| Welcome |
Thank you for choosing ACDL, the Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers of NJ.
The Association was established in 1985 and has since become the
primary organized voice for the criminal defense bar in New Jersey. It
was formed, among other reasons, to respond to the continuing problems
confronting criminal defense lawyers when they honestly, ethically, but
zealously represent their clients; to protect and insure compliance
with those individual rights guaranteed by the New Jersey and United
States Constitutions; and to encourage cooperation among criminal
defense lawyers engaged in the furtherance of those objectives The
criminal defense lawyer has a difficult job, which is poorly understood
by the public and, on occasion, even by the Courts. The ACDL has and
will continue to demonstrate that you are not alone in your efforts to
insure the basic rights and liberties of all people.
Questions / Comments? njacdl@wilentz.com
PO Box 180
W. Allenhurst, NJ 07711
Phone (732)-517-1533
Fax (732)-531-0397
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Installation News by Leslie Stolbof Sinemus Posted by: on Monday May. 12, 2008 |
The Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers of New Jersey (ACDL-NJ) held its annual inauguration dinner at the Pleasantdale Chateau in West Orange, on May 8, 2008. President John C. Whipple, of Arsenault, Whipple, Farmer, Fassett and Azzarello (Chatham, NJ), was sworn in by the Honorable Tonianne J. Bongiovanni, U.S.M.J. (a former ACDL-NJ Board of Trustees member). Mr. Whipple is a 1982 graduate of Seton Hall Law School. He was a Monmouth County Assistant Prosecutor from 1982 to 1985, when he joined the Federal Public Defender’s Office. In 1988, he become a Certified Criminal Trial Lawyer and went into private practice,. He has since been rated one of the Top 100 Super Lawyers of New Jersey. John Whipple served on the New Jersey Supreme Court District X Ethics committee from 1996 to 2000, and has served as a Member of the Board of Trustees for several years before being elected as an officer. He, along with past-president Blair Zwillman (Wilentz, Goldman & Spitzer), is presently a co-chair of the Lawyers Assistance Program with the ACDL-NJ. Judge Bongiovanni also swore in the remaining officers: President-elect Donald DiGioia of Weissman, Healy and DiGioia (Mountainside, N.J.), Vice Presidents William Buckman (Moorestown, N.J.), Leslie Stolbof Sinemus (South Orange, N.J.), and Timothy Donohue, of Arleo and Donohue, (West Orange, N.J.), and Secretary/Treasurer Darren Gelber of Wilentz, Goldman & Spitzer (Woodbridge, N.J.), as well as the remaining thirty members of the Board of Trustees. The keynote speaker was the Honorable James R. Zazzali, retired Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of New Jersey. His remarks emphasized the value of the ACDL-NJ and its efforts on behalf of the attorneys, clients, courts, and legal community of New Jersey. The Honorable Lawrence A. Whipple Memorial Award was given this year to the Honorable Esther Salas, U.S.M.J.. Upon graduating from Rutgers School of Law in Newark in 1994, Judge Salas clerked for the Honorable Eugene Codey, J.S.C. in Essex County. She was in private practice from 1995 to 1997, when she was hired by the Federal Public Defender for the District of New Jersey. She served as President of the Hispanic Bar Association of New Jersey, and in July, 2002, was appointed to serve on the Governor’s Hispanic Advisory Council for Policy Development. Additionally, she was a member of the Board of Trustees of the ACDL-NJ. In November, 2006, Esther Salas was sworn in as the first Hispanic to serve as a United States Magistrate Judge for the District of New Jersey. The Lawrence A. Whipple Memorial Award, given each year by the ACDL-NJ to a member of the bar who exemplifies professionalism, dedication to and passion for the law, honors the memory of one of New Jersey’s most popular judges - a jurist lauded over the years for his intellect, wit, fairness and compassion. Judge Whipple served as Hudson County Prosecutor from 1958 to 1963, when he was sworn in as a Judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey. He served in that capacity until 1967, when he was appointed by President Johnson to the United States District Court of New Jersey. Past recipients of the Whipple Award include the Hon. John J. Gibbons, U.S.C.J. (ret.), the Hon. Tonianne J. Bongiovanni, U.S.M.J., and the first recipient in 1995, the Honorable John J. Hughes, U.S.M.J.. Judge Whipple was the father of now- President John Whipple. The ACDL-NJ is a 400-plus member organization chartered for the purpose of representing the interests of the criminal defense bar and their clients. There is a Lawyers’ Assistance Program, which provides free legal representation to attorney-members acting in defense of their clients. The Amicus Curiae Committee participates in select cases with policy or precedential importance in the N.J. Supreme Court and occasionally the courts below. Recent cases include, inter alia, State v. Chun, 194 N.J. 54 (2008), the Alcotest challenge, State v. Reid, A-105-06 (April 21, 2008), involving expectations of privacy over the internet, and State v. Tomahl Cook, 179 N.J. 533 (2004), resulting in the Court’s requirement that interrogations leading up to confessions be electronically recorded. The Legislative Committee monitors pending legislation and provides both the New Jersey Assembly and Senate with input on the constitutionality or advisability of pending legislation. The Education Committee hosts ‘Super Saturday’ - a day-long seminar in the fall, featuring nationally known and local speakers, as well as smaller, local seminars throughout the year. The ACDL-NJ website includes links to a list serve, brief bank, information about jails and their visiting hours and mentor attorneys, and is located at www.acdlnj.org. |
