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Tuesday, February 18, 2014
Monday, February 17, 2014
Stop Government Oppression
by Robert L. Vogel
In my last trial, there were several instances in which the government tried to misuse its power. I defend people accused of crimes because the government does this. They will come after you with all their power to crush you. There is a mandate, handed down by the U.S. Supreme Court that says that a prosecutor is to "Do Justice." They may strike with a heavy blow, but not an unfair one.
Yet, time and again, from the arrest and investigation, through the trial, there is an abuse of power. We NEED trial attorneys willing to step up and fight for individuals against the power of the State. We need trial attorneys who will defend the little guy, the guy who can't plunk down a years pay, attorneys who will work for the $40 per hour the State of Tennessee pays (they haven't raised the rate in over two decades, I believe), or the $125 per hour the Federal court's pay and still be willing to believe in their case and fight for them.
We need attorneys out there who are willing to take the government to the mat and say "PROVE IT", prove your case or let my client go. We need attorneys who are not going to compromise their clients because it is easier and expeditious to do so.
We see government abuses everyday. We see police who don't respect the 4th amendment. We see trial judges who won't suppress illegally obtained evidence. We see prosecutors and judges worrying about the electorate and the vote they will get next time instead of doing the right thing on a case by case basis. We see prosecutors rewarded by the number of cases prosecuted and sentenced.
Nobody is out there looking for justice. Who will do it. It must be the trial lawyers, the solo practitioner, the small firm, the guy who starts out taking appointments because he believes in helping people. We have to stand up to the machine that would grind us and our clients into the dirt they use to build more of their for profit prisons.
I'll leave you with a video of one of my personal heroes and one of the most respected trial attorneys in America.
Gerry Spence on Government Oppression
Robert Vogel may be contacted at his law firm in Knoxville, TN by calling 865-357-1949 or by emailing rlvogel@robertvogellaw.com
www.robertvogellaw.com
In my last trial, there were several instances in which the government tried to misuse its power. I defend people accused of crimes because the government does this. They will come after you with all their power to crush you. There is a mandate, handed down by the U.S. Supreme Court that says that a prosecutor is to "Do Justice." They may strike with a heavy blow, but not an unfair one.
Yet, time and again, from the arrest and investigation, through the trial, there is an abuse of power. We NEED trial attorneys willing to step up and fight for individuals against the power of the State. We need trial attorneys who will defend the little guy, the guy who can't plunk down a years pay, attorneys who will work for the $40 per hour the State of Tennessee pays (they haven't raised the rate in over two decades, I believe), or the $125 per hour the Federal court's pay and still be willing to believe in their case and fight for them.
We need attorneys out there who are willing to take the government to the mat and say "PROVE IT", prove your case or let my client go. We need attorneys who are not going to compromise their clients because it is easier and expeditious to do so.
We see government abuses everyday. We see police who don't respect the 4th amendment. We see trial judges who won't suppress illegally obtained evidence. We see prosecutors and judges worrying about the electorate and the vote they will get next time instead of doing the right thing on a case by case basis. We see prosecutors rewarded by the number of cases prosecuted and sentenced.
Nobody is out there looking for justice. Who will do it. It must be the trial lawyers, the solo practitioner, the small firm, the guy who starts out taking appointments because he believes in helping people. We have to stand up to the machine that would grind us and our clients into the dirt they use to build more of their for profit prisons.
I'll leave you with a video of one of my personal heroes and one of the most respected trial attorneys in America.
Gerry Spence on Government Oppression
Robert Vogel may be contacted at his law firm in Knoxville, TN by calling 865-357-1949 or by emailing rlvogel@robertvogellaw.com
www.robertvogellaw.com
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Thursday, February 13, 2014
What's Wrong with Our Courts in America? Not enought trials and not enough trial lawyers.
We need two things to fix the system: more trials and more specially, qualified trial lawyers.
If we are going to fix our system of justice, civil and criminal, we need to adopt a system like the United Kingdom and have a special class of lawyers, trained beyond law school, and properly prepared to enter the courtroom and try cases. And, they must be dedicated to the jury system.
