legal news


Register | Forgot Password

P. v. Johnson
Defendant, appeals following his guilty plea to selling cocaine base. (Health and Saf. Code, S 11352, subd. (a).) Court appointed counsel to represent defendant on appeal. After examination of the record, counsel filed an "Opening Brief" in which no issues were raised. On November 7, 2006, court advised defendant he had 30 days within which to personally submit any contentions or issues that he wished us to consider. In response, defendant, who represented himself at trial, filed a letter brief in which he argues the trial court improperly denied the following motions: to set aside the information (Pen. Code,S 995); to compel discovery; and to dismiss (S 997.) Defendant also argues: the section 995 motion was actually a section 1538.5 motion; his section 1538.5 motion was timely filed; the probable cause determination was untimely; his parole hold was improperly used as a reason to deny his right to be arraigned within 48 hours (SS 849, subd. (a), 872, subd. (a)); the trial court improperly refused to hear his dismissal motion and demurrer to the complaint on May 24, 2006; and, he made his own section 1538.5 motion to suppress evidence while in the presence of his appointed counsel. The Attorney General argues that defendant was awarded excessive presentence credits. Court affirm with modification.

Search thread for
Download thread as



Quick Reply

Your Name:
Your Comment:

smiling face wink grin cool nod sticking out tongue raised eyebrow confused shocked shaking head disapproval rolling eyes sad mad

Click an emoji to insert it into your message. You may use BB Codes in your message.
Spam Prevention:

    Home | About Us | Privacy | Subscribe
    © 2024 Fearnotlaw.com The california lawyer directory

  Copyright © 2024 Result Oriented Marketing, Inc.

attorney
scale