How to Hire a Christiansburg, VA Traffic Lawyer

Anyone facing traffic court in Montgomery County should consider hiring a Christiansburg, VA traffic lawyer to defend them.  Deciding which lawyer to hire can be difficult.  When evaluating Christiansburg, VA traffic lawyers, consider the following nine questions.

  1. How many years of experience in traffic law does the lawyer have?  A more experienced lawyer is generally better than a less experienced lawyer.  While lawyers have to know very much to pass the Virginia State Bar Exam, they learn much more while in court, actually practicing law.  Be dubious if the lawyer recently switched from another area of law to traffic law.
  2. Does the lawyer have good Google reviews?  The best predictor of future performance is past performance.  Look for lawyers that consistently do a good job with every case and that have consistently happy clients.
  3. How much does the lawyer charge?  Cheap lawyers are cheap for a reason.
  4. Where did the lawyer go to law school?  Not all law schools are created equal.  More prestigious law schools only accept the best and the brightest, and have very demanding and rigorous programs of study.  Other law schools have much lower admissions requirements and relatively easy programs.
  5. How often does the lawyer appear in Montgomery County General District Court?  A lawyer that frequently appears in Montgomery County General District Court will often get better results than a lawyer who rarely appears in this Court.  A lawyer who appears frequently this court gets to know the judges, clerks, and prosecutors, and many of the police officers.  That lawyer becomes familiar with the sentiments and opinions of the judges and learns how to defend traffic tickets in this Court.  Likewise, the judges, clerks, prosecutors, and police officers get to know the lawyer.
  6. Is the lawyer’s office close to the courthouse?  There is a reason why lawyers often try to have their offices close to courthouses.  Not only is it more convenient to the lawyer, but local lawyers often get better treatment in court than out-of-town lawyers.
  7. In what town does the lawyer live, and how long has the lawyer lived there?  A truly local lawyer will live in the area in which he practices law.  Being one of the locals prevents the lawyer from making a social faux pas in the local court.  Lawyers generally do not like to be asked this question, but their websites may include this information.
  8. How many times did the lawyer take the Virginia State Bar exam before passing it?  A lawyer who passed the bar exam on the first try Many lawyers will not like to be asked this question, especially if they had to take the bar exam several times before passing.  Consider asking the question and gauge the lawyer’s response.
  9. Does the lawyer specialize in traffic law?  A lawyer that specializes in traffic law is best to defend a traffic case.  Traffic lawyers keep up-to-date with the multitude of traffic laws and how they are enforced, and new strategies for defending against them.

How To Hire a Christiansburg, VA Traffic Lawyer

After deciding on a lawyer, the next step is to pay the lawyer.  Traffic lawyers typically require full payment of their attorney’s fee in advance before taking a case.  Lawyers also typically require payment in guaranteed funds, like cash, certified checks, money orders, and credit cards, but not personal checks.  The traffic lawyer is not actually hired, also called retained, to work on a case until the client pays the attorney’s fee.

If paying by cash, make sure to get a receipt.  Make copies of certified checks and money orders.  Keep copies of credit card receipts or statements.  Proof of payment is proof that the lawyer has taken the case and is responsible for handling it properly.

Consider Hiring Christiansburg, VA Traffic Lawyer Harry F. Bosen, Jr.

Christiansburg, VA traffic lawyer Harry F. Bosen, Jr. has been practicing traffic law in Montgomery County General District Court for over 40 years!  He knows the judges, clerks, prosecutors, and many police officers.  Moreover, they know him!  His clients give him the highest ratings on Google for good reason.  Mr. Bosen has lived in southwestern Virginia for nearly his entire life.  He grew up here, went to school here, went to college here, and went to law school here.  He graduated from the prestigious Washington & Lee School of Law, and passed the bar exam a few months later on his first attempt.  His law offices are located approximately twenty minutes from the courthouse.  Call (540) 389-6940 or email for a free consultation and case evaluation.

