Davidson Law Office, Thad Davidson

Davidson Law Office, Thad Davidson Award winning, experienced trial and appellate attorney. If you have a criminal case, State & Federal

Experienced in State and Federal cases, including Murder, Capitol Murder, Manslaughter, Criminally negligent homicide, Unlawful restraint, Kidnapping, Aggravated kidnapping, Drug cases, Assault, Sexual assault, Aggravated assault, Deadly Conduct, Terroristic Threat, Arson, Criminal mischief, Robbery, Aggravated robbery, Burglary, Criminal trespass, Theft, Forgery, Credit-Debit card abuse, Hinderin

g secured creditors, Money laundering, Bribery, Perjury, False report, Tampering, Evading arrest, Bail jumping, Official oppression, Disorderly conduct, Harassment, Stalking, all firearm cases, Gambling, Driving While Intoxicated, Intoxication assault, Intoxication manslaughter, DWI with child passenger, Engaging in organized criminal activity, and more.

02/15/2024

"You look like an as***le."

So sayeth a man in my office today looking for legal representation.

The man is an Army veteran who was injured in Iraq. An honorable discharge on complete disability. He has significant problems, including the criminal allegations against him. He has no prior record.

My first duty today was to keep this man alive. To keep him from committing su***de. I believe I have been successful--and will continue to be successful--in that objective.

With effort and work, timing and tactics, I likely can keep the man out of prison and keep him from getting a felony conviction. These two objectives, however, are on down the road. Future projects.

The man was visibly suffering in my office, a huge guy quivering and shaking like a leaf, sweat pouring off him like a waterfall. I spent the first 45 minutes of our time together getting him calmed down and giving him reasons to stay alive. I made him give me his word that he would not kill himself.

I eventually asked the man why he had chosen me or looked for me to be his lawyer. The man hesitated. He said, "Can I be honest with you?" I said, "Please."

He said, "I looked through lawyers on line, read their profiles. You look like an as***le."

07/06/2022

On Being a Defense Attorney

Recently I received a letter from a client I briefly represented nearly a decade ago. The client had been arrested on multiple felony charges. The client entered into an agreement with me. I began my investigation. I discovered evidence that the charges were without substance. I took my evidence to a detective, a man who had the integrity to listen, and together he and I went on a clue hunt. He soon came to the same conclusion that I had already made: the client was innocent of the charges against him/her. That same day, the client was released from jail and went home.

One significant problem for me, if slight problem or no problem for the client for a very long time: I was never paid. Not a dime.

An excerpt from the letter:

"I know I owe you money and I left on bad terms * * *

I thank you so much for saving my life. If it weren't for you, I would have slipped through the cracks of Smith County!"

Now the former client wants me to represent him/her on a new matter, one just as serious as what I saved him/her from those long years ago.

But I was never paid on the original matter.

So . . .

On Being a Defense Attorney

04/04/2022

Threading a Needle

A few weeks ago I resolved a murder case. This took about 14-15 months to accomplish. The prosecutor, based on the evidence he had at the time, all of which was provided to him by the local police, indicted the defendant for first degree murder. The range of punishment was 5-99 years or life. It did not help things one bit that at the time of the alleged murder, the defendant was on probation for two burglary of a habitation convictions--each punishable by 2-20 years in prison. It also did not help that he fled the scene and that a certain deadly weapon vanished into the wind.

So . . . when I took on the case, the situation for the defendant looked bleak. As in bad. As in very.

However, we--"we" meaning my defense team--did our own investigation. This is a State Bar requirement, but more important than that, it is a vital step the defence must undertake in every critical, high stakes case. Deep digging occasionally turns up evidence the police missed, or ignored, or improperly disregarded.

Hence a common problem and too often occurrence in major felony cases:

(1) someone is dead or something terrible has happened;

(2) the police are under intense pressure to arrest a bad guy or bad guys as suspects for the crime;

(3) there's a potential bad guy or bad guys with records;

(4) the police, instead of strictly following the evidence--and only the evidence--unconsciously or, far worse, negligently or even deliberately focus on questionable evidence, even shaky evidence, that points at their potential bad guy or bad guys, rather than simply, strictly, and only following whatever the evidence is, to a proper and logical and accurate conclusion about who committed what crime if any, in what order, when, where, how and why.

The State's original case missed key evidence, key witness statements, key text messages, and key recorded statements, which the defense team's investigation did not. We acquired some of these leads during our investigation. We followed the facts and the truth as both developed.

The State's original offer was something like 50 or 60 years.

A few weeks ago, the defendant pled guilty to negligent homicide, a state jail felony punishable by 180 days to 2 years in a state jail. Because the defendant used a deadly weapon, however, his punishment was legally increased to third degree felony range of 2-10 years in TDCJ and up to a $10,000 fine.

