Louisiana Administrative Code
Title 22 - CORRECTIONS, CRIMINAL JUSTICE AND LAW ENFORCEMENT
Part XV - Public Defender Board
Chapter 21 - Performance Standards for Attorneys Representing Juveniles in Life without Parole Cases
Section XV-2131 - Pre-Trial Litigation
Universal Citation: LA Admin Code XV-2131
Current through Register Vol. 50, No. 9, September 20, 2024
A. Obligations Regarding court Hearings
1.
Counsel should prepare for and attend all court proceedings involving the
client and/or the clients case. Counsel should be present, alert and focused on
the clients best interests during all stages of the court
proceedings.
2. As soon as possible
after entry of counsel into the case, counsel should provide general advice to
the client on how court proceedings will be conducted, how the client should
conduct himself in court settings, how the client should communicate with
counsel and others in the court setting and how the client should react to
events in court. Counsel should advise the client on appropriate demeanor and
presentation in court and take reasonable steps to assist the client in
maintaining an appropriate demeanor and presentation. Counsel should plan, with
the client, the most convenient system for conferring throughout any court
proceeding.
3. Prior to any court
hearing, counsel should explain to the client, in an age and developmentally
appropriate manner, what is expected to happen before, during and after each
hearing. Where the client may be directly addressed by the court or asked to
speak on the record, counsel should warn the client in advance and both advise
the client on how to proceed and prepare the client for any potential colloquy
or testimony. Counsel should advise the client that he has the right to confer
with counsel before answering any question, even if it means interrupting the
proceedings.
4. Counsel should take
all necessary steps to overcome any barriers to communication or understanding
by the client during court proceedings, including the use of interpreters,
slowing the rate of proceedings, taking adequate breaks, using age and
developmentally appropriate language and explaining proceedings to the client
during the hearing.
5. Counsel
should document in the clients file a summary of all pertinent information
arising from each court hearing and take particular care to memorialize
communications and events that will not appear in the court record or
transcript.
6. Counsel should
ensure that the court minutes and any transcript accurately reflect the orders,
statements and events occurring in court and that all exhibits have been
marked, identified and placed into the record.
B. Obligations of Counsel Following Arrest
1. Counsel or a representative of counsel
have an obligation to meet with incarcerated clients for an initial interview
within 24 hours of counsels initial entry into the case, barring exceptional
circumstances, and shall take other prompt action necessary to provide
high-quality legal representation including:
a. invoking the protections of appropriate
constitutional provisions, federal and state laws, statutory provisions, and
court rules on behalf of a client, and revoking any waivers of these
protections purportedly given by the client, as soon as practicable by
correspondence and a notice of appearance or other pleading filed with the
State and court. More specifically, counsel should communicate in an
appropriate manner with both the client and the government regarding the
protection of the clients rights against self-incrimination, to the effective
assistance of counsel, and to preservation of the attorney-client privilege and
similar safeguards. Counsel at all stages of the case should re-advise the
client and the government regarding these matters as appropriate and assert the
clients right to counsel at any post-arrest procedure such as a line-up,
medical evaluation, psychological evaluation, physical testing or the taking of
a forensic sample;
b. counsel shall
represent the client at the continued custody hearing in order to contest
transfer to adult court in accordance with performance standard 2125;
c. where possible, ensuring that counsel
shall represent the client at a first appearance hearing conducted under La. C.
Cr. P. art. 230.1 in order to contest transfer to adult court, contest probable
cause for a client arrested without an arrest warrant, to seek bail on
favorable terms (after taking into consideration the adverse impact, if any,
such efforts may have upon exercising the client's right to a full bond hearing
at a later date), and will invoke constitutional and statutory protections on
behalf of the client, and otherwise advocate for the interests of the
client.