Avoiding Case Mills

Identifying Case Mills

Recently we have seen solicitations from a few law firms that are automatically mailed to any person recently charged with serious traffic offenses or minor infractions in our local courts. In these solicitations, the law firms claim to be experts in the field of criminal and traffic defense. These solicitations may include misleading language and other obfuscations with fine print and seals of approval that actually mean very little in the legal field.

Be aware that the law firms sending these solicitations may be “case mills” that offer little more than cheap fees for little work, and do a high volume business to make high profits at the expense of the general public. Case mills assign inexperienced attorneys to whom they pay next to nothing to represent their clients. The attorneys are often times subcontractors and not actual employees of the law firm. These attorneys are typically unfamiliar with our local judges and courts.

Case mills, despite being small firms, often hire full-time marketing and sales staff to churn new business into their mills.  With few clients making the mistake of hiring them more than once, new and unsuspecting clients are necessary for them to continue their “churn and burn” style of business.  Often they spend as much time and money on their sales and marketing efforts as they do on the actual practice of law.

Avoiding Case Mills and Retaining Effective Legal Counsel

By taking cases for a cheap fee and only paying the assigned attorney a pittance to work on the case, case mills can only afford to make a minimum effort to prepare for the case in advance of the court date. Many times, the final results of the case reflect the lack of lack of time and effort put into preparing the cases and the inexperience of the attorneys and their unfamiliarity with our local judges and courts.

The general public should avoid case mills at all costs. The general public should seek to retain effective counsel that is focused on practicing law rather than sales and marketing.

See Winning Matters for more details on the difference that allows us and other reputable law firms to be successful in obtaining excellent results for our clients time and time again.

Roanoke County Traffic Lawyer

Defending Roanoke County, Virginia Traffic Tickets

If you have been ticketed or arrested for Reckless Driving in Roanoke County, you need a good traffic lawyer. If you have received a ticket for a lesser traffic offense, retaining a Roanoke County traffic attorney can also be very helpful to you. Roanoke County can be one of the most reasonable jurisdictions in Virginia when dealing with Reckless Driving, Speeding, and other traffic violations.

Roanoke County Highways and Law Enforcement

Roanoke County is a large county located (map) along the Interstate 81 , Interstate 581, and Route 220.  Many travelers to Roanoke and Salem, and those passing through the Commonwealth of Virginia receive tickets in Roanoke County.  On I-81 in Roanoke County, Reckless Driving, Speeding, and other traffic tickets are primarily issued by the Virginia State Police. The Virginia State Police also patrol major highways in Roanoke County, such as Route 220. The Roanoke County Police Department also patrols Roanoke County highways, and is the primary law enforcement agency patrolling and issuing tickets along secondary highways and roadways in Roanoke County.

Roanoke County Traffic Courts

The Roanoke County Courthouse, Where Roanoke County Traffic Cases Are Heard
The Roanoke County Courthouse, Where Roanoke County Traffic Cases Are Heard

In Virginia, the vast majority of traffic cases are heard in General District Courts.  Roanoke County traffic tickets are tried in Roanoke County General District Court, located in the City of Salem, Virginia because Salem is the county seat for Roanoke County.  Roanoke County traffic lawyer Harry F. Bosen, Jr. has been effectively defending speeding tickets in Roanoke County General District Court since 1975.  Roanoke County General District Court is across the street from the law firm’s offices.

Mr. Bosen regularly practices traffic law before all of the sitting judges of Roanoke County General District Court, including the Honorable Jacqueline F. Ward Talevi, Presiding Judge, Chief Judge; the Honorable Vincent A. Lilley, Presiding Judge; the Honorable Francis W. Burkart III, and the Honorable J. Christopher Clemens.  Practicing before this Court on a daily basis, Roanoke County traffic attorneys Bosen and Pollard are very familiar with the sentiments of the judges on certain legal issues and understand how to effectively defend traffic tickets and other traffic offenses there.

Roanoke County Traffic Lawyer Harry F. Bosen, Jr.
Roanoke County Traffic Lawyer Harry F. Bosen, Jr.

