While Parish Touts Criminal Law Experience, He May Never Get to Practice It As Yolo County Judge
Public Defender Suggests Office Would Disqualify Judge Parish from Presiding Over Criminal Case Defended by Her Office
Deputy District Attorney Clinton Parish is running against sitting Yolo Superior Court Judge Daniel Maguire in a contested election that will be held this June. Mr. Parish has focused much of his campaign on what he calls his strong record of criminal law experience, which, given AB 109 (California’s realignment law) and recent retirements on the bench, is in short supply.
In a recent debate presented by the Yolo County Bar Association, Mr. Parish argued, “There is a void there.”
Local Critics Believe Yolo County Could Do Better in Allocating Funding and Changing Current Incarceration Strategies –
On March 2, 2012, Edward Lee Elmore was released from prison in South Carolina for a crime he had not committed. But in order to do so, he had to agree to what is known as an Alford Plea – a plea arrangement in which he maintained his innocence but agreed the state could re-convict him of murder in a new trial.
On March 9, 2012, a Yolo County Jury of eight women and four men acquitted Christopher Spatola of a single misdemeanor count of a violation of Penal Code section 148, obstructing or delaying a peace officer in carrying out the legal performance of duties.
The case of four West Sacramento teenagers and one adult who allegedly attacked, robbed and assaulted a passerby in the late night hours back in January, 2011, turned when the defense’s expert, Dr. Geoffrey Loftus, testified about the impact of human memory on eyewitness identification.
They all talk about the fiscal costs of the death penalty, and indeed the fiscal cost matters when the cost of execution is three times the cost of regular imprisonment. And it really matters when you are not executing people and you really never have.


It is a trial that, in strange ways, still haunts me. Bennie Moses sentenced to 830 years for the crime of the repeated rape of his daughter over a period of years.
A Yolo County Jury found Steve Sargent not guilty of gross vehicular manslaughter for his role in a fatal accident that killed his passenger. The jury would deadlock on a lesser included charge of vehicular manslaughter, 8-4 in favor of acquittal, and 7-5 also for acquittal on a charge of failure to stop.
Michael Morton was released from prison in October 2011 after spending nearly 25 years in prison for the murder of his wife.
A frequent criticism of the current state of California gang laws is that they permit prosecutors to enter in damaging and prejudicial evidence that generally would not be admissible, under California’s Evidence Code section 352.

by Andrew Love