2. Prior to
indictment, counsel should take steps to secure the pretrial release of the
client where such steps will not jeopardize the clients ability to defend
against any later indictment. Where the client is unable to obtain pretrial
release, counsel should take all reasonable steps to identify and ensure that
the clients medical, mental health, education and security needs are being met
and that the jail is in full compliance with PREA.
a. Counsel should consider requesting the
client be held in a facility intended for juveniles rather than an adult
jail.
b. Counsel shall advocate for
the client to be provided a free and appropriate educational plan as required
by the PREA, including special education as appropriate. Maintenance of the
clients education may result in the development of positive mitigation
evidence, and may be beneficial to the clients mental health.
c. Counsel shall consult with the client
about requesting sight and sound isolation from adults, taking reasonable steps
to explain the potential positive and negative consequences of such
isolation.
3. While
counsel should only seek to submit evidence for the client to the grand jury in
exceptional cases, counsel should consider in each particular case whether such
an application is appropriate in the circumstances.
4. Where counsel is assigned to the case of a
defendant arrested outside of Louisiana, counsel should immediately contact any
attorney representing the client in the jurisdiction of arrest to share
information as appropriate and coordinate the representation of the client.
Where the client is not represented in the jurisdiction of arrest, counsel
should take all reasonable steps to arrange effective representation for him.
Ordinarily, counsel should travel to the jurisdiction of arrest to consult with
and provide legal advice to the client with respect to the Louisiana case and
the ramifications for the case of waiving or contesting extradition. Counsel
should conduct the initial interviews with the client, the assertion and
protection of the clients rights and the investigation of the case, including
the circumstances of the arrest, in accordance with these standards, regardless
of whether the client is being held in the jurisdiction of arrest or has been
extradited to Louisiana. Counsel should not wait for the client to be
extradited before commencing active representation of the client.
C. Counsels Duties at the Preliminary Hearing
1. In the absence of
exceptional circumstances, counsel should move for a preliminary hearing in all
cases in a timely fashion, having regard to prosecution practices in the
particular jurisdiction and the likely timing of any indictment. Counsel shall
move for a preliminary hearing even when a continued custody hearing has been
held and even where counsel represented the client at a continued custody
hearing. If counsel is denied a preliminary hearing, counsel shall move for an
adversarial bond hearing where counsel shall ensure his ability to examine
witnesses.
2. In the event the
client is subject to the jurisdiction of the juvenile court, in the absence of
exceptional circumstances, counsel shall enforce the clients right to a
continued custody hearing. Counsel should consider the strategic benefit of
negotiating or requesting a continuance of the continued custody hearing,
having regard for prosecution practices in the particular jurisdiction, the
opportunity to conduct pre-hearing investigation, the opportunity to negotiate
retaining juvenile jurisdiction over the case and the likely timing of any
indictment. A continued custody hearing shall not substitute for a preliminary
hearing.
3. While the primary
function of the preliminary hearing is to ensure that probable cause exists to
hold the client in custody or under bond obligation, the hearing may provide
collateral advantages for the client by:
a.
creating a transcript of cross-examination of states witnesses for use as an
impeachment tool;
b. preserving
testimony favorable to the client of a witness who may not appear at
trial;
c. providing discovery of
the states case;
d. allowing for
more effective and earlier preparation of a defense; and
e. persuading the prosecution to refuse the
charges or accept lesser charges for prosecution.
4. Counsel should conduct as thorough an
investigation of the case as is possible in the time allowed before the
preliminary hearing to best inform strategic decisions regarding the
subpoenaing of witnesses and the scope and nature of cross-examination. Counsel
should fully exercise the rights to subpoena and cross-examine witnesses to
seek a favorable outcome at the preliminary hearing and maximize the collateral
advantages to the client of the proceedings.
5. In preparing for the preliminary hearing,
the attorney should be familiar with:
a. the
elements of each of the offenses alleged;
b. the requirements for establishing probable
cause;
c. factual information which
is available concerning the existence of or lack of probable cause;
d. the tactics of full or partial
cross-examination, including the potential impact on the admissibility of any
witness testimony if they are later unavailable for trial and how to respond to
any objection on discovery grounds by showing how the question is relevant to
probable cause;
e. additional
factual information and impeachment evidence that could be discovered by
counsel during the hearing; and
f.
the subpoena process for obtaining compulsory attendance of witnesses at
preliminary hearing and the necessary steps to be taken in order to obtain a
proper recordation of the proceedings.
