Richard S. Jaffe

Last updated

Richard S. Jaffe
Richard S. Jaffe.jpg
Born (1950-02-27) February 27, 1950 (age 73)
Alma mater University of Alabama (BA, JD)
OccupationLawyer
Employer(s)Jaffe, Hanle, Whisonant & Knight, P.C.
Notable workQuest for Justice: Defending the Damned

Richard S. Jaffe (born February 27, 1950) is an American lawyer, legal analyst, leadership coach, and author of Quest for Justice: Defending the Damned. [1] Jaffe is considered one of the foremost experts and lecturers on criminal law in America and is frequently called upon to comment on death penalty issues and other areas of criminal law by national television, radio and print media.

Contents

Jaffe is best known for leading the exonerations of three death row inmates in Alabama, [2] and for representing Centennial Olympic Park bomber Eric Robert Rudolph. Jaffe has successfully defended hundreds of individuals accused of murder, including more than sixty cases where the defendant faced the death penalty. [3] He tried twenty-two of those cases to conclusion to a jury. In Alabama, six people have been exonerated from death row. [4] Jaffe served as lead lawyer in four of them: James Willie “Bo” Cochran, Randal Padgett, Gary Drinkard and Wesley Quick (on appeal). [5] None of Jaffe’s clients are on death row nor have been executed. In addition, Jaffe served as lead counsel, at the behest of the ACLU, in the case of State of Alabama versus Montez Spradley, who was also on death row. [6] Jaffe's efforts led to Spradley being released from Alabama's death row. [7]

Early career

Jaffe began his career as a prosecutor. In 1976, then State of Alabama Attorney General Bill Baxley hired him as an Assistant Attorney General in the criminal appellate division. In 1977–1978 he served as a Deputy District attorney for Tuscaloosa County, Alabama where he tried serious felony cases of all types before moving to Birmingham and opening a private practice concentrating on criminal defense. [8]

Jaffe is a former faculty member at Miles Law School. [9] Jaffe taught criminal law and evidence. [10] From 2000 to 2008, Jaffe served as the co-counsel along with Emory Anthony for Birmingham, Alabama Mayor Bernard Kincaid. [11]

Jaffe is also a certified professional coach. [12] He received his certification from CTI and soon thereafter started A Coach for Champions, Inc. [13]

Jaffe is the Senior Partner of the Birmingham, Alabama law firm of Jaffe, Hanle, Whisonant & Knight, P.C. [14] The firm concentrates in criminal defense, with Jaffe concentrating in the areas of white collar criminal defense and criminal litigation in the federal and state courts. [15]

Alabama Death Penalty Assessment Team

Jaffe was a member of the American Bar Association’s Alabama Death Penalty Assessment Team. [16] The eight-person assessment team spent nearly two years collecting and analyzing various laws, rules, procedures, standards, and guidelines relating to the administration of the death penalty in Alabama. In 2006, the Alabama Assessment Team released a report finding major flaws in the state’s administration of the death penalty, and recommended a moratorium on all executions until the legislature could reform the capital punishment system. [17]

Awards and recognition

The American College of Trial Lawyers inducted Jaffe as a fellow in 2013. [18]

Jaffe served as president of the Alabama Criminal Defense Association (ACDL) in 2001. [19] He is the founder of the Greater Birmingham Criminal Defense Attorneys Association (GBCDLA). [20]

In 2002, Jaffe was awarded the Roderick Beddow Award, the Alabama Criminal Defense Lawyer Association's most prestigious award for service in the criminal defense field. [21]

In 2019, Jaffe was inducted into the "Hall of Fame Attorneys" by B-Metro Magazine. [22]

In 2012, Jaffe received a NAACP community service award. [23]

Publications and training

Jaffe has served as a faculty member for the Bryan R. Shechmeister Death Penalty College and the Clarence Darrow Death Penalty College. He also served as a faculty member for the Tennessee Trial Lawyers college. [24]

Jaffe is the author of the book Quest for Justice: Defending the Damned, a memoir published by New Horizon Press in 2012 that chronicles his legal career. The book provides details into some of Jaffe’s highest profile murder cases as well as his representation of Olympic and Birmingham bomber Eric Rudolph. [25] In 2020 The National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDLPress) published the 2nd Edition of Quest for Justice: Defending the Damned. [26]

Jaffe has published numerous articles in "The Champion," the official magazine of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. [27] Some of Jaffe's articles have explore the exoneration of the Scottsboro Boys, [28] preparing for the prosecutor's expert witness, [29] the principles on cross-examination, [30] and interrogation tactics. [31]

Adaptations

Two of Jaffe's clients, Bo Cochran and Randal Padgett, were profiled in the off-Broadway theater production of The Exonerated by Jessica Blank and Erik Jensen. [32] The play was later adapted into a made-for-cable movie. [33] During the development of the play, the playwrights consulted Jaffe on details surrounding both cases, interviewing him and his clients on multiple occasions.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Clarence Darrow</span> American lawyer and leading member of the American Civil Liberties Union