Roanoke county traffic lawyer Harry F. Bosen, Jr. also defends traffic cases in Roanoke County Circuit Court, which is also across the street from the law firm’s offices.  A Roanoke County traffic case will not typically reach the Circuit Court level unless the case is appealed from Roanoke Count General District Court.  Mr. Bosen typically only handles such an appeal if the client retained another attorney for the original trial, represented themselves (pro se), or did not appear on their court date, and Mr. Bosen believes an appeal would be effective.

Although appealed traffic cases heard in Roanoke County Circuit Court are relatively rare, Roanoke County traffic lawyer Harry F. Bosen, Jr. also regularly practices before all of the sitting judges of Roanoke County Circuit Court, including the Honorable James R. Swanson, Presiding Judge, Chief Judge; the Honorable Charles N. Dorsey, Presiding Judge; the Honorable William D. Broadhurst; and the Honorable David B. Carson.  Roanoke County attorneys Bosen and Pollard typically practice before this Court on other types of cases, such as serious crimes, personal injury and civil litigation, and will and estate matters.  Practicing before this Court on other types of cases enables Mr. Bosen to also be familiar with the sentiments of the Circuit Court judges on certain legal issues and understand how to present a defense on a traffic case there.

In addition to being familiar with the General District and Circuit Court judges, Roanoke County traffic lawyer Harry F. Bosen, Jr. is familiar with the Commonwealth’s Attorneys who prosecute the traffic cases in Roanoke County.  During over 40 years of experience working with the Roanoke County Commonwealth’s Attorney’s Office, Mr. Bosen has earned a reputation for being fair with law enforcement and honest with the court.  In many Roanoke County traffic cases, Mr. Bosen can work with the prosecutor assigned to the case and the Roanoke County Police Officer or Virginia State Trooper who issued the ticket to negotiate a favorable outcome before court.

Dedicated. Tenacious. Honest.
Free Consultation · Email or Call (540) 389-6940

Roanoke County traffic lawyer Harry F. Bosen, Jr. offers effective defense of serious traffic offenses and minor traffic infractions, including the following:

  • Consequences of Unpaid Traffic Fines,
  • Speeding (including School Zones and Work Zones),
  • Reckless Driving,
  • Reckless Driving By Speed,
  • Improper Lane Change,
  • Improper Passing,
  • Failure To Yield Right-Of-Way,
  • Failure To Yield To Law Enforcement and Public Safety Vehicles,
  • Failure To Obey a Highway Sign,
  • Failure To Obey a Traffic Control Device,
  • Failure To Stop Before Entering Highway From Private Road,
  • Driving Without a License,
  • Driving On a Suspended or Revoked License,
  • Driving Without Insurance,
  • Hit-and-Run,
  • Leaving the Scene of an Accident,
  • DUI (also known as Driving Under the Influence, DWI, and Driving While Intoxicated),
  • DUID (Driving Under the Influence of Drugs),
  • Disregarding Signal By Law Enforcement Officer To Stop,
  • Eluding Police,
  • Stopping the Vehicle of Another,
  • Blocking Egress/Ingress To Premises,
  • Vehicular Manslaughter, and
  • Vehicular Homicide.

Contact Our Roanoke County Traffic Lawyer Harry F. Bosen, Jr.

If you have received any kind of Reckless Driving, Speeding or other traffic ticket in Roanoke County, you need a Roanoke County traffic lawyer who knows what to do.  Talk to an experienced Roanoke County traffic attorney at the law offices of Harry F. Bosen, Jr., located across the street from the Roanoke County Courthouse. We will explain your options and what we can do to help you.  Contact us today for a free consultation.

Christiansburg Traffic Lawyer

Christiansburg Traffic Attorneys Defending Montgomery County Traffic Tickets

If you have been ticketed or arrested for Reckless Driving in Montgomery County, Virginia, you need a good traffic lawyer. If you have received a ticket for a lesser traffic offense, retaining a Christiansburg traffic attorney can also be very helpful to you. Montgomery County is a very fair jurisdiction in Virginia for adjudicating Reckless Driving, Speeding, and other traffic violations.