6. Counsel should not present defense
evidence, especially the clients testimony, except in unusual circumstances
where there is a sound tactical reason that overcomes the inadvisability of
disclosing the defense case at this stage.
D. Counsels Duties at Arraignment
1. Where possible, qualified counsel should
be assigned prior to arraignment and should represent the client at
arraignment.
2. Counsel should
preserve the client's rights by entering a plea of not guilty in all but the
most extraordinary circumstances where a sound tactical reason exists for not
doing so.
3. If not already done,
counsel should assert the clients Fifth and Sixth Amendment rights to silence
and to counsel and should review with the client the need to remain
silent.
4. If not already done,
counsel should take all reasonable steps to identify and ensure that the
clients medical, mental health educational and security needs are being
met.
5. Counsel should move for
discovery at or immediately following arraignment and shall reserve the right
to file all other pretrial motions in accordance with the rules of criminal
procedure. See performance standard 2131.F, formal and informal
discovery.
E. Counsels Duty in Pretrial Release Proceedings
1.
Counsel should be prepared to present to the appropriate judicial officer a
statement of the factual circumstances and the legal criteria supporting
release pursuant to C.Cr.P. art. 331, and, where appropriate, to make a
proposal concerning conditions of release.
2. Counsel should carefully consider the
strategic benefits or risks of making an application for bail, including the
timing of any application and any collateral benefits or risks that may be
associated with a bail application.
3. Where the client is not able to obtain
release under the conditions set by the court, counsel should consider pursuing
modification of the conditions of release under the procedures
available.
4. If the court sets
conditions of release which require the posting of a monetary bond or the
posting of real property as collateral for release, counsel should make sure
the client understands the available options and the procedures that must be
followed in posting such assets. Where appropriate, counsel should advise the
client and others acting in his or her behalf how to properly post such
assets.
5. Absent extraordinary
circumstances, counsel shall advocate for the client to be held in the juvenile
detention center. Whether the client is in juvenile or adult custody, counsel
shall advocate for PREA and, where appropriate, IDEA compliant conditions of
confinement. See performance standard 2131.B, obligation of counsel following
arrest.
F. Formal and Informal Discovery
1. Counsel should pursue
discovery, including filing a motion for discovery, a bill of particulars and
conducting appropriate interviews. Counsel has a duty to pursue, as soon as
practicable, discovery procedures provided by statute, by the rules of the
jurisdiction, and to pursue such informal discovery methods as may be available
to supplement the factual investigation of the case.
2. In considering discovery requests, counsel
should take into account that such requests may trigger reciprocal discovery
obligations. Counsel shall be familiar with the rules regarding reciprocal
discovery and be aware of any potential obligations and time limits regarding
reciprocal discovery.
3. Counsel
should consider seeking discovery, at a minimum, of the following:
a. the precise statutory provision relied
upon for the charge or indictment, including any aggravating factors that may
be relied upon by the prosecution to establish first degree murder under
R.S.
14:30;
b. any aggravating circumstances that may be
relied upon by the prosecution in support of a sentence of life without
parole;
c. any evidence that may be
relied upon by the prosecution in support of the argument that the client is
the "worst offender";
d. any
written, recorded or oral statement, confession or response to interrogation
made by or attributed to the client. Such discovery should, where possible,
include a copy of any such confession or statement, the substance of any oral
confession or statement and details as to when, where and to whom the
confession or statement was made;
e. any record of the clients arrests and
convictions and those of potential witnesses;
f. any information, document or tangible
thing favorable to the client on the issues of guilt or punishment, including
information relevant for impeachment purposes;
g. any documents or tangible evidence the
state intends to use as evidence at trial, including but not limited to: all
books, papers, documents, data, photographs, tangible objects, buildings or
places, or copies, descriptions, or other representations, or portions thereof,
relevant to the case;
h. any
documents or tangible evidence obtained from or belonging to the client,
including a list of all items seized from the client or from any place under
the clients dominion;
i. any
results or reports and underlying data of relevant physical or mental
examinations, including medical records of the victim where relevant, and of
scientific tests, experiments and comparisons, or copies thereof, intended for
use at trial or favorable to the client on the issues of guilt or
punishment;
j. one half of any DNA
sample taken from the client;
k.
