Posts Tagged ‘attorney’

SECDEF Tells Soldiers, More Deployments

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Secretary Gates answered questions about Army deployment cycles in a town hall meeting at Fort Drum this week.  He had no specific answers regarding continuing and uneven shouldering of deployment lengths by brigades except to announce on July 20th an increase in Army personnel by 22,000.  The stress of continuous rotations into the battlefield can result in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

What is PTSD?

According to the National Center for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, PTSD is an anxiety disorder that can occur after you have been through a traumatic event such as combat.  All people with PTSD have lived through a traumatic event that caused them to fear for their lives, see horrible things, and feel helpless.  They may try to avoid situations or people that trigger memories of the traumatic event. They may even avoid talking or thinking about the event.  Some people develop more severe systems that could affect their daily lives.

PTSD Impact on Military Careers

Family members can help monitor loved ones and counsel them when they begin to feel the anxiety of repeated deployments.  The military legal system gets involved when that military member chooses to not report for duty resulting in an unauthorized absence.  UA or AWOL is a serious military justice infraction.  Military members can return after being gone less than 30 days and most probably receive non-judicial punishment and can finish their military obligation or careers.   UA or AWOL for over 30 days most often results in a other than honorable discharge from the service.  This could make them ineligible for most Veterans Administration benefits.

Act Before the Military Justice System Does

If you are a family member of a military member and notice any of the symptoms of PSTD, encourage him or her to talk to the mental health professionals, chaplains and his or her immediate supervisor.  Get that person the help needed prior to having to deal with unauthorized absence or AWOL and the possible life-long results when the military justice system is involved.

Better a Hundred Guilty People Go Free Than One Innocent Person Wrongly Convicted

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

The high standard of proof required for a person to be convicted under our system of justice recognizes that sometimes guilty people will go free.  But it is necessary to assure that innocent people are not wrongly convicted.  Or at least, in theory, that is how it is supposed to work.  Increasingly, however, it seems that innocent people are being wrongly convicted for crimes they did not commit despite the built in safety mechanism of our “beyond a reasonable doubt” standard for a finding of guilty because the law has gradually shifted to limit a defendant’s access to evidence and witnesses.  The case of William Osborne is emblematic of the problem. 

Mr. Osborne was convicted of the rape of a woman in 1994 after a codefendant made a deal and testified against him.  Mr. Osborne was convicted based partly on the codefendant’s testimony and an old method of DNA testing that narrowed the field of possible perpetrators to 17% of the population.  Recently Mr. Osborne asked the State of Alaska to allow him access to his DNA so he could personally pay the $1000 necessary to get a new DNA analysis that will definitively establish his guilt or innocence.  The new DNA analysis can determine whether Mr. Osborne was the perpetrator to a level of certainty of one in a trillion.  Alaska, however, refused

To me, it seems that Mr. Osborne’s is a reasonable request.  If he is truly guilty we will be able to finally shut him up and move on.  But if he is innocent, then we can begin to undue this human tragedy and look for the real perpetrator.  The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals saw it that way as well.  They sided with the Innocence Project that is representing Mr. Osborne.  Incidentally, the Innocence Project reports that DNA evidence has led to the release of 232 people who had been wrongly convicted.  On March 3rd, Governor Palin sent the Alaska Attorney General to argue the case before the Supreme Court to persuade the Court to reverse the Ninth Circuit.  Obama’s Justice Department is, confoundingly, siding with Alaska.  Their argument is at best spurious and at worst criminal, “States need finality in criminal convictions.” 

I am not sure where in our constitution States and the Federal government find the language granting them a right to “finality in conviction.”  I do know, however, where to find the right to Due Process for those accused of criminal acts.  It is called the 14th Amendment. 

I am not sure if Mr. Osborne is innocent or guilty.  He did not have a previous criminal history and at the time of his conviction he was serving in the military.  That leads me to want to give him the minimal benefit of doubt to allow him to pay the $1000 to test the DNA retrieved from the condom used on the victim to absolutely prove whether he did or did not rape her.  Our politicians and prosecutors need an infusion of reality and some remedial instruction on our Constitution.  The rights granted by that document in criminal proceedings are to those accused of crimes and not the Prosecution.  Perhaps we can clear up our dockets and help judges turn their attention to more pressing matters of justice if Prosecutors and politicians stop bringing frivolous lawsuits and appeals that challenge common sense and do nothing to improve out trust in our justice system.

Haytham Faraj, Esq.

Puckett & Faraj PC

Attorneys Neal Puckett and Haytham Faraj specialize in criminal defense and trial work.  They are partners in the premier litigation law firm of Puckett and Faraj, PC.  They have decades of trial experience defending those accused of criminal charges in federal trials and military courts-martial. Mr. Puckett and Mr. Faraj also represent clients in a variety of administrative hearings including Boards of Inquiry, Administrative Separation hearings,  Boards of Corrections of Military and Naval Records, Military Discharge Review Boards and National Security Clearance hearings, among others. Neal Puckett and Haytham Faraj have also represented those who have been harmed or injured by the negligence, recklessness, or deliberate acts or failures of others.

The partners take pride in providing client focused representation that seeks to ensure client accessibility to the attorneys and best in class service.  Puckett and Faraj, PC seeks maintain its position in providing the gold standard in legal representation.  The firm has offices in Alexandria, Virginia and San Diego, California.  The partners are licensed to practice in Illinois, Virginia, the Eastern District of Michigan and in all states and all over the world, including Iraq, Afghanistan, Germany, Italy, Japan, and Kuwait representing military clients.

 

  

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Criminal defense firm, Puckett & Faraj, P.C., retained to represent Mr. Issam Hamama, former cultural advisor and translator to U.S. force in Iraq

Monday, January 5th, 2009

Puckett and Faraj, PC. has been retained by Mr. Issam Hamama of El Cajon, California to defend him against charges brought by the U.S. Attorney in the Eastern District of Michigan.  Mr. Hamama, a former Iraqi citizen, served with the U.S. forces in Iraq over the last few years as a translator and cultural advisor to U.S. forces engaged in operations in Iraq.  Mr. Hamama’s charges stem from his efforts in the nineties as as an activist working to relieve the suffering of Iraqi children and civilians harmed by the U.N. sanctions against Iraq following operation Desert Shield and Desert Storm.  The case of Mr. Hamama is a companion case to several other similar cases in which some defendants pled guilty and at least one defendant was acquitted.

Puckett & Faraj PC

Neal Puckett and Haytham Faraj are criminal defense and general litigation attorneys and partners in the The Law Firm of Puckett and Faraj, PC.  They have decades of trial experience defending those accused of criminal charges in federal and military courts-martial.  Mr. Puckett and Mr. Faraj also represent clients in a variety of administrative hearings including Boards of Inquiry, Administrative Separation hearings, immigration removal hearings, Boards of Corrections of Military and Naval Records, Military Discharge Review Boards and National Security Clearance hearings, among others.  Neal Puckett and Haytham Faraj have also represented those who have been harmed or injured by the negligence, recklessness, or deliberate acts or failures of others.