Clarence Seward Darrow was an American lawyer who became famous in the early 20th century for his involvement in the Leopold and Loeb murder trial and the Scopes trial. He was a leading member of the American Civil Liberties Union and a prominent advocate for Georgist economic reform.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Thomas Mesereau</span> American attorney (born 1950)

Thomas Arthur Mesereau Jr. is an American attorney best known for successfully defending Michael Jackson in his 2005 child molestation trial, as well as representing many other celebrities.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Leonard Weinglass</span> American criminal defense attorney and constitutional law advocate

Leonard Irving Weinglass was a U.S. criminal defense lawyer and constitutional law advocate, best known for his defense of participants in the 1960s counterculture. He was admitted to the bar in New Jersey, New York, Connecticut and California. He taught criminal trial advocacy at the University of Southern California Law School from 1974 to 1976, and at the Peoples College of Law, in Los Angeles, California from 1974 to 1975.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Peter Neufeld</span> American attorney

Peter J. Neufeld is an American attorney, co-founder, with Barry Scheck of the Innocence Project, and a founding partner in the civil rights law firm Neufeld Scheck & Brustin. Starting from his earliest years as an attorney representing clients at New York's Legal Aid Society, and teaching trial advocacy at Fordham School of Law from 1988 to 1991, he has focused on civil rights and the intersection of science and criminal justice.

Rob Warden is a Chicago legal affairs journalist and co-founder of three organizations dedicated to exonerating the innocent and reforming criminal justice: the Center on Wrongful Convictions at Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law, the National Registry of Exonerations at the University of California-Irvine, and Injustice Watch, a non-partisan, not-for-profit, journalism organization that conducts in-depth research exposing institutional failures that obstruct justice and equality. As an investigative journalist in the 1970s, he began focusing on death penalty cases, which led to a career exposing and publicizing the injustices and misconduct in the legal system. Warden's work was instrumental in the blanket commutation of death row cases in Illinois in 2003 and in the abolition of the Illinois death penalty in 2011.

Samuel Raymond Gross is an American lawyer and the Thomas and Mabel Long Professor of Law at the University of Michigan Law School. Gross is best known for his work in false convictions and exonerations, notably the Larry Griffin death penalty case.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Attorney General of Alabama</span> Attorney general for the U.S. state of Alabama

The attorney general of Alabama is an elected, constitutional officer of the State of Alabama. The office of the attorney general is located at the state capitol in Montgomery, Alabama. Henry Hitchcock was elected Alabama's first attorney general in 1819.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joshua Marquis</span> American lawyer

Joshua K. Marquis is an attorney and politician from Astoria, Oregon in the United States. He served as District Attorney for Clatsop County from March 1994 until December 31, 2018. He frequently writes and speaks about capital punishment, and is a national advocate for the death penalty.

Walter "Johnny D." McMillian was a pulpwood worker from Monroeville, Alabama, who was wrongfully convicted of murder and sentenced to death. His conviction was wrongfully obtained, based on police coercion and perjury. In the 1988 trial, under a controversial Alabama doctrine called "judicial override", the judge imposed the death penalty, although the jury had voted for a sentence of life imprisonment.

U. W. Clemon is an Alabama attorney in private practice and a former United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama. He was among the first ten African-American lawyers admitted to the Alabama bar. In 1974 he was one of the first two African Americans elected to the Alabama Senate since Reconstruction.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kathleen Zellner</span> American lawyer

Kathleen Zellner is an American attorney who has worked extensively in wrongful conviction advocacy. Notable clients Zellner has represented include Steven Avery, Kevin Fox, Ryan W. Ferguson, Larry Eyler, and 19 exonerees who are listed in the National Registry of Exonerations.

Judy Clare Clarke is an American criminal defense attorney who has represented several high-profile defendants such as Ted Kaczynski, Eric Rudolph, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, Joseph Edward Duncan, Zacarias Moussaoui, Jared Lee Loughner, Robert Gregory Bowers, Burford Furrow, Lisa Montgomery and Susan Smith.

Connick v. Thompson, 563 U.S. 51 (2011), is a United States Supreme Court case in which the Court considered whether a prosecutor's office can be held liable for a single Brady violation by one of its members on the theory that the office provided inadequate training.

James W. Parkman, III is an American criminal defense lawyer in Birmingham, Alabama. He has been practicing law for over 40 years, and has represented several high-profile clients, most notably former HealthSouth CEO Richard M. Scrushy, Swedish criminal Bo Stefan Eriksson, former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, and Alabama State Senator Harri Anne Smith.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Anthony Ray Hinton</span> American activist, writer, and author (born 1956)

Anthony Ray Hinton is an American activist, writer, and author who was wrongly convicted of the 1985 murders of two fast food restaurant managers in Birmingham, Alabama. Hinton was sentenced to death and held on the state's death row for 28 years before his 2015 release.

