TBA Law Blog


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Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Oct 7, 2022
News Type: Legal News

The Memphis Bar Association's Access to Justice Committee is accepting nominations for its annual pro bono awards through Oct. 12. Nominations, which can be submitted online, should include the name and contact information of the nominee and a brief statement supporting the selection. The committee will vote on the final recipients, with winners being announced at the 2022 Pro Bono Awards Ceremony on Nov. 3.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Oct 7, 2022
News Type: Legal News

Just one month into her new role as the head of the Department of Children’s Services, Margie Quin says children in state care are sleeping on office floors and her staff is “traumatized.” According to WREG, Quinn told a group of state lawmakers this week that 100% of secure facilities are full with 11 to 15 youth waiting for appropriate placements. She went on to say that those sleeping in offices are “high-needs children” and sometimes youth who have committed a felony, which has staff and kids feeling unsettled. Quin promised lawmakers she is digging for answers and solutions to problems plaguing the department.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Oct 7, 2022
News Type: Legal News

Hamilton County Chancellor Pamela Fleenor has taken over as president of the Tennessee Judicial Conference, the Administrative Office of the Courts reports. Fleenor is the third woman to hold the position and the first judge from Chattanooga to be elected president in 30 years. Among her goals for the year are to restore and increase public confidence and trust in the court system, and to reconnect judges who lacked fellowship with their colleagues during the pandemic. “The relationships are priceless,” she said. “Judges cannot talk about cases to anyone because it is confidential — not lawyers, not your family. But you can talk to other judges.” Fleenor is a Chattanooga native. She earned her law degree from the University of Cincinnati College of Law and was a trial practitioner before running for chancellor in 2014.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Oct 7, 2022
News Type: Legal News, Your Career

The Governor’s Council for Judicial Appointments is now accepting applications for the Court of Criminal Appeals, Western Section, vacancy created by the death of Judge John Everett Williams on Sept. 2. Applicants must be licensed attorneys who are at least 30 years old, a resident of the state for five years and a resident of Tennessee’s Western Grand Division. Applications must be submitted to the Administrative Office of the Courts by noon CDT on Oct. 24. Get full applications instructions here. Applicants will be interviewed on Nov. 22 at 9 a.m. CST in the courtroom of the Tennessee Supreme Court Building in Jackson.

Posted by: Stacey Shrader Joslin on Oct 7, 2022
News Type: Legal News, Upcoming

Results from the July Tennessee Bar Exam are expected to be released Monday by the Tennessee Board of Law Examiners. Watch the TBA.org website for the results as they become available.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Oct 6, 2022

Former Knoxville prosecutor Hector Sanchez this week became Tennessee’s first Hispanic criminal court judge after he took the oath of office to serve the 6th Judicial District. “I’m excited to serve the citizens of Knox County,” Sanchez told Knoxville’s WATE 6. “I think inclusion is very important. I think diversity on the bench is important.” Sanchez is an honorably discharged Marine who earned his law degree from the University of Tennessee College of Law. He believes the core values he learned while in the Marine Corps – “honor, courage and commitment” – will translate into his courtroom. “…those are things every day I try to apply to every situation that I’m involved in,” he said. Sanchez was with the district attorney’s office before Gov. Bill Lee appointed him as a 6th Judicial District Criminal Court judge. He succeeds Judge Kyle Hixson who was appointed to the Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals – Eastern Section.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Oct 6, 2022
News Type: Legal News

Alex Friedmann, a Nashville criminal justice advocate, was today sentenced to 40 years in prison for hiding firearms and other weapons in the walls of the Downtown Detention Center while it was under construction, the Tennessean reports. Friedmann admitted to the crimes, but his attorneys argued the state was overcharging him. He has prior felony convictions elevating the minimum punishment to 25 years in prison. Prior to sentencing, Friedmann wrote to Judge Steve Dozier detailing two incidents of rape while he was being held in the old county jail when he was 18. He said he hid the weapons out of an irrational fear that he’d be jailed again and subject to another rape. Sheriff Daron Hall rejected that claim in court today, saying Friedmann’s plot was to incite violence inside the jail. Friedmann also pleaded guilty to a federal gun possession crime and will be sentenced for that charge in January.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Oct 6, 2022
News Type: Legal News

The Tennessee Supreme Court yesterday heard arguments in a voting rights case in which plaintiffs allege the state illegally blocked a man from voting over a felony conviction in Virginia, even though his voting rights had been restored there. Ernest Falls was granted clemency for a felony conviction in Virginia and had his voting rights restored before moving to Tennessee. When he tried to register to vote in Grainger County in 2020, state officials said Falls failed to prove he had paid all court costs and restitution required by the state of his conviction. Falls never owed court costs or restitution in his Virginia case and the clemency grant fully restored his right to vote in Virginia. A Davidson County judge previously sided with the state in the case, finding "Tennessee law does not require that Tennessee reach the same result" as other states' decisions on voter restoration. The Tennessean has the full story.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Oct 6, 2022
News Type: Legal News

The White House today announced that President Joe Biden will pardon all those convicted of simple possession of marijuana under federal law, The Hill reports. “There are thousands of people who have prior federal convictions for marijuana possession, who may be denied employment, housing, or educational opportunities as a result,” Biden said in a statement. “My action will help relieve the collateral consequences arising from these convictions.” White House officials urged governors to take similar action and told reporters that the pardon could benefit around 6,500 individuals. They added that no one is currently in federal prison for simple possession charges.

Posted by: Kate Prince on Oct 6, 2022
News Type: Legal News

A preliminary hearing has been set for Cleotha Henderson, the man charged with abducting and murdering Memphis jogger and school teacher Eliza Fletcher last month, the Daily Memphian reports. Henderson, who also goes by the surname Abston, will go before General Sessions Criminal Court Judge Louis Montesi on Nov. 16. He is represented by public defender Jennifer Case. Henderson is charged with first-degree murder, especially aggravated kidnapping and tampering with evidence. If convicted, he could receive life imprisonment, life without parole or the death penalty.  


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