Montgomery County County Highways and Law Enforcement

Montgomery County is a large county located (map) along the Interstate 81 and Route 460 corridors, located in the New River Valley, southwest of Roanoke.  Many travelers to Christiansburg and Blacksburg, as well as travelers passing through the New River Valley in Southwestern Virginia receive tickets in Montgomery County.  On I-81 in Montgomery County, Reckless Driving, Speeding, and other traffic tickets are primarily issued by the Virginia State Police, although the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Department also patrols I-81.  The Virginia State Police also patrol major highways in Montgomery County, such as Route 460.  The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Department also patrols Montgomery County highways.  The Christiansburg Police Department patrols roadways in the Town of Christiansburg, the Blacksburg Police Department in the Town of Blacksburg, the Virginia Tech Police Department on the Virginia Tech campus, and the Radford University Police Department on the Radford University campus.

Montgomery County Traffic Courts

Montgomery County Courthouse, Christiansburg, Virginia
Montgomery County Courthouse, Christiansburg, Virginia

In Virginia, the vast majority of traffic cases are heard in General District Courts. Montgomery County traffic tickets are tried in Montgomery County General District Court, located in Christiansburg, Virginia. Christiansburg traffic lawyer Harry F. Bosen, Jr. has been effectively defending speeding tickets in Montgomery County General District Court since 1975.

Christiansburg traffic attorney Bosen regularly practices traffic law before all of the sitting judges of Montgomery County General District Court, including the Honorable Gino W. Williams, Presiding Judge, Chief Judge; Honorable Randal J. Duncan, Presiding Judge; Honorable J. D. Bolt; and Honorable Erin J. DeHart. Practicing before this Court on a frequent basis, Mr. Bosen is very familiar with the sentiments of the judges on certain legal issues and understand how to effectively defend traffic tickets and other traffic offenses there.

Christiansburg traffic lawyer Harry F. Bosen, Jr. also defends traffic cases in Montgomery County Circuit Court. A Montgomery County traffic case will not typically reach the Circuit Court level unless the case is appealed from Montgomery County General District Court.  Attorney Bosen typically only handles such an appeal if the client retained another attorney for the original trial, represented themselves (pro se), or did not appear on their court date, and Mr. Bosen believes an appeal would be effective.

Christiansburg Traffic Lawyer
Christiansburg Traffic Lawyer Harry F. Bosen, Jr.

Although appealed traffic cases heard in Montgomery County Circuit Court are relatively rare, Christiansburg traffic lawyer Harry F. Bosen, Jr. also practices before all of the sitting judges of Montgomery County Circuit Court, including the Honorable Robert M. D. Turk, Presiding Judge; Honorable Josiah T. Showalter, Jr., Chief Judge; Honorable Bradley W. Finch; Honorable Brett L. Geisler; Honorable H. Lee Harrell; and Honorable Marcus H. Long, Jr.  Attorney Bosen typically practices before this Court on other types of cases, such as serious crimes, personal injury and civil litigation.  Practicing before this Court on other types of cases enables Mr. Bosen to also be familiar with the sentiments of the Circuit Court judges on certain legal issues and understand how to present a defense on a traffic case there.

In addition to being familiar with the General District and Circuit Court judges, Christiansburg traffic lawyer Harry F. Bosen, Jr. knows the Commonwealth’s Attorneys who prosecute the traffic cases in Roanoke County. After over 40 years of experience working with the Montgomery County Commonwealth’s Attorney’s Office, Mr. Bosen has earned a reputation for being fair with law enforcement and honest with the court. In many Montgomery County traffic cases, he can work with the prosecutor assigned to the case and the law enforcement officer who issued the ticket to negotiate a favorable outcome before court.