any successful or unsuccessful out-of-court identification procedures
undertaken or attempted;
l. any
search warrant applications, including any affidavit in support, search warrant
and return on search warrant;
m.
any other crimes, wrongs or acts that may be relied upon by the prosecution in
the guilt phase;
n. any other
adjudicated or unadjudicated conduct that may be relied upon by the prosecution
in the sentencing phase;
o. any
victim impact information that may be relied upon by the prosecution in the
sentencing phase, including any information favorable to the client regarding
the victim or victim impact;
p. any
statements of prosecution witnesses, though counsel should be particularly
sensitive to the effect of any reciprocal discovery obligation triggered by
such discovery;
q. any statements
of co-conspirators;
r. any
confessions and inculpatory statements of co-defendant(s) intended to be used
at trial, and any exculpatory statements; and
s. any understanding or agreement, implicit
or explicit, between any state actor and any witness as to consideration or
potential favors in exchange for testimony, including any memorandum of
understanding with a prisoner who may seek a sentence reduction.
4. Counsel should ensure that
discovery requests extend to information and material in the possession of
others acting on the government's behalf in the case, including law
enforcement. This is particularly important where the investigation involved
more than one law enforcement agency or law enforcement personnel from multiple
jurisdictions.
5. Counsel should
take all available steps to ensure that prosecutors comply with their ethical
obligations to disclose favorable information contained in Rule 3. 8(d) of the
Louisiana Rules of Professional Conduct.
6. Counsel should ensure that discovery
requests extend to any discoverable material contained in memoranda or other
internal state documents made by the district attorney or by agents of the
state in connection with the investigation or prosecution of the case; or of
statements made by witnesses or prospective witnesses, other than the client,
to the district attorney, or to agents of the state.
7. Counsel should not limit discovery
requests to those matters the law clearly requires the prosecution to disclose
but should also request and seek to obtain other relevant information and
material.
8. When appropriate,
counsel should request open file discovery. Where open file discovery is
granted, counsel should ensure that the full nature, extent and limitations of
the open file discovery policy are placed on the court record. Where inspection
of prosecution or law enforcement files is permitted, counsel should make a
detailed and complete list of the materials reviewed and file this list into
the court record.
9. Counsel should
seek the timely production and preservation of discoverable information,
documents or tangible things likely to become unavailable unless special
measures are taken. If counsel believes the state may destroy or consume in
testing evidence that is significant to the case (e.g., rough notes of law
enforcement interviews, 911 tapes, drugs, or biological or forensic evidence
like blood or urine samples), counsel should also file a motion to preserve
evidence in the event that it is or may become discoverable.
10. Counsel should establish a thorough and
reliable system of documenting all requests for discovery and all items
provided in discovery, including the date of request and the date of receipt.
This system should allow counsel to identify and prove, if necessary, the
source of all information, documents and material received in discovery, when
they were provided and under what circumstances. This system should allow
counsel to identify and prove, where necessary, that any particular piece of
information, document or material had not previously been provided in
discovery.
11. Counsel should
scrupulously examine all material received as soon as possible to identify and
document the material received, to identify any materials that may be missing,
illegible or unusable and to determine further areas of investigation or
discovery. Where access is given to documents, objects or other materials
counsel should promptly and scrupulously conduct an inspection of these items
and carefully document the condition and contents of the items, using
photographic or audio-visual means when appropriate. Expert assistance should
be utilized where appropriate to ensure that a full and informed inspection of
the items is conducted. Where a reproduction of an original document or item is
provided (including photocopies, transcripts, photographs, audio or video
depictions) counsel should promptly and scrupulously inspect and document the
original items in order to ensure the accuracy of the reproduction provided and
to identify any additional information available from inspection of the
original that may not be available from the reproduction.
12. Counsel should file with the court an
inventory of all materials received or inspected in discovery. This inventory
should be sufficiently detailed to identify precisely each piece of
information, document or thing received including, for example, how many pages
a document contained and any pages that may have been missing.