David Isaac Bruck is a Canadian-American criminal defense attorney, clinical professor of law at Washington and Lee University School of Law, and director of the Virginia Capital Case Clearinghouse. Bruck was raised in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He attended Harvard College and University of South Carolina School of Law. He has co-represented high profile defendants, including Ramzi bin al-Shibh, Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, Dylann Roof, and Susan Smith.

Glenn Ford was convicted of murder in 1984 and released from Angola Prison in March 2014 after a full exoneration. Ford was born in Shreveport, Louisiana. He was the longest serving death row inmate in the United States to be fully exonerated before his death. He was denied compensation by the state of Louisiana for his wrongful conviction.

Charles Addison Gessler was an American criminal defense attorney who specialized in death penalty litigation. Gessler worked as a deputy public defender for the Los Angeles County Public Defender's office for thirty-two years. Gessler handled several high-profile cases, including representing Lyle Menéndez, G. Gordon Liddy and Vaughn Greenwood.

Peter J. McQuillan was an American judge and jurist. In legal circles, McQuillan was most noted for his work and expertise in the complete revision of the New York State penal code in the 1960s, the first major overhaul of that law since the 1800s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">David Schoen</span> American attorney

David Schoen is an American attorney specializing in federal criminal defense and civil rights law. He was one of the attorneys who represented former president Donald Trump during his second impeachment trial in the United States Senate.

References

  1. "Lawyer Profile – the National Trial Lawyers".
  2. "Lawyer Richard Jaffe questions the death penalty in 'Quest for Justice: Defending the Damned'". Birmingham News.
  3. "Lawyer Profile – the National Trial Lawyers".
  4. "Description of Innocence Cases".
  5. https://law.justia.com/cases/alabama/court-of-appeals-criminal/2007/060428.html; https://caselaw.findlaw.com/al-court-of-criminal-appeals/1095073.html
  6. Radley Balko (October 26, 2021) [2015-09-22]. "The outrageous conviction of Montez Spradley". The Washington Post . Washington, D.C. ISSN   0190-8286. OCLC   1330888409.[ please check these dates ]
  7. Radley Balko (October 26, 2021) [2015-09-22]. "The outrageous conviction of Montez Spradley". The Washington Post . Washington, D.C. ISSN   0190-8286. OCLC   1330888409.[ please check these dates ]
  8. "Lawyer Profile – the National Trial Lawyers".
  9. "Lawyer Profile – the National Trial Lawyers".
  10. "Lawyer Profile – the National Trial Lawyers".
  11. "FindLaw's Supreme Court of Alabama case and opinions". Findlaw. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
  12. (CTI), The Coaches Training Institute. "The Co-Active Network – richard jaffe".
  13. "A coach for champions". Archived from the original on March 4, 2016.
  14. "JHWK". Jaffe, Hanle, Whisonant & Knight, P.C.
  15. "Lawyer Profile – the National Trial Lawyers".
  16. "Members of the Alabama Death Penalty Assessment Team" (PDF).
  17. "The Alabama Death Penalty Assessment Report" (PDF).
  18. "Birmingham attorney Richard Jaffe named Fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers". Birmingham News.
  19. "Alabama Criminal Defense Lawyers Association – Past Presidents and History".
  20. "Lawyer Profile – the National Trial Lawyers".
  21. "Roderick Beddow Lifetime Award". Alabama Criminal Defense Lawyers Association.
  22. https://www.rjaffelaw.com/blog/2019/march/attorney-richard-jaffe-inducted-into-hall-of-fam/; http://b-metro.com/b-metro-top-flight-attorneys/35808/%7Ctitle=http://b-metro.com/b-metro-top-flight-attorneys/35808/
  23. "Jaffe, Hanle, Whisonant & Knight, P.C." (PDF).
  24. "Lawyer Profile – the National Trial Lawyers".
  25. "Home". questforjusticethebook.com.
  26. "Home". questforjusticethebook.com.
  27. "NACDL – the Champion".
  28. Jaffe, Richard (March 2014). "History Corrected – The Scottsboro Boys Are Official Innocent". The Champion.
  29. Jaffe, Richard (March 2013). "A Primer on Preparing for the Prosecution's Expert". The Champion.
  30. Jaffe, Richard (June 2016). "Cross-Examination Principles". The Champion.
  31. Jaffe, Richard (January–February 2001). "Something about Interrogation Tactics". The Champion.
  32. Jaworowski, Ken (September 20, 2012). "When Justice Makes You Gasp". The New York Times.
  33. "The Exonerated". IMDb . January 27, 2005.