Then, we must set deadlines for the prosecution of cases. Either get them to trial or dismiss them if they are not gotten to trial.
I was in court the other day and the Judge was dressing down two attorneys who had let their case go three years without getting through the discovery process (investigation and exchange of evidence). The Judge was justifiably frustrated and gave them a deadline. Get it ready to try or I'm going to dismiss it for failure to prosecute, he told them. Great, good for you Judge. But, he waited three years to tell them that. That should be the message from the day the case is filed.
We don't need more rules. We don't need tort reform. In fact, tort reform is the opposite of what we need. It keeps cases away from the jury.
We need anyone who is preparing to enter into the legal system to know they will face a jury in a reasonable amount of time. This will slim down the ranks of cases. Now, defendants in both the civil and criminal realm know that they can count on cases hanging around for years. Thus, the guilty, those who injured people and those who have broken the law, can rely on a system that will let them evade and then bargain for a result.
Let twelve citizens at them instead, I say. Let their peers hear the case and decide what justice ought to be. That is what the Constitution provided. That is the expectation of the jury system. Have a contest to determine who is right and what justice looks like.
The power of that system remains in the hands of the people. It gives the people a chance to decide what justice looks like in their society. It is an amazing and wonderful system that is currently being abused and misused.
The universal complaint is that our court system is bogged down. There are too many cases. That is followed often by the corollary that those cases are mostly frivolous. That assumption is untrue, as are most generalized assumptions, but, there are likely some weak cases out there. And one can always find an example of a case that seems absurd. But, the majority of cases brought have some merit.
The problem is most cases are never tested in front of a jury. The jury system is not working because people are not using it. Instead, they throw paper at each other for a couple of years, jockeying for advantage. When there is no paper left to throw, then they settle the case. They may have a couple of hearings, but no one wants to try the case in front of a jury.
Either they don't trust the very system that in which they agreed to serve, or, they know their case won't pass muster in front of 12 citizens.
I did a stint working for a mid-size firm. I didn't like it very much. I like working directly with clients and other lawyers. But, the lawyers at the firm were fine people, honest and kind to me. They knew the law well. But, for them, litigation did not mean trials, it meant lots of paper, motions, mediations, negotiations, settlement conferences. Bidding the case back and forth.
I was told in no uncertain terms that getting out of my seat to go argue a case was not cost efficient. Everything today is about cost and profit. Law is a business.
Which stinks, because law is not a business. There are books out there that teach you how to run your law practice like a McDonald's franchise. But, it's not. It's supposed to be a noble, time honored service profession, where learned men and women take the time to care about their client's case. If a trial is in order, then a trial should happen. A trial should be the first choice, not the last.
I have had lawyers say to me that if a case goes to trial, you failed. Trials are the last resort, to be avoided at all costs. That idea is exactly backwards.
Trials are the point of a lawsuit. They are the point of a prosecution. Yet, today, most cases, criminal or civil, settle and never see a jury. I'm not talking about half or three quarters, but well over 90 percent of all cases brought - whether civil or criminal - settle. The controversy never sees the light of day. The people never get a voice in the matter.
And that is what a jury trial is all about. The power of a jury trial is in the hands of a jury. We have to have enough faith in our position to hand the decision over to twelve fellow citizens.
Now, here is where we clean out the chaff of the cases - if you don't have the guts to let your fellow citizens see the case, hear the case, review the evidence and decide your controversy, THEN DON'T BRING IT IN THE FIRST PLACE!
If the case is not worthy of the trial, it is not worthy of the courtroom.
Yet, so many cases are settled today that it has become the expectation.
We also need lawyers who can take cases to trial. Most lawyers have little or no experience in front of a jury. That has to change. We need a system in which the dwindling number of experienced trial lawyers out the take the inexperienced under their wing. And the inexperienced might have to second chair a few cases, maybe for a reduced fee or pro bono, to get the experience. We need an organized system to teach them.