Dedicated. Tenacious. Honest.
Free Consultation · Email or Call (540) 389-6940

Christiansburg traffic lawyer Harry F. Bosen, Jr. offers effective defense of serious traffic offenses and minor traffic infractions in Montgomery County General District and Circuit Courts, including the following:

  • Consequences of Unpaid Traffic Fines,
  • Speeding (including School Zones and Work Zones),
  • Reckless Driving,
  • Reckless Driving By Speed,
  • Improper Lane Change,
  • Improper Passing,
  • Failure To Yield Right-Of-Way,
  • Failure To Yield To Law Enforcement and Public Safety Vehicles,
  • Failure To Obey a Highway Sign,
  • Failure To Obey a Traffic Control Device,
  • Failure To Stop Before Entering Highway From Private Road,
  • Driving Without a License,
  • Driving On a Suspended or Revoked License,
  • Driving Without Insurance,
  • Hit-and-Run,
  • Leaving the Scene of an Accident,
  • DUI (also known as Driving Under the Influence, DWI, and Driving While Intoxicated),
  • DUID (Driving Under the Influence of Drugs),
  • Disregarding Signal By Law Enforcement Officer To Stop,
  • Eluding Police,
  • Stopping the Vehicle of Another,
  • Blocking Egress/Ingress To Premises,
  • Vehicular Manslaughter, and
  • Vehicular Homicide.

Contact Christiansburg Traffic Lawyer Harry F. Bosen, Jr.

If you have received any kind of Reckless Driving, Speeding or other traffic ticket in Montgomery County, you need a Christiansburg traffic lawyer who knows what to do. Talk to an experienced attorney at the Law Offices of Harry F. Bosen, Jr. located just 25 minutes from the Montgomery County Courthouse.  We will explain your options and what we can do to help you.  Contact us today for a free consultation.

Salem, VA Locksmith Acquitted of All Child Sexual Abuse Charges

Read news coverage from the Roanoke Times on the original charges and the final case results.

Read coverage of the case from Virginia Lawyers Weekly.

Background

In July 2012, a 41 year old Salem locksmith, Robert Marshall Hickson, Sr., was charged by indictment with one count of Animate (Digital) Anal Penetration involving one of two nieces and five counts of Aggravated Sexual Battery involving one of his daughters and two nieces.  All accusers were under 18 years of age.  The Virginia Department of Criminal Justice Services immediately revoked his locksmith’s license.  Based on the alleged ages of the accusers, he faced a maximum possible punishment of life plus 100 years.  Sixteen months later, after a three day jury trial and seven and a half hours of jury deliberation, at approximately 9:00 p.m. on Friday, November 15, 2013, a jury of seven men and five women found him Not Guilty on all counts.  There were several notable features about this case.

Four of the indictments broadly alleged the crimes were committed over approximately four year periods, while the two involving his daughter alleged specific dates in July 2012. Two indictments charged Aggravated Sexual Abuse of a Child Less Than 13 Years of Age.  One charged Sexual Abuse of a Child of At Least 13 Years of Age But Less Than 15 Years of Age.  Due to the chronologically vague nature of the crimes broadly alleged to have occurred over four years, the defense sought to pin down the alleged crimes described by the accusers to specific events and time frames in the lives of the defendant, accusers and witnesses.  The defense sought to isolate the events with specificity from the vague indictments as a foundation for a specific defenses and then to prove that Hickson could not have perpetrated the crimes alleged to have occurred at the time of these specific life events.  The defense hoped to argue that if one could not believe abuse had occurred at the time of a specific event as identified by an accuser during her testimony, then how could one believe any accusations from the accusers that any abuse occurred at all?

Broad Allegations Narrowed Down To Specific Events

The defense benefitted from the fact that it not only had the initial statements of the accusers given to the police, but also that the cases had originated on warrants and that a preliminary hearing  held in the Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court.  The defense, of course, had a court reporter present during that hearing, it had the court reporter sworn by the Judge, and had that transcript prepared for use at trial.  During trial, there were a number of inconsistent statements made by the accusers when compared to both the preliminary hearing transcript and their initial statements to the police.  During the preliminary hearing, the defense was able to pin down the specific allegations of sexual abuse as having occurred during specific events with specific details of those events, with the accusers asserting the vents were precisely why they could remember the abuse incident.