13. Unless strong strategic considerations
dictate otherwise, counsel should ensure that all discovery requests are made
in a form that will allow counsel to enforce the requests to the extent
possible and to seek the imposition of sanctions for non-compliance. Counsel
should seek prompt compliance with discovery demands.
14. Where the state asserts that requested
information is not discoverable, counsel should, where appropriate, request an
in camera inspection of the material and seek to have the withheld material
preserved in the record under seal. Counsel should recognize that a judge
undertaking in camera review may not have sufficient understanding of the
possible basis for disclosure, especially the ways in which information may be
favorable to defense in the particular case. Where in camera review is
undertaken, counsel should take all available steps to ensure that the judge is
sufficiently informed to make an accurate assessment of the information,
including through the use of ex parte and under seal proffer, where appropriate
and permissible.
15. Counsel should
timely comply with requirements governing disclosure of evidence by the
defendant and notice of defenses and expert witnesses. Counsel also should be
aware of the possible sanctions for failure to comply with those requirements.
Unless justified by strategic considerations, counsel should not disclose any
matter or thing not required by law and should seek to limit both the scope and
timing of any defense discovery. Counsel should take all reasonable steps to
prevent the prosecution from obtaining private or confidential information
concerning the client, including matters such as medical, mental health, social
services, juvenile court, educational and financial information. Counsel should
be wary of discussing any confidential matters over the recorded jail
phones.
16. Counsel should
understand the law governing the prosecutions power to require a defendant to
provide non-testimonial evidence (such as handwriting exemplars, lineups, photo
show-ups, voice identifications, and physical specimens like blood, semen, and
urine), the circumstances in which a defendant may refuse to do so, the extent
to which counsel may participate in the proceedings, and the required
preservation of the record. Counsel should raise appropriate objections to
requests for non-testimonial evidence and should insist on appropriate
safeguards when these procedures are to occur. Counsel should also prepare the
client for participation in such procedures. Counsel should accompany the
client, insist that the police not require the client to answer any questions
and, if necessary, return to court before complying with the order.
G. The Duty to File Pretrial Motions
1. Counsel at every stage of the case,
exercising professional judgment in accordance with these standards should
consider all legal and factual claims potentially available, including all good
faith arguments for an extension, modification or reversal of existing law.
Counsel should thoroughly investigate the basis for each potential claim before
reaching a conclusion as to whether it should be asserted.
2. Counsel should give consideration to the
full range of motions and other pleadings available and pertinent to a JLWOP
case when determining the motions to be filed in the particular case, including
motions to proceed ex parte. Counsel should file motions tailored to the
individual case that provide the court with all necessary information, rather
than pro forma or boilerplate motions. The requirement that counsel file
motions tailored to the individual case is not a prohibition against also
filing motions that raise previously identified legal issues, nor is it a
prohibition on the filing of boilerplate motions where no tailoring of the
motion is necessary or appropriate in the case.
3. The decision to file pretrial motions and
memoranda should be made after considering the applicable law in light of the
circumstances of each case. Each potential claim should be evaluated in light
of:
a. the unique characteristics of juvenile
law and practice;
b. the unique
characteristics of a sentencing hearing for a juvenile facing a possible
sentence of life without parole;
c.
the potential impact of any pretrial motion or ruling on the strategy for the
sentencing phase;
d. the near
certainty that all available avenues of appellate and post-conviction relief
will be pursued in the event of conviction and imposition of a life without
parole sentence;
e. the importance
of protecting the clients rights against later contentions by the government
that the claim has been waived, defaulted, not exhausted, or otherwise
forfeited;
f. the significant
limitations placed upon factual development of claims in subsequent stages of
the case; and
g. any other
professionally appropriate costs and benefits to the assertion of the
claim.
