dallas criminal defense lawyer

"I Could Be Doing Real Police Work"

Austin Criminal Defense Lawyer  Tue, 06/16/2009 - 1:57am

Quoting a member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition, Nicholas Kristof sees the light in the cleverly and accurately titled “Drugs Won the War”:

He said he gradually became disillusioned with the drug war, beginning in 1967 when he was a young beat officer in San Diego.



 

Anything to Reduce the Size of Government

Austin Criminal Defense Lawyer  Fri, 04/24/2009 - 1:20am

I’m not much for labels, and I refuse to say I’m a Democrat, or a Libertarian, and I assume it goes without saying I reject the notion that I am a Republican.

But if you had to pigeon hole me, I’m something of a little “l” libertarian, at least as far as that means I’m socially “liberal” and economically “conservative”.

I don’t like government waste any more than the next guy. Waste, that is, government waste.



 

NetRoots Nation: Sunshine Laws for Bloggers

Austin Criminal Defense Lawyer  Wed, 07/09/2008 - 5:40pm

Just found out that Dallas criminal defense lawyer Robert Guest is speaking at next week’s NetRoots Nation conference as part of a panel on “Sunshine Laws for Bloggers”:

Nearly every state has some form of open records or "sunshine" law designed to make accessing public records at least somewhat less difficult than it otherwise could be.



 

Dallas DA on 60 Minutes: Practical Blawgosphere Goes Hog Wild

Austin Criminal Defense Lawyer  Mon, 05/05/2008 - 11:32pm

Houston defense lawyer Mark Bennett bemoans other lawyers reacting to this story before he can:

Lots of folks had something to say about this:



 

2 Criminal Defense Blogs Change Addresses

Austin Criminal Defense Lawyer  Fri, 03/14/2008 - 8:54am

David Terrell has moved “In the Moment” to a new address, while keeping the name of the blog. Robert Guest starts over as “Dallas Criminal Defense Lawyer”. (Given the lack of originality of my own blog’s name, I suppose am not allowed to join the chorus of blawgers who lament Guest’s abandonment of “I Was The State”.)