan Lee and John Buscema and expanded in various comic book iterations with varying amounts of levity and fourth wall breaking, begins with a fake-out. Deputy district attorney Jennifer Walters (Tatiana Maslany) is about to head into a completely irrelevant trial, and her paralegal/best friend Nikki (Ginger Gonzaga) suggests that if all else fails in court, she can just hulk out. The idea of ​​a show like this starting without a perfunctory origin story feels refreshing for maybe two seconds, until Jen turns to the camera and says, “It’s true. I am a Hulk,” launching into exactly that perfunctory origin story, which takes up nearly the

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Top lawyers hired by those linked to Georgia election probe

ATLANTA (AP) — In the state investigation spurred by then-President Donald Trump’s call to Georgia’s top election official, people who have been called to testify — or who might be — about potential interference in the 2020 presidential contest are turning to high-profile lawyers.

Trump has hired Drew Findling, one of Atlanta’s most prominent criminal defense attorneys who is perhaps best known for representing rap stars. US Sen. Lindsey Graham, RS.C., has brought on Trump’s former White House counsel Don McGahn, who was in federal court in Atlanta last week as part of a legal team fighting a subpoena for Graham.

No one has been charged with a crime in the investigation and both Trump and Graham have denied any wrongdoing, but the moves come at a particularly precarious legal moment for Trump.

FBI agents conducted an unprecedented search of his Florida estate on Monday in an unrelated investigation into whether Trump removed sensitive information from the White House. He also invoked his Fifth Amendment protection against self-incrimination on Wednesday as he testified under oath in the New York attorney general’s long-running civil investigation into his business dealings.

But the attorney hires in Atlanta suggest Trump and his allies are paying especially close attention to the investigation led by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis.

“You’re not going to go and hire an expensive lawyer unless either you want to send a message that, ‘You guys better come correct or my fancy lawyer will blow you out of the water,’ or you actually are worried,” said Caren Morrison, a Georgia State University law professor and former federal prosecutor.

Legal experts However warn that the hires alone don’t suggest that someone is the subject or target of an investigation.

“I don’t think that’s any indication that anybody’s about to be charged

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