One such event was a day when the defendant supposedly abused a niece while she was in a bunk bed with two other younger children of the Defendant’s girlfriend in his basement apartment in his parents’ home and at a time when the defendant’s girlfriend had supposedly left the premises with the defendant’s daughter.  However, the defense was able to prove that on that particular day, which was the morning after the only night ever when that niece spent the night downstairs, he actually was on a weekend camping trip with friends (who all testified) approximately 45 miles away.  Furthermore, although his girlfriend had left the premises that morning with all of her children and the defendant’s daughter to go clean an apartment she had recently rented under a lease, which cleaning was part of a free first month’s rental payment, she had sent the niece upstairs to the defendant’s parents because she did not have room in her vehicle to transport all of the children.  The grandparents testified they specifically recalled these details and the child coming upstairs that morning, and they affirmed that had been the only night ever that said niece spent the night downstairs.

Another occasion of alleged abuse (the animate penetration charge) supposedly occurred on a Friday in 2009 in the defendant’s basement apartment.   However, at this time the defendant’s girlfriend was with his children downstairs in the apartment and was making a t-shirt that contained the hand prints of all of his children, which was to be a surprise for the defendant the following Father’s Day (Sunday).  The defense produced work records in the form of invoices and payments showing that the defendant had been on “lock calls” all that day, which was supported by his girlfriend testifying that he was not present during the making of the t-shirt because, after all, it was a surprise.  The girlfriend remembered the niece coming downstairs, staying only a few minutes, and returning upstairs.  The defendant’s mother remembered the niece coming back upstairs and asking the niece why she did not stay down there any longer than she did, to which the niece replied that there was not enough room for her down there due to everyone else being down there.  The defense was fortunate in that the defendant’s girlfriend had found the t-shirt in storage and so she and the defendant were able to display the shirt to the jury with all of the children’s hand prints, including those of the accusing daughter, and with “09” centered on the front.

One more occasion of note when abuse allegedly occurred on that same niece in her upstairs bedroom, where she often stayed with the defendant’s parents, was in 2011.  Here, the defense showed that the defendant did not have a key to any of the doors leading to that part of the house, which were consistently locked, and that although he was a locksmith, he could not have gained access to keys for that part of the house because they had Medco locks and so would not have been able to get keys made due to Medco technologies, policies, and procedures.  The defendant’s father testified that he had put Medco locks on all of his doors years ago when a State Trooper was killed nearby on Interstate 81 and the killers broke into the home behind his, killing the husband of that family and abducting and later killing the wife.  He testified that, as was his custom, he checked all the door locks before he left for a doctor’s appointment that morning at the VA in Salem (he had his appointment schedule and VA records at trial) and he further testified that his son had not had a key to the upstairs portion of the house since approximately 2005, when the locks were re-keyed, because the defendant’s daughter (who was an accuser in this case) would steal things and lie about it and they did not want her to have access to a key through her father when she visited him in his basement apartment.  Supposedly, according to the niece, when she woke up in her bed Hickson was in bed with her and abuse her and after Hickson had molested this niece on this occasion, she then rode with him to a shopping mall in Christiansburg for a “lock call”, rode with him to visit an uncle in Christiansburg (she gave conflicting testimony about even being at that visit, but the uncle’s girlfriend testified she recalled the visit and noted the niece acted normal), and then rode with him to a store near her friend’s home in Floyd County to go on a pre-planned trip with the friend, which she also denied was pre-planned.  It was shown at trial by the defense that she could have driven her own car, which she owned, used, and which was present at the Hickson home on that very date.  When asked on cross at trial why she would ride with Hickson on this trip immediately after he abused her she stated: “I just wanted to get out of there”, to which defense counsel retorted, “Why didn’t you just drive your own car when something so terrible had just happened to you?”

There were numerous other discrepancies as to the defendant’s opportunity to have done specific acts alleged for specific time periods and specific events.  The defense produced evidence and testimony with specificity to combat each allegation as was done in the preceding three example instances.  If other evidence was not available, the defense produced “lock call” records to cast doubt on the various stories given.