Law schools do not prepare you for court. They don't have the lawyers in them teaching that know how to go to court. This is not a criticism of law school - it is necessary to the practice that lawyers become well trained in their knowledge of the law - you can't be a trial lawyer if you don't know the law and the rules.
But that is just step number one. Next, you have to learn how to prepare a case for trial and how to try it. And, you have to believe in the system. You have to have faith in the jury. Have faith in your case. You have to trust people to care and to think. You have to let them properly exercise the power given to them by the Constitution.
If you can let go of your case, hand it over to twelve people, well that's when the magic happens. If you've done your job as a trial attorney and communicated your client's story well, you can feel safe in the hands of a jury.
But, this is the artistic part of practicing law. This is where we discover ourselves, where we learn to connect with others. At the trial, when we are vulnerable and open and willing to ask our neighbors for help - we will find it. There is a connection we all can feel. A spirit of justice that we can tap into.
And, when we do, we connect with each other on a guttural, primal level - the way our ancestors did around the fire, knitting together their lives with one another - trusting one another.
That, in the end, is what a jury trial is about. Believing in your case, communicating your case, and then trusting your neighbor to decide fairly - to give you justice. That's all you can ever ask for. And a good trial, conducted by an experienced and skilled trial attorney, is the only place in America that you will find it.
Attorney Robert Vogel is a available to represent people in both civil, plaintiff cases and criminal defense matters. He represents individuals who are being oppressed by the government or corporations. Contact him via email at rlvogel@robertvogellaw.com or call 865-357-1949 for a free consultation.
Visit his website at www.robertvogellaw.com
If we are going to fix our system of justice, civil and criminal, we need to adopt a system like the United Kingdom and have a special class of lawyers, trained beyond law school, and properly prepared to enter the courtroom and try cases. And, they must be dedicated to the jury system.
Then, we must set deadlines for the prosecution of cases. Either get them to trial or dismiss them if they are not gotten to trial.
I was in court the other day and the Judge was dressing down two attorneys who had let their case go three years without getting through the discovery process (investigation and exchange of evidence). The Judge was justifiably frustrated and gave them a deadline. Get it ready to try or I'm going to dismiss it for failure to prosecute, he told them. Great, good for you Judge. But, he waited three years to tell them that. That should be the message from the day the case is filed.
We don't need more rules. We don't need tort reform. In fact, tort reform is the opposite of what we need. It keeps cases away from the jury.
We need anyone who is preparing to enter into the legal system to know they will face a jury in a reasonable amount of time. This will slim down the ranks of cases. Now, defendants in both the civil and criminal realm know that they can count on cases hanging around for years. Thus, the guilty, those who injured people and those who have broken the law, can rely on a system that will let them evade and then bargain for a result.
Let twelve citizens at them instead, I say. Let their peers hear the case and decide what justice ought to be. That is what the Constitution provided. That is the expectation of the jury system. Have a contest to determine who is right and what justice looks like.
The power of that system remains in the hands of the people. It gives the people a chance to decide what justice looks like in their society. It is an amazing and wonderful system that is currently being abused and misused.
The universal complaint is that our court system is bogged down. There are too many cases. That is followed often by the corollary that those cases are mostly frivolous. That assumption is untrue, as are most generalized assumptions, but, there are likely some weak cases out there. And one can always find an example of a case that seems absurd. But, the majority of cases brought have some merit.
The problem is most cases are never tested in front of a jury. The jury system is not working because people are not using it. Instead, they throw paper at each other for a couple of years, jockeying for advantage. When there is no paper left to throw, then they settle the case. They may have a couple of hearings, but no one wants to try the case in front of a jury.
Either they don't trust the very system that in which they agreed to serve, or, they know their case won't pass muster in front of 12 citizens.
I did a stint working for a mid-size firm. I didn't like it very much. I like working directly with clients and other lawyers. But, the lawyers at the firm were fine people, honest and kind to me. They knew the law well. But, for them, litigation did not mean trials, it meant lots of paper, motions, mediations, negotiations, settlement conferences. Bidding the case back and forth.
I was told in no uncertain terms that getting out of my seat to go argue a case was not cost efficient. Everything today is about cost and profit. Law is a business.
