IV. Defendants Dominate Continuances |
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Thirty-two lawmakers reported a remarkable 431 legislative continuances during the two years studied. Criminal cases account for 63 percent of these continuance filings largely due to the work of hyperactive criminal-defense attorney Roberto Alonzo (D-Dallas) (see below). Lawmakers filed 29 percent of their continuances in civil cases, which would far outnumber criminal filings were it not for Rep. Alonzo’s prolific criminal filings. Finally, family-law cases accounted for 8 percent of all continuances cases. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Criminal Defense Attorneys
|
|
No. of |
% of |
Case Type |
Cases |
Cases |
Criminal |
272 |
63% |
Civil |
126 |
29% |
Family |
33 |
8% |
TOTAL: |
431 |
100% |
Continunace Filings |
No. of |
% of |
In Civil Cases |
Cases |
Cases |
For Defendants |
88 |
70% |
For Plaintiffs |
30 |
24% |
NA or Unclear |
8 |
6% |
TOTAL: |
126 |
100% |
In theory and in practice, defendants seem to have a greater interest in delaying both civil and criminal judgments. Defendants accounted for the vast majority of all legislative-continuance filings in both criminal and civil cases. In non-family civil cases, defense attorneys accounted for the vast majority of the continuance filings, outnumbering continuance filings by plaintiff attorneys almost three to one. Such corporate giants as Farmers Insurance, Ford Motor Co., Wal-Mart and Wyeth Pharmaceutical all retained lawmakers who filed legislative continuances.
|
|
Continuance |
Corporate Client |
Continuance Filer |
Filing Date |
Clayton Homes |
Rep. Jim Solis (D-Harlingen) |
2/24/2005 |
Farmers Insurance |
Rep. Rene Oliveira (D-Brownsville) |
4/22/2005 |
HEB Grocery |
Rep. Rene Oliveira (D-Brownsville) |
4/22/2004 |
Ford Motor Co. |
Rep. Vilma Luna (D-Corpus) |
3/18/2005 |
Wal-Mart |
Rep. Rene Oliveira (D-Brownsville) |
4/22/2004 |
Wal-Mart |
Rep. Carlos Uresti (D-San Antonio) |
1/14/2005 |
Wyeth Pharmaceuticals |
Rep. Ruben Hope (R-Conroe) |
8/14/2003 |
Wyeth Pharmaceuticals |
Rep. Ruben Hope (R-Conroe) |
9/12/2003 |
Rep. Veronica Gonzales (D-McAllen) filed the boldest continuance request. Although legislative continuances only apply to state court cases, Rep. Gonzales sought one in federal court in McAllen in June 2005. Rep. Gonzales filed this unusual request soon after she was assigned to defend alleged marijuana dealer Israel Jose Juarez, Jr. The federal judge in this case does not appear to have ruled on this continuance request. 10