Accuser Motivation

The defense also put on evidence for possible motivation on the parts of the accusers, one of which was the elder niece consistently wanting the defendant to move out of his basement apartment so she and her friend could move into it, and another being the hatred of the daughter for her father after he confronted her boyfriend and her lying about her sneaking over to the boyfriend’s house whenever she visited her father, which resulted in the defendant barring the boyfriend from his home.  The father and the daughter had an intense argument on July 5, 2012 after defendant got home from work because he forbade the boyfriend from picking his daughter up, the very day that the accusers first reported allegations of abuse to the defendant’s parents upstairs.  Testimony revealed that she had stated to him “I hate you, this isn’t fair”.  Both of the defendant’s parents testified at trial that when the girls were making their reports to them, they were laughing, smiling, and texting, causing both grandparents to think the reports must have been some sort of joke.  Seven days later when one of the niece’s sister learned of the allegations, all of the accusers’ mothers were informed, and the police were called, thus beginning the legal momentum against the defendant that was not stopped until trial and the ultimate verdict.

The defense was able to get this accusing daughter of the defendant to admit on cross examination that she was “a liar and a thief”, that she “hated” her father, and that the issues with the boyfriend was part of what lead her to report the allegations to her grandparents.  When this witness testified on rebuttal, the defense had a Facebook posting made made the first day of trial which stated:  “Two more days until I put him in jail”, which posting was put into evidence and used on cross.  The jury became wide-eyed on that evidence being presented.

Sexual Abuse Prevalence and Jury Selection

An interesting aspect of the case was a pre-trial motion filed by the defense asking the Court for individual voire dire or at least three person voire dire.  The defense produced a scholarly article analyzing a Los Angeles Times national survey which found that 26% of women and 19% of men had been sexually abused or had been the victim of some sort of sexual misconduct.  The Court granted 3 person voire dire.  During voire dire, 20% of the women in the first 30 jurors called expressed an inability to dispassionately serve because of their own personal history with sexual abuse or misconduct.

The defense was consistently concerned about tainting jurors against the defense during voire dire by asking “personal questions” about their, their families, and their friends’ histories as to sexual abuse and misconduct.  The defense attempted to resolve this issue by advising each set of three jurors that personal questions had to be asked of them by defense counsel to gauge their fairness and fitness to hear the case because the prosecution had asked that a jury be impaneled to hear the case.  Defense counsel believes this took the edge off the defense having to ask such questions and put the onus on the prosecution.

Jury Deliberation

During their deliberations, the jury sent out questions on three different occasions, approximately two hours apart each.  The first set of questions asked for the specific dates of birth of each accuser.  Defense counsel suspected throughout the case that the ages of the alleged victims at the times of the alleged specific crimes did not fit the age ranges specified in the indictments, which events the defense was able to pin down to specific dates.  With the alleged victims’ testimony as to their birth dates presented at trial confirming the defense’s previous suspicions, the defense agreed that the jury should be given the dates of birth by the Judge as requested because it was apparent the jury was concerned about the specificity of the ages in the charges and the date ranges of the alleged crimes.  The Commonwealth had argued during closing that the girls had testified that the abuse was ongoing over the date ranges specified in the indictments and that the jury did not have to find the defendant guilty of one specific crime for each indictment, but the defense had argued if the jury did not believe the abuse had occurred at the time of a specific event by the child during her testimony, then how could they believe any abuse occurred at all even during the date ranges.  The stated reason the defense used in agreeing that the Court could give the jury the birth dates was because the defense was certain that the birth dates had already been testified to anyway and it did no harm in giving them evidence already presented.  The Judge gave the dates of birth to the jury.

The second set of questions asked specifically about two of the instructions and whether the ages of the girls fit the charge for each instruction, which affirmed the defense’s conclusion as to why the jury wanted the birth dates in the first set of questions.  The defense agreed with the Judge that the jury should be instructed that the burden was on the Commonwealth to prove all of the elements of the crimes charged and if all the elements of the chrimes are not proven, then the defendant should be found Not Guilty.