Which stinks, because law is not a business. There are books out there that teach you how to run your law practice like a McDonald's franchise. But, it's not. It's supposed to be a noble, time honored service profession, where learned men and women take the time to care about their client's case. If a trial is in order, then a trial should happen. A trial should be the first choice, not the last.
I have had lawyers say to me that if a case goes to trial, you failed. Trials are the last resort, to be avoided at all costs. That idea is exactly backwards.
Trials are the point of a lawsuit. They are the point of a prosecution. Yet, today, most cases, criminal or civil, settle and never see a jury. I'm not talking about half or three quarters, but well over 90 percent of all cases brought - whether civil or criminal - settle. The controversy never sees the light of day. The people never get a voice in the matter.
And that is what a jury trial is all about. The power of a jury trial is in the hands of a jury. We have to have enough faith in our position to hand the decision over to twelve fellow citizens.
Now, here is where we clean out the chaff of the cases - if you don't have the guts to let your fellow citizens see the case, hear the case, review the evidence and decide your controversy, THEN DON'T BRING IT IN THE FIRST PLACE!
If the case is not worthy of the trial, it is not worthy of the courtroom.
Yet, so many cases are settled today that it has become the expectation.
We also need lawyers who can take cases to trial. Most lawyers have little or no experience in front of a jury. That has to change. We need a system in which the dwindling number of experienced trial lawyers out the take the inexperienced under their wing. And the inexperienced might have to second chair a few cases, maybe for a reduced fee or pro bono, to get the experience. We need an organized system to teach them.
Law schools do not prepare you for court. They don't have the lawyers in them teaching that know how to go to court. This is not a criticism of law school - it is necessary to the practice that lawyers become well trained in their knowledge of the law - you can't be a trial lawyer if you don't know the law and the rules.
But that is just step number one. Next, you have to learn how to prepare a case for trial and how to try it. And, you have to believe in the system. You have to have faith in the jury. Have faith in your case. You have to trust people to care and to think. You have to let them properly exercise the power given to them by the Constitution.
If you can let go of your case, hand it over to twelve people, well that's when the magic happens. If you've done your job as a trial attorney and communicated your client's story well, you can feel safe in the hands of a jury.
But, this is the artistic part of practicing law. This is where we discover ourselves, where we learn to connect with others. At the trial, when we are vulnerable and open and willing to ask our neighbors for help - we will find it. There is a connection we all can feel. A spirit of justice that we can tap into.
And, when we do, we connect with each other on a guttural, primal level - the way our ancestors did around the fire, knitting together their lives with one another - trusting one another.
That, in the end, is what a jury trial is about. Believing in your case, communicating your case, and then trusting your neighbor to decide fairly - to give you justice. That's all you can ever ask for. And a good trial, conducted by an experienced and skilled trial attorney, is the only place in America that you will find it.
Attorney Robert Vogel is a available to represent people in both civil, plaintiff cases and criminal defense matters. He represents individuals who are being oppressed by the government or corporations. Contact him via email at rlvogel@robertvogellaw.com or call 865-357-1949 for a free consultation.
Visit his website at www.robertvogellaw.com
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Monday, February 10, 2014
Beware of Forced Arbitration Clauses
Attorney Bob Vogel can be contacted at rlvogel@robertvogellaw.com or by calling 865-357-1949
By opening a credit card envelope in the mail, making a call on a cell phone, or even
taking a first sip of coffee, millions of American consumers are unknowingly giving
law. Instead they unwittingly “agree” to the terms and conditions of a corporate backed
privatized system designed to ensure consumers can never hold corporations
accountable for causing harm, no matter how abusive or horrific.
Forced arbitration is Corporate America’s Trojan Horse – a campaign to eliminate access
to the courts and individual rights and replace them with big businesses’ own dispute
mill. Though most Americans remain largely unaware of forced arbitration and its effects
on their rights, more than half a billion arbitration provisions infi ltrate our everyday lives.
Forced arbitration clauses are bad news for consumers, patients and workers.
