The Anatomy of Public Corruption

Judicial Profile: Department 31 Honorable Laurel S. Brady


Connecting a long tail to an even longer tail 

Some cases conclusions should be reopened - no question other cases were factual, correct and by the book. 

Judicial Profile: Department 31
Honorable Laurel S. Brady

Biographical Information
Education:
University of California, San Diego and graduated with a B.A. in History. Golden Gate School of Law
Pre-bench Legal Experience:
Law clerk, Marin Superior Court, Civil Law and Motion; Law clerk, California Attorney General's Office, Consumer Protection Section; Deputy District Attorney Contra Costa County 1989-1990; Deputy District Attorney Solano County 1990-1996

Judicial Experience

10/1996-06/1998 Municipal Court, Richmond — appointed by Gov. Pete Wilson 06/1998 — present Superior Court — elevates by consolidation. Assignments included:
  • 06/1998 - 12/1999 Criminal Trials
  • 2000-2001 Criminal Calendar
  • 2002 Criminal Trials
  • 2001-2002 Assistant Presiding Judge and Criminal Trials
  • 2003-2004 Presiding Judge
  • 2005-2007 Criminal Trials
  • 2008-2009 Supervising Judge — Richmond Branch Court
  • 2010 Criminal Trials
  • 2011-2014 Civil Fast Track
  • 2014-present Criminal Trials

Pre-bench Civic & Professional Activities

District Manager for an office furniture manufacturer. Trade member of AIA, ASID.

Continuing Legal Education Faculty

Faculty member for Continuing Judicial Education and Research (CJER)
Certified Instructor for POST (Police Officers Standards and Training).
Has taught classes on evidence, legal motions, competence to stand trial.
Sits on several education committees and acts as facilitator for various judicial training programs. For CJER (California Judges Education and Research) sits on variety of local court committees including Executive Committee, Budget Commitee, Operations & Security Commitee.

Courtroom Policies

Judge Brady will rule from the bench or will issue written orders depending upon the circumstances. Her hours are from 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Teleconferencing


Motions

Heard in trial court.

Briefs

Judge Brady prefers courtesy copies to be delivered to her chambers. She does not appreciate boiler-plate briefs, finding them to be less helpful.

Discovery

Expects discovery disputes to be addressed early so as not to delay trial proceedings.

In Limine Motions

Normally heard prior to jury selection.

Voir Dire

Judge Brady does a general voir dire with prospective jurors. She allows and believes that attorneys should be permitted to interact with prospective jurors. Depending on the nature of the case, Judge Brady does impose time limitations.

Jury Instructions

Judge Brady requires attorneys to provide her with a checklist from CalCrim and for civil, CASI instructions and requires the checklist by the first or second day of trial. Any special instructions must be written.

Witnesses

Judge Brady requires a witness list prior to the start of trial.

Sanctions

In criminal cases, sanctions are not typically imposed. Judge Brady imposes sanctions under unusual circumstances (such as failure to comply with a direct court order or discovery order). Sanctions can be monetary or other.

Documents

For civil fastrack, attorneys must pre-mark exhibits and have exhibit log for clerk.
For criminal, attorneys must confer with Courtroom Clerk.

Decorum

Judge Brady expects professional courtesy to the court, opposing counsel and to all within the courtroom.

Court Reporters & Translators

In criminal cases, court reporters are mandated. Interpreters are mandated and provided for defendants but not for witnesses (this is the responsibility of the parties). The court provides the court reporter in criminal cases. For civil cases, parties must provide their own court reporters.

Computers in the Courtroom

Judge Brady welcomes the use of computers in the courtroom. Criminal cases, however, do not tend to be as high-tech in presentation as civil cases.

Audio-visual

Judge Brady welcomes the use of audio-visual in her courtroom.

Cameras in the Courtroom

Cameras in the courtroom are within the discretion of the court. Judge Brady requires that counsel comply with notice requirements so that the propriety of cameras can be analyzed by the court beforehand.

Advice

Judge Brady recommends that attorneys be thoroughly prepared and familiar with their cases so they can anticipate issues that may suddenly arise. She also recommends that attorneys get as much training as they can, such as observing experienced attorneys to learn their techniques.
Share:

No comments:

Anchor links for post titles

Popular Posts

Blog Archive

Labels

Recent Posts

Popular Posts

Labels

Recent Posts

Pages

Labels

Blog Archive

Recent Posts