The third set of jury questions came an hour and a half before the verdict.  These questions were:  “What is the definition of circumstantial evidence?” and “Is witness testimony circumstantial evidence?”  The defense agreed that the Judge should tell the jury that they had all of the evidence and all of the instructions before them and they should decide the case based on what they have,  The defense felt that it would be even more confusing to the jury to give them additional definitions or responses.

Postscript

Defense counsel assisted the defendant in getting his state locksmith license reinstated with the Criminal Justice Services Department.

In addition, an appeal was filed with the Social Services Department for Roanoke County which had made an investigation into the girls’ complaints and made a “founded” Child Protective Services decision that would have labeled him a sex offender in their records for between 12 and 18 years.  The initial appeal was denied by the local department head and that decision was appealed to a hearing officer for the Commonwealth of Virginia.  After a nearly full day hearing by video conference, the founded complaints were reversed and he was totally cleared of all allegations within that Department.

Fincastle Traffic Lawyer

Fincastle, Virginia Traffic Offenses and Their Defense

If you have been ticketed or arrested for Reckless Driving in Botetourt County, you need a good traffic defense lawyer.  If you have received a ticket for a lesser traffic offense, retaining a Fincastle traffic attorney can also be very helpful to you in Botetourt County General District Court.  Botetourt County is one of the strictest jurisdictions in Virginia for Reckless Driving, Speeding, and other traffic violations.

Botetourt County is located immediately north of Roanoke along the Interstate 81 (I-81) corridor (map).  Many travelers to Fincastle, Roanoke, Blacksburg, and Salem, and those just passing through the Commonwealth of Virginia receive tickets in Botetourt County.

Botetourt County Courthouse, Where Botetourt County Traffic Cases Are Heard
Botetourt County Courthouse, Where Botetourt County Traffic Cases Are Heard

On I-81 in Botetourt County, Reckless Driving, Speeding, and other traffic tickets are primarily issued by the Virginia State Police.  The Virginia State Police also patrol major highways in Botetourt County, such as Route 220.  The Botetourt County Sheriff’s Office also patrols Botetourt County highways, and is the primary law enforcement agency patrolling and issuing tickets along secondary highways and roadways in Botetourt County.  Botetourt County traffic tickets are tried in Botetourt County General District Court, housed in the historic Botetourt County Courthouse in beautiful Fincastle, Virginia.

The consequences of a conviction for Reckless Driving, Speeding, and other moving violation are serious, especially in Botetourt County.  Not only can traffic tickets lead to skyrocketing car insurance rates, demerit points on your driving record, the suspension or revocation of your driver’s license, but in Botetourt County, high fines and jail time are common.

If you have received any kind of Reckless Driving, Speeding or other traffic ticket in Botetourt County, you need a Fincastle traffic lawyer who knows what to do.  Talk to an experienced Fincastle traffic attorney at the law offices of Harry F. Bosen, Jr., located just a few minutes from the Botetourt County General District Court.  We will explain your options and what we can do to help you.  Contact us today for a free consultation.

Bland County Man Acquitted Of Rape Charge Despite Confession To Police

The following major criminal case was tried by Harry F. Bosen, Jr. in 2006. Mr. Bosen was invited to present the following report at the International Conference on Law and Mental Health in June of 2007 in Padua, Italy.  Following Mr. Bosen’s presentation, three experts (a psychiatrist and psychologists) presented psychiatric and related issues raised in this case. The case was featured in articles published by the American Bar Association (Mental & Physical Disability Law Reporter, Vol. 30, No. 2, March-April 2006), The Virginia Lawyers Weekly, The Virginia Trial Lawyers Association, and has been evaluated and discussed in various psychological and psychiatric publications. Its import and impact on the issues of false vs. recovered memory, mental retardation, and false confession have been significant. It is an example of legal tenacity and inquisitiveness that resulted in preventing a completely innocent, but borderline mentally retarded, man from being imprisoned for up to life for a heinous crime to which he confessed, but which he did not commit and which was proven by the evidence in court to have never have actually happened.

Read the complete trial report here:  Havens Trial Report.