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Message from President Justin P. Loughry, September 2007 Posted by: on Friday Sep. 28, 2007 |
LET US PRAISE DUE PROCESS Unpopular defendants in high profile cases have never had it easy. The lawyers who represent them do some of the heaviest lifting in our legal system. For their trouble, such attorneys deserve respect, not reproach; but as we see from two current cases in South Jersey, reproach is winning. This past May, local high schoolers in Haddonfield commandeered a family’s home in the absence of parental figures, partied long and ugly into the night and desecrated the place, defiling even a piano with various bodily excretions. The press had a field day. Privileged kids acting badly make the easiest of targets. Who could dare rise to their defense? Speaking of easy targets, in Camden federal court, we are fast approaching trial in the case of the "Fort Dix" conspiracy, where the government arrested several men from the Balkans for an alleged plot to murder military base personnel. Another banner day for public outcry. As the Haddonfield charges ripened in juvenile court, defenses did materialize. Worried parents hired counsel. Those lawyers properly sought exculpation, or at least mitigation of culpability, for their clients. The press decried these parents’ decisions to retain lawyers and their attempts to protect their children from damage in the courts. Columnists glibly derided the defendants for “lawyering up” -- as if the exercise of the right to counsel and to question the state’s charges was some unseemly sin. The press and the public often convict an unpopular accused before counsel has filed a single motion. The rush to judgment increasingly includes this cheap shot at due process: that the presumably guilty defendant has “lawyered up.” No doubt this new pejorative came to some minds when the Duke Lacrosse teammates and their families hired counsel to protect against the onslaught of Prosecutor Nifong. Given the penchant of the media and public toward a presumption of guilt, the defendant in a high profile case needs zealous counsel now more than ever. When the press and public criticize a defendant for “lawyering up,” they exact a price for the exercise of a precious civil right. The phrase not only impugns the defendant, but casts aspersions on the mission of the defense attorney to protect the rights of an often demonized defendant. Unfortunately, the subtle pejorative can grow into something uglier and more ominous. In the Fort Dix case, popular sentiment runs high against the accused “enemy in our midst.” Deeming them monsters, the court of public opinion easily abandons any pretense of a presumption of innocence. Representing these young men are several appointed lawyers, including Michael Riley, a distinguished former prosecutor now in private practice. Tracey Riley, his wife, is also a lawyer who has worked at times in Mr. Riley’s office. It so happens that Ms. Riley is running as a candidate for State Assembly from a section of Burlington County in which Fort Dix is located. In the eyes of several opposition party leaders in towns near Fort Dix, Tracey Riley is supposedly unfit to represent the people of her district because of her husband’s work for a Fort Dix defendant. In a letter to Ms. Riley made public during the current political campaign, three mayors from the Fort Dix area accused her of a “conflict of interest” in seeking to represent the people of Burlington County, when her husband represents one of the “thugs” who plotted against the lives of Fort Dix personnel. The mayors say that their constituents are “sickened” by Michael Riley’s decision to accept the appointment to represent a defendant in such a case. These elected officials demanded that Ms. Riley “answer some questions about how your penchant for defending lowlifes like this would affect decisions you make in the Legislature.” So much for the presumption of innocence and the right to effective assistance of counsel. Public officials swear to uphold the Constitutions of the United States and New Jersey. That solemn responsibility ought to include promoting respect, not contempt, for the institutions and the lawyers who safeguard constitutional rights—even the rights of the most unpopular of defendants. The attack on Michael Riley and Tracey Riley is an attack on every lawyer who stands with and defends an unpopular accused. Mr. Riley honors the highest traditions of the profession in assuming the defense of his “Fort Dix” client. His decision deserves respect, not reproach. One or more of the public servants or candidates who have criticized Attorney Riley for accepting the Fort Dix case are lawyers themselves. In public statements, they denounce the Rileys for a supposedly “clear conflict of interest” in representing “someone who was targeting soldiers at Fort Dix, while seeking to represent the people of Burlington County in the Legislature.” Such rhetoric bespeaks little regard for the Constitution or the Rules of Professional Conduct. Those Rules provide that a lawyer’s representation of a client does not constitute an endorsement of the client’s political, economic, social or moral views or activities. Accusing Michael and Tracey Riley of a “conflict of interest” lacks substance and devalues the precious currency of professional duty and individual rights. Eight hundred years ago, some defiant Englishmen secured from King John at Runnymede the right of trial by jury. For centuries courageous lawyers and citizens have defended and deepened that right and the constitutional promises that inhere in it. These rights are our greatest strength as a free people. Let us praise, rather than reproach, the exercise of such rights and the lawyers who fight to safeguard them. |
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