James O. Ruane

Last updated
James O. Ruane
Born
James O'Neill Ruane

(1972-07-24) July 24, 1972 (age 53)
Jersey City, New Jersey, United States
Other namesJay Ruane
CitizenshipAmerican
Education University of Scranton (BA, 1994)
Alma mater University of Connecticut School of Law (JD, 1998)
Occupation(s)Attorney and legal educator
Years active1998–present
Organization(s)Connecticut Criminal Defense Lawyers Association (CCDLA)
National College for DUI Defense (NCDD)
Notable workThe Connecticut DUI Trial Handbook (2014)
The Connecticut Criminal Trial Handbook (2025)
FatherJames J. Ruane

James O'Neill "Jay" Ruane (born July 24, 1972) is an American criminal defense attorney, writer, and legal educator based in Connecticut. He has argued multiple cases before the Connecticut Appellate Court [1] and written several legal books on DUI and criminal defense. [2] Ruane has served as President of the Connecticut Criminal Defense Lawyers Association (CCDLA). [3] He was also appointed Connecticut State Delegate to the National College for DUI Defense (NCDD) and has served on its faculty. [4] In addition, Ruane is the managing partner of Ruane Attorneys at Law, which is Connecticut's largest criminal defense firm by attorney count. [5]

Contents

Early life and education

James O'Neill Ruane was born on July 24, 1972, in Jersey City, New Jersey. He is the son of attorney James J. Ruane, who founded a criminal defense practice in 1978. [6] James O. Ruane attended the University of Scranton, graduating in 1994 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in history. [7] He earned his Juris Doctor from the University of Connecticut School of Law in 1998. [8]

While in law school, Ruane was a law clerk and later began his career as a public defender in Connecticut. [9] He was admitted to the bar in 1998. [10]

Ruane was admitted to the Connecticut Bar in 1998. [11] He was also admitted to the New York State Bar in 2015. [12] In 2004, he was admitted to practice before the Supreme Court of the United States. [13]

He began his career in the Connecticut Public Defender's Office before joining his father's practice, which later became Ruane Attorneys at Law, LLC. [14] In 2001, James "Jay" Ruane and his father James J. Ruane co-founded Ruane Attorneys at Law. It is the largest criminal defense firm in Connecticut by attorney count as of 2025. The firm is headquartered in Shelton, Connecticut and has more than 14 attorneys. In 2023, Ruane launched The Criminal Mastermind, a group coaching program designed for individual and small firm criminal defense lawyers. [15]

Appellate and notable cases

Ruane has served as counsel of record in several significant Connecticut appellate decisions, including:

Other notable cases include State v. Zamora, State v. Hood, State v. Stash, and State v. Popeleski, which involved constitutional and evidentiary issues in criminal defense litigation. [19] Ruane Attorneys served as lead counsel in the post-conviction litigation that resulted in the exonerations of Marquis Jackson and Darcus Henry, who were wrongfully convicted of murder in Connecticut. Their exonerations are documented by the National Registry of Exonerations. [20]

Ruane has testified on DUI defense, field sobriety testing, and breath testing procedures. [21] He also has testified on Connecticut DUI law in post-conviction proceedings in Connecticut and before the Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles.

Conferences and lectures

Ruane frequently presents at national legal conferences, including those hosted by the DUI Defense Lawyers Association (DUIDLA), the Connecticut Bar Association (CBA), and the District of Columbia Bar, the National College for DUI Defense, the Oklahoma Criminal Defense Lawyers Association, and more. [22]

Ruane has also lectured to law students, attorneys, and judges on DUI defense and law practice topics, and he regularly contributes to training programs through the National College for DUI Defense (NCDD), where he has served as faculty for public defender training in Connecticut. [23] In addition, he is the co-host of The Law Firm Blueprint podcast and host of The Criminal Mastermind and Connecticut Criminal Defense Law podcasts. [24]

Affiliations

Ruane has served as President of the Connecticut Criminal Defense Lawyers Association (CCDLA). [3] He was also appointed Connecticut State Delegate to the National College for DUI Defense (NCDD) and has served on its faculty. [4] In addition, he was recognized as CLE faculty by the Connecticut Bar Association (CBA), DUIDLA, and the DC Bar. [25]

Publications

Books

Ruane has authored or co-authored more than eight books on DUI defense, criminal law, and law practice management. These include:

Articles

Ruane has contributed regularly to The Champion, the official magazine of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL). [32] Some articles include:

Other publications

Ruane was written articles for the Connecticut Law Tribune on criminal defense, law practice management, and trial scheduling. [35] He is listed as a co-author in Nesci's Arizona DUI Defense: The Law & Practice (4th ed., 2015; 6th ed., 2023).

