HARRIS COUNTY CRIMINAL TRIAL VERDICTS
February 1, 2017 – July 19, 2019 (for personal use ONLY)
DEFENSE ATTORNEY STATISTICS
January 1, 2018 – July 19, 2019
A Compilation of Not Guilty Verdicts, Mid-Trial Dismissals, Trial-Setting Dismissals and *Special Felony Dismissals (exceptions apply) -For personal use ONLY
JUDGE STATISTICS
January 1, 2019 – July 19, 2019
A Compilation of Jury and Judge Trials including trials ending with pleas, dismissals and hung juries. Trial = jury picked. List compiled from personal observation and cross-checking with the District Clerk’s online website.
LEADER BOARD
TRIAL LAWYER STANDINGS
January 1, 2019 – July 19, 2019
A Compilation of Jury and Judge Trials that conclude with a Verdict. Source: Visual observation and cross-checking with District Clerk’s online website.
(Source: Harris County District Clerk’s Online Services – CrimDisposMonthly spreadsheet – eliminated dismissals when convicted of another charge or case refiled)
*Special Felony Dismissals – Each felony dismissal is evaluated from the dismissal order, criminal history, pending cases, other convictions, etc. I look for dismissals where essentially the client gets “off the hook” by the good work of the Defense Attorney
“David Temple confessed his love to a coworker he was having an affair with just a few days before his wife was killed, the colleague-turned-second wife said Friday during Temple’s murder retrial.
Although Heather Temple filed for divorce amid the trial last week, prosecutors and defense attorneys did not discuss the state of the marriage in her testimony. Heather instead spoke to the “inappropriate” nature of her flirtatiousness and romantic encounters with David, while he was still married to his pregnant wife, Belinda.” by Samantha Ketterer
“A former University of Houston student who pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter in the drunken-driving wreck that killed another UH student three years ago was sentenced Friday to 10 years in prison.
As his family looked on, Marshall Schoen handed his suit jacket and tie to a bailiff, preparing to be taken into custody. Outside the courtroom, the slain student’s mother and his girlfriend, who was injured in the crash, gripped each other in a tight hug, both breaking down in tears.” by Samantha Ketterer
“A coalition of advocates and lawyers on Friday morning asked Harris County District Attorney Kim Ogg to develop a list of police deemed too untrustworthy to rely on in court — and to release the names publicly to rebuild community trust on the heels of a botched narcotics raid that left a Houston couple dead earlier this year.” by Keri Blakinger