4. Among the
issues that counsel should consider addressing in pretrial motions practice
are:
a. matters potentially developed in
early stages of investigation and discovery, including:
i. the pretrial custody of the accused,
including the appropriate bond amount and the need for an adversarial hearing
to explore the same;
ii. the need
to divest the criminal court of jurisdiction or the improper or unwarranted
transfer of the client to criminal court;
iii. the need for appropriate, ongoing and
confidential access to the client by counsel, investigators, mitigation
specialists and experts;
iv. the
need for a preliminary hearing, including a post-indictment preliminary
hearing;
v. the statutory,
constitutional and ethical discovery obligations including the reciprocal
discovery obligations of the defense;
vi. the need for and adequacy of a bill of
particulars;
vii. the need for and
adequacy of notice of other crimes or bad acts to be admitted in the guilt or
sentencing phase of trial;
viii.
the need for and adequacy of notice of any victim impact evidence;
ix. the preservation of and provision of
unimpeded access to evidence and witnesses;
x. the use of compulsory process to complete
an adequate investigation, including the possible use of special process
servers;
xi. the prevention or
modification of any investigative or procedural step proposed by the state that
violates any right, duty or privilege arising out of federal, state or local
law or is contrary to the interests of the client;
xii. access to experts or resources required
by, among other things, these standards which may be denied to an accused
because of his indigence;
xiii. the
clients right to a speedy trial;
xiv. the clients right to a continuance in
order to adequately prepare his or her case;
xv. the need for a change of venue;
xvi. the need to obtain a gag
order;
xvii. the need to receive
notice of and be present at hearings involving co-defendants and to receive
copies of pleadings filed by any co-defendant;
xviii. the dismissal of a charge on double
jeopardy grounds;
xix. the recusal
of the trail judge, the prosecutor and/or prosecutors office;
xx. competency of the client;
xxi. intellectual disability;
xxii. the nature, scope and circumstances of
any testing or assessment of the client;
xxiii. extension of any motions filing
deadline or the entitlement to file motions after the expiration of a motions
deadline; and
xxiv. requiring the
state to respond to motions in writing;
b. matters likely to be more fully developed
after comprehensive discovery, including:
i.
the constitutionality of the implicated statute or statutes;
ii. the constitutionality of a juvenile life
without parole sentence generally, as applied in Louisiana, and as applied to
the clients case;
iii. the
potential defects in the grand jury composition, the charging process or the
allotment;
iv. the sufficiency of
the charging document under all applicable statutory and constitutional
provisions, as well as other defects in the charging document such as
surplusage in the document which may be prejudicial;
v. any basis upon which the indictment may be
quashed;
vi. the adequacy and
constitutionality of any aggravating factors or circumstances;
vii. the propriety and prejudice of any
joinder of charges or defendants in the charging document;
viii. the permissible scope and nature of
evidence that may be offered by the prosecution in aggravation of sentence or
by the defense in mitigation of sentence;
ix. abuse of prosecutorial discretion in
seeking a sentence of life without parole;
x. the suppression of evidence or statements
gathered or presented in violation of the Fourth, Fifth or Sixth Amendments to
the United States Constitution, or corresponding state constitutional and
statutory provisions with special attention to the particular issues raised by
the clients age and attendant circumstances;
xi. suppression of evidence or statements
gathered in violation of any right, duty or privilege arising out of state or
local law with special attention to the particular issues raised by the clients
age and attendant circumstances;
xii. the admissibility of evidence of other
crimes, wrongs or acts that may be relied upon by the prosecution in the guilt
phase with special attention to the particular issues raised by the clients age
and attendant circumstances;
xiii.
the admissibility of any unrelated criminal conduct that may be relied upon by
the prosecution in the sentencing phase with special attention to the
particular issues raised by the clients age and attendant
circumstances;
xiv. the suppression
of a prior conviction obtained in violation of the defendants right to
counsel;
xv. notices of affirmative
defenses with all required information included; and
xvi. notices necessary to entitle the client
to present particular forms of evidence at trial, such as alibi notice and
notice of intention to rely upon mental health evidence;
c. matters likely arising later in pretrial
litigation and in anticipation of trial, including:
i.