Arbitration can be an effective solution in business-to-business cases, when
corporations with vast legal resources and knowledge voluntarily agree to settle
with arbitration. But in the David versus Goliath context of an individual taking on a
corporation, forcing people into arbitration is little more than stealing their right to
justice. The otherwise benign-sounding idea of arbitration is actually a severely biased
process in which you can almost never win, and from which you can never escape. As
Senator Elizabeth Warren once said, forced arbitration is “Darth Vader’s Death Star--the
Empire always wins.”
Most Americans have “consented” to a wide range of forced arbitration clauses without
ever knowing it.
Forced arbitration eliminates all of the checks and balances of the civil justice system,
including the right to a public forum, the right to demand information from a
corporation, the right to a written record, and, most importantly, the right to trial by jury.
Arbitrators are not bound by law and their decisions are not subject to any meaningful
judicial review.
At every stage this Trojan Horse has been pushed by the fi nancial and lobbying might
of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Through its legal reform front group the Institute
for Legal Reform (ILR), the U.S. Chamber has been at the forefront of a heavily-funded
campaign to eliminate corporate accountability, even for massive violations of state and
federal law. For decades, this has primarily revolved around high profi le PR campaigns
to portray the civil justice system as beset by frivolous lawsuits. But where a billiondollar
tort reform campaign has not succeeded in closing the courthouse door, its more
stealthy compatriot – forced arbitration – has gone a long way to shielding corporations
from accountability and replacing the courthouse altogether.
Consumer forced arbitration clauses have surged in the last two decades as
corporations have pounced on the opportunities they present. To Big Business, the
boilerplate clauses are the ultimate out. Accountability for all misconduct and violations
of law has been eliminated by a paragraph of fi ne print that is rarely ever read. Without
realizing it, the majority of Americans have consented to forced arbitration multiple
times.1
These clauses are buried in the fi ne print of credit card
and cell phone contracts, in the packaging of every
imaginable retail product, and in mountainous pages of
nursing home care and employment contracts. Often,
consumers are unaware that they have agreed to a
forced arbitration clause. Corporations conduct extensive
market research to design these notices in a way that
makes them easy to ignore, with headers such as “there’s
nothing you need to do.”3 Researchers have shown that
it is next to impossible to see these forced arbitration
clauses before applying for a credit card or purchasing
a product, which means just by “receiving” the product
or service, one is “agreeing” to sign away all legal rights
and protections. Nor do consumers gain anything from
“agreeing” to waive their rights. Consumers do not get
better rates, faster service or enjoy any other form of
passed-on savings.
Even using a website can bind you to forced arbitration.
Sites such as PayPal, EBay, and Instagram use broad
forced arbitration clauses. Instagram’s forced arbitration
clause went so far as to ban users from participating
in actions by state attorneys general. Under such a provision, site visitors whose credit
card details were leaked would be unable to benefi t from any intervention by state
authorities.
Arbitration’s defenders claim it is more effi cient and less costly than the civil justice
system. If this were true, arbitration would not have to be forced on mostly
unwitting consumers. The truth is the U.S. Chamber’s forced arbitration campaign has
been nothing less than a rights grab of unprecedented sweep. Millions of Americans
have had their constitutional protections stripped away by boilerplate fi ne print slipped
into every imaginable contract.
With their accountability eliminated, corporations have found themselves free to cheat
and abuse customers and employees, encouraged by the fact that such abuses have
gone unchecked. And without a public record of theses abuses, Americans will have no
way of knowing just how much danger these products and services pose. When no one
is accountable, no one is safe.
While courts across the land have attempted to stand up to the unfairness of forced
arbitration, such attempts at preserving protections have been stymied by the U.S.
Supreme Court. The Court’s consistent message has been that individuals, groups, and
states will not be allowed to circumvent the FAA no matter how virtuous their cause.
This means that any respite from the abuses of forced arbitration lies with Congress and
federal agencies. Without Congressional action, corporations will use forced arbitration
for what it is – a license to steal.
Contact Attorney Bob Vogel for information about your rights. rlvogel@robertvogellaw.com
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