TBA Law Blog


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Posted by: Azya Thornton on Feb 26, 2025
News Type: Legal News

General Sessions Court Judge Sheila Bruce-Renfroe is seeking $800,000 in additional funding to expand the Shelby County Mental Health Court, which provides an alternative to incarceration for individuals with mental health diagnoses. According to Action News 5, Renfroe says the court has struggled to reorganize and re-energize since the pandemic, although it has continued to admit participants. In 2023, the Tennessee legislature allocated $5.7 million to mental health courts statewide, with Shelby County receiving $367,000. Additional local funding was redirected to jail repairs. With just 48 admissions in Fiscal Year 2023, Renfroe aims to increase capacity to 120 participants and improve program outcomes. She plans to request the additional funding from Shelby County commissioners according to the news station. Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris expressed qualified support, saying, “I would love to invest more money in our mental health court and for me and the public it’s just function. Can we get more cases turned? Because I’m all for the investment, but I’m also for accountability.”

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Feb 26, 2025
News Type: Legal News

Fatal drug overdoses are declining in Tennessee and nationwide after years of rising deaths, offering a potential turning point in the opioid crisis. According to the Axios, Tennessee’s overdose death rate fell 6.6% from 56 per 100,000 people in 2022 to 52.3 per 100,000 in 2023, while the national rate dropped 4%. Tennessee has invested tens of millions of dollars from opioid lawsuit settlements into overdose prevention efforts, including expanding access to naloxone, a medication that can reverse  overdoses. Since 2017, overdose prevention specialists have distributed more than 678,000 units of naloxone, documenting over 82,000 lives saved, according to the Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services. Despite the decline, the state’s overdose death rate remains significantly higher than the national average, with more than 3,800 reported deaths in 2023.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Feb 26, 2025
News Type: Legal News

Last week, Dumaka Shabazz was sworn in as the first African American federal public defender for the Middle District of Tennessee at the Fred D. Thompson Federal Building & Courthouse in Nashville, WKRN reports. A seasoned attorney and advocate for marginalized communities, Shabazz has served as an assistant public defender in Nashville since 2010, representing clients in complex cases involving fraud, homicide and large-scale narcotics offenses. Before joining the Federal Public Defender’s Office, Shabazz worked in private practice. He began his legal career as a prosecutor in the Davidson County District Attorney’s Office. He also has taught trial advocacy at Vanderbilt Law School and trained newly hired federal public defenders at the New Defender College in New Mexico. The Office of the Federal Public Defender was established in 1978 under the Criminal Justice Act. It provides legal representation to individuals who cannot afford private counsel, ensuring their Sixth Amendment right to a legal defense.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Feb 26, 2025
News Type: Legal News

The City of Memphis has appointed a nine-member team to monitor the Memphis Police Department (MPD), including former law enforcement officials, religious leaders, health experts, professors, and a community organizer. Led by former federal Judge Bernice Donald, the team was formed after the city refused to enter a consent decree with the U.S. Department of Justice regarding civil rights violations by MPD, the Commercial Appeal reports. Additionally, the city has again moved to dismiss a lawsuit filed by Tyre Nichols’ family, arguing that the officers involved acted independently of any official policy and that the allegations are insufficient to establish liability against the city.

Posted by: Liz Slagle Todaro on Feb 26, 2025

A significant aspect of the indigent representation proposal from the Tennessee Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC), on behalf of the Tennessee Supreme Court, is the establishment of an “Indigent Representation Commission.” This commission would provide oversight and management for the indigent representation system, including the proposed "Office of Indigent Conflicts and Civil Counsel." The commission would be governed by Tennessee Supreme Court Rule, like existing supreme court boards and commissions, and would manage indigent representation tasks presently handled largely with the courts. The commission also would work closely with other stakeholders to review and implement policies to improve the system. Learn more about the plan and indigent representation in Tennessee. Watch for more details about the plan in upcoming issues of TBA Today.

Posted by: Azya Thornton on Feb 26, 2025
News Type: Legal News

President Donald Trump has appointed Alice Marie Johnson, a Memphis woman previously pardoned by Trump, to work on clemency issues, The Daily Memphian reports. Johnson is being referred to as the administration’s new “pardon czar,” though her exact duties have not been specified. She was convicted in 1996 of a first-time, nonviolent drug offense and sentenced to life in prison without parole. In 2018, reality television star Kim Kardashian advocated for her release, and Trump granted her executive clemency. Initially placed on a five-year probation, Johnson received a full pardon in 2020.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Feb 25, 2025
News Type: Legal News

Former Tennessee state senator Brian Kelsey has reported to federal prison after exhausting all appeals in his case, the Daily Memphian reports. He will be housed at a minimum-security satellite camp at FCI Ashland in Kentucky. Kelsey pleaded guilty in 2022 to an illegal campaign finance scheme but then tried unsuccessfully to change his plea. He had argued that his guilty plea was entered into with an “unsure heart and a confused mind” due to events in his personal life. He later argued that he had ineffective legal counsel, and that his claim of innocence was supported by two key witnesses. U.S. District Judge Waverly Crenshaw in Nashville denied the final appeal a few days ago.

Posted by: Laura Labenberg on Feb 25, 2025
News Type: Legal News

TBA YLD members will be voting on one contested election this year. Ballots were sent by email yesterday and are due back by March 9. Two candidates are running for District 9 representative on the YLD Board: Nashville lawyer Ginny Blake and Hendersonville lawyer Kaley Bonett. The email was sent from Intelliscan Inc. Those who did not receive the email in their inbox should check their spam folder. If it still was not received, members should contact elections@tnbar.org to request that it be resent. Learn more about the candidates.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Feb 25, 2025
News Type: Legal News

U.S. District Judge J. Ronnie Greer of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee at Greeneville has sentenced Sean Williams to 95 years in prison. The Johnson City man was convicted in July 2024 of escaping prison and in November of three counts of production of child pornography. According to a press release from the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of Tennessee, the evidence presented at the child pornography trial showed that Williams used three minor children to engage in sexually explicit conduct and took photos of that conduct. The conduct occurred at Williams’s apartment in Johnson City. Williams also has been accused of sexually assaulted each of the victims’ mothers while they were unconscious, around the same time that he took pornographic photos of their children. No charges have been filed based on those claims.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Feb 25, 2025
News Type: Legal News

The Shelby County Board of Commissioners has appointed Taylor Bachelor as the new General Sessions Criminal Court judge for Division 7, replacing Bill Anderson, who will retire March 1. Bachelor will serve until a special election is held in conjunction with the county's August 2026 general election. Anderson’s exit drew 13 applicants, who were interviewed by county commissioners on Friday. Bachelor emerged from a field of seven. On the third ballot, she prevailed over former U.S. Attorney Reagan Fondren, reports the Daily Memphian. Bachelor is an assistant district attorney general and former juvenile court magistrate.


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