in limine motions to
exclude evidence that is inadmissible as a result of a lack of relevance,
probative force being outweighed by prejudicial effect, the lack of a necessary
foundation, failure to satisfy the threshold for expert evidence or for other
reasons;
ii. the constitutionality
of the scope of and any limitations placed upon any affirmative defense or the
use of a particular form of favorable evidence;
iii. the competency of a particular witness
or class of witnesses;
iv. the
nature and scope of victim impact evidence;
v.
in limine motions to
prevent prosecutorial misconduct or motions to halt or mitigate the effects of
prosecutorial misconduct;
vi.
matters of trial evidence or procedure at either phase of the trial which may
be appropriately litigated by means of a pretrial motion in
limine;
vii. matters of
trial or courtroom procedure, including: recordation of all proceedings,
including bench and chambers conferences; timing and duration of hearings;
prohibition of ex parte communications; manner of objections; ensuring the
clients presence at hearings; medication of the client; avoiding prejudice
arising from any security measures;
viii. challenges to the process of
establishing the jury venire;
ix.
the desirability of jury determination of sentence;
x. the use of a jury questionnaire;
xi. the manner and scope of Voir
dire, the use of cause and peremptory challenges and the management of
sequestration;
xii. the
desirability and circumstances of the jury viewing any scene; and
xiii. the instructions to be delivered at
guilt and sentencing;
d.
counsel should withdraw or decide not to file a motion only after careful
consideration, and only after determining whether the filing of a motion may be
necessary to protect the clients rights, including later claims of waiver or
procedural default. In making this decision, counsel should remember that a
motion has many objectives in addition to the ultimate relief requested by the
motion. Counsel thus should consider whether:
i. the time deadline for filing pretrial
motions warrants filing a motion to preserve the clients rights, pending the
results of further investigation;
ii. changes in the governing law might occur
after the filing deadline which could enhance the likelihood that relief ought
to be granted; and
iii. later
changes in the strategic and tactical posture of the defense case may occur
which affect the significance of potential pretrial motions.
5. Counsel should
timely file motions according to the applicable rules and caselaw, provide
notice of an intention to file more motions where appropriate, reserve the
right to supplement motions once discovery has been completed, offer good cause
and seek to file appropriate motions out of time and seek to file necessary and
appropriate motions out of time even where good cause for delay is not
available. If counsel needs more time to file a motion, counsel should request
more time.
6. Counsel should give
careful consideration before joining in co-defendants motions and should avoid
any possibility that the client will be deemed to have joined in a
co-defendants motions without a knowing, affirmative adoption of the motions by
counsel.
7. As a part of the
strategic plan for the case, counsel should maintain a document describing the
litigation theory in the case, including a list of all motions considered for
filing and the reason for filing or not filing each motion considered. The
litigation theory document should also detail the timing and disposition of all
motions. The current litigation theory document and any prior drafts of the
document should be maintained in the clients file. See performance standard
2127(E), development of a strategic plan for the case.
H. Preparing, Filing, and Arguing Pretrial Motions
1. Motions should be filed in a timely
manner, should comport with the formal requirements of the court rules and
should succinctly inform the court of the authority relied upon. Counsel should
seek an evidentiary hearing for any motion in which factual findings or the
presentation of evidence would be in the clients interests. Where an
evidentiary hearing is denied, counsel should make a proffer of the proposed
evidence.
2. When a hearing on a
motion requires the taking of evidence, counsel's preparation for the
evidentiary hearing should include:
a. factual
investigation and discovery as well as careful research of appropriate case law
relevant to the claim advanced;
b.
the subpoenaing of all helpful evidence and the subpoenaing and preparation of
all witnesses with information pertinent to the instant or future
proceedings;
c. full understanding
of the burdens of proof, evidentiary principles and trial court procedures
applying to the hearing, including the benefits and potential consequences of
having the client and other defense witnesses testify;
d. familiarity with all applicable procedures
for obtaining evidentiary hearings prior to trial;
e. obtaining the assistance of expert
witnesses where appropriate and necessary;
f. careful preparation of any witnesses who
are called, especially the client;
g. careful preparation for and conduct of
examination or cross-examination of any witness, having particular regard to
the possibility that the state may later seek to rely upon the transcript of
the evidence should the witness become unavailable;
h. consideration of any collateral benefits
or disadvantages that may arise from the evidentiary hearing;
i. obtaining stipulation of facts by and
between counsel, where appropriate; and
j. preparation and submission of a memorandum
of law where appropriate.