There were many and other complicated factors at play in this case.

I advised the client that if we took the case to trial, we would likely obtain a Not Guilty verdict from the jury, or a hung jury, as long as we were able to pick a rational, intelligent, attentive jury. The prosecutor, whom I respect, did not disagree with this assessment, and in fact advised the DA of same.

The defendant, however, fearing a possible life sentence if things went south, fearing never seeing his young daughter again, instructed me to avoid trial as long as I could obtain for him a sentence of ten years or less. Given his existing time in jail waiting for trial, he would be parole eligible in about three and a half years if I obtained a ten year deal.

There were many negotiations over many months. It is arguable he did not commit murder of any kind or type. It is also arguable he did. I struggled over this for some time, but the defendant was the client, and I followed his orders, which were proper and legal under both the law and State Bar rules.

I acquired that ten year deal.

Again, the client avoided a trial he might have lost, avoided a possible life sentence, and is parole eligible in about three and half years.

Is this a trial victory?

No. There was no trial.

Should we have taken the case to trial?

The defendant ordered me to get him a ten year deal or better. I did so.

Is the defendant satisfied with the outcome of his case?

Very much so. He will miss his daughter's middle school years. But he will see his child graduate from high school. He will see her graduate from college. He will be there for her during critical years of her childhood, if not all of them.

Is this a victory for the client?

He feels it is.

And so, and therefore, the answer, and his answer, is yes.

State v. Tommy Pettigrew, 241st District Court, Smith County, TX.

Threading a Needle

01/19/2022

A Difficult Case, an Excellent Ending

Today I resolved a case nearly four years old. The client was charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. The client shot a guy half a dozen times, a veritable gunfight in a phone booth. The other guy shot back, of course, and may have fired the first shot. The mutual salvo took place at a range of 6 ft or less, at night, in poor light conditions, and between two closely parked vehicles. The other guy wasn't supposed to have a gun; it was illegal for him to possess a gun.

Security video from the gas station caught the muzzle flashes between the shooters. It was difficult, perhaps impossible, to determine who pulled the trigger first. My client was grazed by a lethally-intended bullet. The other guy suffered permanent severe injuries.

There were other complications I cannot get into here. Those complications did not help my client, and were significantly of the client's own creation.

The case was heading for a trial, and this is several years ago, but was assigned to a good, honorable prosecutor, and a tough one, but also a fair one. That prosecutor and I respect each other very much. We have hundreds of felony trials under our belts. Both of us have fought viciously hard trial fights. Neither of us want to go to trial against the other. Both of us accept that someday there may be a case in which we have no choice. The case at hand certainly seemed to be one of those cases.

Just before the covid pandemic came along, the prosecutor offered 12 years to do on a 20-year maximum possible sentence. I advised my client. The client promptly rejected the offer.

Halfway through the first year of the pandemic, the prosecutor offered 10 years to do. The client and I talked about it. We examined the videos. Examined the history of the alleged victim. Learned a few more things which helped us against the alleged victim. My client rejected the offer.

About a year and a half into the case, the prosecutor offered 8 years, and both the client and I knew the offer wouldn't get any better unless other evidence came forward which tended to be exculpatory or otherwise beneficial to the defendant. The client rejected the offer, however because of the covid pandemic, there were no trials available, not only for us, but for anyone. The criminal justice system went into hibernation. Both sides went into Wait Mode.

My client was out on bond this entire time. He did well on bond, with no violations and no issues with the court. He had a life, if not much of one because of his weekly reporting requirements to the pre-trial probation office. Still, he wasn't locked up without being prosecuted or convicted. The Great Wait was no real handicap to the client, and did not help the prosecution. Time usually favors the defense.

The pandemic lifted and changed the local world enough so that trials resumed at the courthouse. My client's case fell in line. The prosecutor and I talked. Both of us dreaded the thought of going into battle against the other. Both of us thought the odds of victory for our respective side was merely 50%.

A key witness for the state got himself into deeper trouble than the trouble he was already in. The good and honorable prosecutor was forced to tell us about it, although we already knew via our other sources. This particular kind of trouble cast credibility issues upon the witness, and his credibility was already shaky. This was a huge benefit to the defense. Both sides knew it.

The trial date approached. Jury selection was immediately around the corner.

Today my client accepted a deferred adjudication offer on the case. The client pled guilty, but was not found guilty, does not have a felony conviction, and is free at home as I write these words. He will be on deferred adjudication probation for 10 years unless, sometime after the halfway point, and long after I have disappeared from his memory and his life, he can persuade the prosecutor and the judge for early termination of his deferred adjudication probation.

