Green Haven's End Game

Perhaps the single most important moment in the debate about whether to approve the Green Haven condominium association project on Bethany’s Halter Farm property took place more than a year ago. That’s when Patsy Weiner, then a member of the town’s Planning and Zoning Commission, took the floor at a town meeting to explain the virtues of what proponent’s call co-housing plans.
“You can have co-housing associations for all sorts of purposes,” she said, in her dry, timorous sort of way. “There could be a group devoted to equestrian...
May 3, 2014

A Killing in Milford

Death comes swiftly, with a crushing finality, leaving the living numb with grief and overcome with loss. Our comings and goings remain stunning mysteries. When a life is taken at the hand of another, anger rises like a tidal wave.
So we are angry today at Christopher Plaskon. “I did it. Just arrest me,” he said, as police responded to the Jonathan Law High School in Milford, where 16-year-old Maren Sanchez had been fatally stabbed.
As with so many killings, the question is not whodunit, but why was it done?
Mr. Plaskon is a juvenile, but because he has been...
April 30, 2014

Prison for a Troubled Teen?

One measure of our humanity is how we treat the least among us. The future will judge us harshly, I am afraid. This is especially so regarding our prisons. We’ve taken a punitive turn in social philosophy, and have created penal colonies in our midst. What’s worse, we’ve fallen in love with these islands of hatred.
“How can you represent those people” I am sometimes asked.
Why this one is accused of murder; that one has been accused of selling narcotics; this one sexually abused a client; that one stole money or forged a document in connection with a...
April 27, 2014

When the Process Becomes the Punishment

The process, criminal defense lawyers like to say, is the punishment. Nowhere is this so true as in the low-level criminal courts in Connecticut, known among the cognoscenti as the “GAs,” or Geographical Areas. All criminal cases make their courtside debut in the GA courts. Only the most serious are transferred to what some folks refer to, with a sense of drama, as “high court;” lawyers know these courts simply as JDs, short for Judicial Districts.
Connecticut is divided into 13 Judicial Districts and 20 Geographical Areas. Despite that, New Haven’s GA...
April 20, 2014

A Primer on Anarchism

April 14, 2014
Anarchism is given a bad rap by folks who rarely take the trouble to understand what they are criticizing. Alexander Berkman's classic text on...

Green Haven's Legacy Foreseen

April 12, 2014
April 16, 2024 – Connecticut lost a town last night, but it did not lose either territory or population. Two suburban entities...

No Trial Tax? Get Real, Judge.

April 11, 2014
I was in the chambers of a judge I respect a great deal trying to reach a plea bargain in a complex case the other day. Well before trial, he made...

SWAT Teams to Search for Documents?

April 10, 2014
The lawyer was at the very least honest, even if the words he spoke were chilling.
“Does the Internal Revenue Service take the position...

Why We Lost the War on Terror

April 5, 2014
I was startled to learn that manipulation of federal "no-fly" lists takes place simply as a means of recruiting potential informants: Young Moslem...

Let's Rethink Our Love of Prisons

April 2, 2014
Delaware Judge Jan Jurden just helped to destroy the market in human souls, and for that, I am grateful. She refused to send a self-confessed child...

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Taking Back the Courts
Norm Pattis Taking Back the Courts

The Wizard of Oz was one of my favorites movies as a kid. Little did I know judges were so much like the wizard, hiding behind empty trappings of power. This book tells you things you need to know about what really goes on in court. Read it, weep, and then demand that the courts do better.

In the Trenches
Norm Pattis In the Trenches

Plenty of lawyers write about the law, but few who write try cases. Judge for yourself whether I talk the talk and walk the walk in this collection of occasional essays about life in the law's trenches.

Juries and Justice
Norm Pattis Juries and Justice

How prepared are you to take seriously the notion that 'we the people' are, in fact, sovereign? Discover the secret, and unused, power of jurors. 'Ask why; then nullify.'

Norm Pattis

About Norm

Norm Pattis is a Connecticut based trial lawyer focused on high stakes criminal cases and civil right violations. He is a veteran of more than 150 jury trials, many resulting in acquittals for people charged with serious crimes, multi-million dollar civil rights and discrimination verdicts, and scores of cases favorably settled.

© Norm Pattis is represented by Elite Lawyer Management, managing agents for Exceptional American Lawyers
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