3. When asserting a legal claim, counsel
should present the claim as forcefully as possible, tailoring the presentation
to the particular facts and circumstances in the clients case and the
applicable law in the particular jurisdiction. Counsel should pursue good faith
arguments for an extension, modification or reversal of existing law.
4. Counsel should ensure that a full record
is made of all legal proceedings in connection with the claim. If a hearing on
a pretrial motion is held in advance of trial, counsel should obtain the
transcript of the hearing where it may be of assistance in preparation for or
use at trial.
5. In filing,
scheduling, contesting or consenting to any pretrial motion, including
scheduling orders, counsel should be aware of the effect it might have upon the
clients statutory and constitutional speedy trial rights.
I. Continuing Duty to File Motions
1. Counsel at all stages of the case should
be prepared to raise during subsequent proceedings any issue which is
appropriately raised at an earlier time or stage, but could not have been so
raised because the facts supporting the motion were unknown or not reasonably
available.
2. Further, counsel
should be prepared to renew a motion or supplement claims previously made with
additional factual or legal information if new supporting information is
disclosed or made available in later proceedings, discovery or
investigation.
3. Where counsel has
failed to timely provide a required notice or file a motion, counsel should
seek to file the motion or notice out of time regardless of whether good cause
exists for the earlier failure to file and be prepared to present any argument
for good cause that is available. Where a court bars a notice or motion as
untimely, counsel should ensure that a copy of the notice or motion is
maintained in the record and available for any subsequent review.
4. Counsel should also renew pretrial motions
and object to the admission of challenged evidence at trial as necessary to
preserve the motions and objections for appellate review.
5. Counsel shall have the discretion to
assist incarcerated clients seeking redress of institutional grievances or
responding to institutional proceedings and should do so where the resolution
of the grievance or proceeding is likely to be of significance in the JLWOP
proceeding.
J. Duty to File and Respond to Supervisory Writ Applications
1. Where appropriate, counsel should make
application for supervisory writs in the Circuit Court of Appeal or the
Louisiana Supreme Court following an adverse district court ruling or failure
to rule. Counsel should give specific consideration to: the extent to which
relief is more likely in an interlocutory posture or after a final decision on
the merits of the case; the extent of prejudice from the ruling of the district
court and the likely ability to demonstrate that prejudice following a final
decision on the merits of the case; the impact of the district courts current
ruling on the conduct of the defense in the absence of intervention by a
reviewing court; the impact of a ruling by a reviewing court in a writ posture
on any subsequent review on direct appeal; the adequacy of the record created
in the district court and whether the record for review may be improved through
further district court proceedings.
2. Counsel should seek expedited
consideration or a stay where appropriate and consider the simultaneous filing
of writ applications in the Court of Appeal and Supreme Court in emergency
circumstances.
3. Counsel should
take great care to ensure that all filings in the Courts of Appeal and the
Louisiana Supreme Court comply with the requirement of the relevant Rules of
Court, including any local rules.
4. Counsel should ensure that an adequate
record is created in the district court to justify and encourage the exercise
of the supervisory jurisdiction of the Courts of Appeal or Louisiana Supreme
Court.
5. Counsel should seek to
respond to any state application for supervisory writs except where exceptional
circumstances justify the choice not to respond.
6. A lack of adequate time, resources or
expertise is not an adequate reason for failing to make application for
supervisory writs or failing to respond to a state application. Where counsel
lacks adequate time, resources or expertise, counsel should take all available
steps to ensure that the defense team has sufficient time, resources and
expertise, including seeking assignment of additional counsel. Counsel shall
ensure that the role of lack of time or resources upon the decision to file a
writ application is reflected in the record.
AUTHORITY NOTE: Promulgated in accordance with R.S. 15:148.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Louisiana may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google
Privacy Policy and
Terms of Service apply.