References

  1. "State v. Pjura (2002) — official appellate case document". Justia Law. 2018-02-28. Retrieved 2025-09-04.
  2. Ruane, James O.; Ruane, James J.; Sanfilippo, Jennifer; Boskello, Cassandra (2014-10-20). The Connecticut DUI Trial Handbook. ISBN   978-0-9906490-1-4.
  3. 1 2 "Past President". CCDLA – The Connecticut Criminal Defense Lawyers Association. Retrieved 2025-09-04.
  4. 1 2 "Top-Rated DUI Attorneys". Top-Rated DUI Attorneys. 2018-05-24. Retrieved 2025-09-04.
  5. Ruane Attorneys at Law.
  6. University of Scranton Alumni records.
  7. University of Connecticut School of Law Alumni directory.
  8. "Jay Ruane". Ruane DUI & Criminal Defense Attorneys. 2024-12-09. Retrieved 2025-09-04.
  9. Connecticut Law Tribune — "Sworn in by his father".
  10. "Attorney/Firm Look-up". Connecticut Judicial Branch. Retrieved 2025-09-04.
  11. New York Unified Court System — Attorney detail (NY Bar).
  12. Supreme Court of the United States Bar admission list.
  13. Connecticut Public Defender's Office archives.
  14. "About the Firm". Ruane DUI & Criminal Defense Attorneys LLC. 2023-10-16. Retrieved 2025-09-04.
  15. The Criminal Mastermind – Program Site.
  16. Booth, George (2016-01-01). "Home". CT Judicial Law Libraries' NewsLog. Retrieved 2025-09-04.
  17. State v. Kelley — appellate decision (via CaseText).
  18. "Newland v. Commissioner of Correction — appellate opinion". Justia Law. 2018-09-17. Retrieved 2025-09-04.
  19. Connecticut Appellate Court cases (Zamora, Hood, Stash, Popeleski) (not retrieved).
  20. "Marquis Jackson". National Registry of Exonerations. 1999-01-24. Retrieved 2025-09-04.
  21. DMV hearing records — expert witness references.
  22. "2021 Practice 360 Program Listing". DC Bar. 2025-08-20. Retrieved 2025-09-04.
  23. "National College of DUI Defense Attorneys". State Delegates. Retrieved 2025-09-04.
  24. "The Law Firm Blueprint". Apple Podcasts. 2024-11-15. Retrieved 2025-09-04.
  25. Connecticut Bar Association CLE Faculty Listings – Criminal Defense.
  26. Ruane, James O.; Ruane, James J.; Sanfilippo, Jennifer; Boskello, Cassandra (2014-10-20). The Connecticut DUI Trial Handbook. ISBN   978-0-9906490-1-4.
  27. Ruane, Jay; DiNardi, Teresa (2017-01-01). The Connecticut DUI Guide. ISBN   978-0-9965631-2-3.
  28. DiNardi, Teresa; Ruane, Jay (2015-02-01). Lady DUI's Connecticut DUI Survival Guide. ISBN   978-0-9906490-4-5.
  29. Fitzpatrick, Mike; Ruane, Jim; Ruane, Jay (2018-06-25). The Connecticut Habeas Corpus Guide. ISBN   978-0-9965631-7-8.
  30. McKeen, Ryan; Tarascio, Billie; Umansky, William (2019). Tiger Tactics. ISBN   978-1-7326411-1-2.
  31. Ruane, Jay (2024). The 1 Day MBA for Lawyers. ISBN   979-8-9889578-2-9.
  32. "The Champion". NACDL - National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. Retrieved 2025-09-04.
  33. "Closing Arguments: Powerful Visuals Pack a Punch". NACDL - National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. 2014. Retrieved 2025-09-04.
  34. "What Should the Defense Lawyer Do When a Juror is Sleeping". NACDL - National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. 2017. Retrieved 2025-09-04.
  35. Connecticut Law Tribune – Article on trial scheduling advocacy (2016).