Yolo County Jury Quickly Convicts Man of Burglary Despite Heavily Circumstantial Case
A Yolo County Jury went out just after lunch and came back before 5 pm to convict Oscar Barrientos of two counts – one of first degree burglary and one of grand theft.
Despite these convictions, Mr. Barrientos still likely faces probation, given his age at the time of the crime and his lack of priors. Nevertheless, his conviction was based entirely on circumstantial evidence, most of the pieces extremely flawed to the point where Deputy DA Sulaiman Tokhi suggested that the defense would be that he is the most unlucky person around.
This week, Yolo Judicial Watch covered a typical Yolo County trial in which an Hispanic defendant was judged by a nearly all-white jury that contained no other Hispanics.
The case that would never end may have just ended with Michael Artz in custody serving what would appear to be a 270-day jail sentence.
by the ACLU
The Contra Costa Times has a very interesting story on a California Supreme Court case that will decide whether Contra Costa prosecutors (and by extension all DA’s) should be required to run criminal background checks on police officers so defense attorneys can prepare to challenge their credibility before they are called as witnesses in court.
Judge Timothy Fall sentence Pedro Ramirez to 13 years in prison for the beating of a Sikh Taxi Driver back in November 2010. This followed an extended attempt to withdraw from his plea, based on ineffectual counsel.

Local Cases and Tragic National Mistakes Highlight Need for Eyewitness Identification Reform Procedures –
A few months ago a woman accused of drug dealing was acquitted of those charges, but still faced an immigration hold. Her husband had tragically put out an assassination hit on her back in Mexico. The sad part is, given the minor charges against her, the Sheriff’s office did not have to report the woman to immigration.