Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Update on Grrr

Update on Grrr.

This the most thoroughly I have ever lost a case. I lost every motion, every evidentiary argument, the trial itself, and now, the sentencing.

The maximum sentence allowed by statute on each count, consecutive to each other with no possibility of parole. It amounts to a life without parole sentence.

At least I won't lose the appeal - client is retaining new counsel for that.

An interesting DA policy

Here is the scenario that every defense and prosecuting attorney has seen:

Johnny and his Significant Other Suzy get into an argument. Suzy calls the police and tells the responding officer that Johnny slapped her around. Johnny is arrested for Family Violence Battery.

Then, of course, after Johnny has been in jail for a week or two, Suzy decides that she really loves Johnny and tells the DA that she lied to the police because she was mad and that Johnny never really touched her. Johnny gets out of jail and Suzy gets probation for false report of a crime. (Johnny would have gotten 12 months to serve because he has a horrible record, including prior FVB against same victim - and may well have had his probation revoked for even longer).

For the last few months, the DA's office in my circuit has used a new policy, and the Judges are fully on board with it. If the above scenario happens, then Suzy serves exactly as many days as Johnny served. Once word of this got around the jail, then the claims of "I lied to the police" dropped to nearly nothing.

Lying rarely ever does anyone any good, and most people are terrible liars. Suzy (and Johnny) are usually a lot better off if she goes to the DA and says that he slapped her, but she really doesn't want to go forward with the case because they have a relationship that is worth something. Frequently Suzy's statement of that sort is enough to get the case dismissed (with no additional charges) or sentenced as probation/counseling only. I have even seen juries, on more than one occasion, find not guilty because Suzy so obviously doesn't want a conviction and just wants to get beyond this.

Friday, January 9, 2009

A history of the AP Poll

A while back, I started playing around with the AP Poll for college football. I took every AP Poll since the beginning in 1936 and assigned a point value to each final ranking. 25 points to #1, 24 to #2 and so on. This morning, I included newest poll and here are some results.

The overall top 25 teams, from 1936 season to present are:

1. Oklahoma
2. Michigan
3. Notre Dame
4. Ohio State
5. Alabama
6. Southern California
7. Nebraska
8. Texas
9. Tennessee
10. Penn State
11. LSU
12. (tie) Miami (Fla.)
12. (tie) Georgia
14. UCLA
15. (tie) Auburn
15. (tie) Florida State
17. Florida
18. Arkansas
19. Washington
20. Mississippi
21. Michigan State
22. Texas A&M
23. Georgia Tech
24. Iowa
25. Clemson

The top ten teams for the last ten years;

1. (tie) Oklahoma
1. (tie) Texas
3. Southern California
4. Ohio State
5. Georgia
6. Florida
7. Virginia Tech
8. Miami (Fla.)
9. LSU
10. Michigan

The top ten teams from the last five years;

1. Southern California
2. Texas
3. Ohio State
4. Oklahoma
5. LSU
6. Florida
7. Georgia
8. Virginia Tech
9. West Virginia
10. Boise State

Interesting factoids:

There have been 73 AP national championships. Of those, 10 schools: Notre Dame (8), Oklahoma (7), Alabama (6), Southern California (5), Miami (5), Ohio State (4), Nebraska (4), Minnesota (4), Florida (3), and Texas (3) have won 49 (67%) of them.

The longest current streak of being ranked in the final poll belongs to Georgia, at 12 years.

The longest national championship drought belongs to Texas Christian, who last won the AP title in 1938.

The longest ever streak of being ranked in the final poll belongs to Nebraska, at 33 years from 1969 - 2001.

A total of 129 teams have been ranked in the final poll at least once. #129 is Bowling Green, who was ranked #23 in 2003.

Back-to-back titles have been won by Notre Dame (1946-47), Oklahoma (1955-56, 1974-75), Alabama (1964-65, 1978-79), Southern California (2003-04), Nebraska (1970-71,1994-95), Minnesota (1940-41), and Army (1944-45).

Number 1 teams by decade:

1930s: Notre Dame
1940s: Michigan
1950s: Oklahoma
1960s: Alabama
1970s: Oklahoma
1980s: Nebraska
1990s: Florida State
2000s: Oklahoma

Based on current conference alignment, the all-time top 25 breaks down as follows:

SEC: 8 (32%)
Big 10: 5 (20%)
Big 12: 4 (16%)
ACC: 4 (16%)
Pac 10: 3 (12%)
Notre Dame: (4%)