So, a difficult case with an excellent ending. The client is free. He does not have a felony conviction. He won't have one as long as he stays out of trouble. He has spent several years on pre-trial probation and has never been in trouble during that time. I feel his chances of success while on deferred adjudication probation are extremely high.

Mission accomplished. Case closed. Justice achieved.

01/06/2022

I am T.W. Davidson, a criminal defense and constitutional law attorney in Tyler, TX. I've been practicing law in TX since 2000, and in Wisconsin before that, from 1996-98. I've been a lawyer about 25 years now.

I am a trial lawyer and appellate attorney in both state and federal criminal cases. I have handled everything from misdemeanor theft cases up to capital murder trials. Perhaps my most significant case was State v. Patrick Kelly, part of the Mineola Swingers Club Cases. My client, who was wrongfully and illegally convicted after a vicious long difficult trial, was ultimately released from prison as a free man, along with multiple other MSC defendants. A major motion picture was made about his case and the other MSC cases. Justice ultimately prevailed for my client in a battle and war that took three years to win. I never gave up on my client. He never gave up on me.

Recent cases:

In October of 2021 I took a murder case to trial--State v. Keiuna Paul--in Cherokee County. My client received NOT GUILTY verdicts from the jury.

Earlier in 2021, I took two criminal trespass cases to trial--State v. Jett Worl and State v. Brandon Neal--and received NOT GUILTY verdicts from the jury in those cases.

In the fall of 2021, I did an appeal of an unconstitutitionally high (as in outrageous) bond set by a district judge in Cherokee County. The appellate court reversed--meaning, my client won--the district judge in a scathing opinion in Irving Williams v. State, 12th Court of Appeals, Tyler, TX.

I represented defendants in several misdemeanor cases--a DWI case, a ma*****na case, another drug case--in Smith County which were dismissed in 2021, along with a significant felony case that was also dismissed, all without trial. I have obtained very favorable (to my clients) plea agreements in other cases in Smith County and surrounding counties. I practice primarily in Smith County, Cherokee County, Anderson County, Rusk County, Gregg County and other counties within 60-70 miles of Tyler.

I am a fighter. I research the law, investigate the facts, and will take a case to trial if that is the right thing to do, or when my client directs me to do so. I am also skilled, however, at obtaining favorable (to the client) plea agreement resolutions in cases where the client or clients do not wish to go to trial, but rather seek a non-trial outcome which will keep them from getting a conviction, or will keep them out of jail, or will, in the most difficult cases, obtain for them an outcome to the case (or cases) which the client or clients are happy with.

Prosecutors fear and respect defense attorneys who will fight and win at trial and/or on appeal. This also results in far better outcomes for clients in cases which do not go to trial.

Before I became an attorney, I was an officer and aviator in the U.S. Marine Corps, primarily flying fighter-reconnaissance jets, the RF-4 Phantom II. I have a daughter who is grown up, on her own, and happily married. I have a separate life as a musician, composer and writer.

My mantra:

The Constitution of the United States--fighting for it, defending it, protecting it, ensuring that it protects my clients--is everything to me. It is why I am a defense lawyer and constitutional law attorney. I will fight for it, defend it and protect it to my last breath.

Have a criminal case pending against you or someone you love? Let me fight for you. Let me fight for them.

It is what I do.

Respectfully submitted,

T.W. Davidson

Davidson Law Office, 329 S. Fannin Ave., Tyler, TX. (903) 535-9600 (T) // (903) 533-9394 (F)

12/27/2021

VICTORY ON APPEAL!

As posted on the Twelfth Court of Appeals (located in Tyler, TX) website:

12-21-00032-CR
Memorandum Opinion by Hon. Bass Jr.
Ex Parte: Irving Williams
Appeal from 369th District Court of Cherokee County
REVERSED AND REMANDED

This was and is a big deal. A judge set an insanely high multiple count bond against my client, who has no prior record and is not an escape risk. After much negotiating, the State agreed with me that the Client's bond should be not one million dollars plus, not in the high hundreds of thousands, but just $100,000, which I knew the Client and his family could post.

But the trial court judge ignored the evidence I put on, ignored the Client's uncontroverted testimony, and, quite frankly, the State damn near laid behind the log at the hearing and did nothing. The trial judge lowered the original insanely high bond by a small amount, purposely ignoring that the Client could never post it.

Enraged, I did the appeal--a tremendous amount of work--for free, pro bono.

And the appellate court agreed with me and slammed the trial court. Shortly thereafter, the Client was able to post the suddenly-massively-lowered bond the trial court (albeit reluctantly) was forced to set. VICTORY ON APPEAL.

12/27/2021

VICTORY FOR THE DEFENSE

TWO CRIMINAL TRESPASS CASES TRIED SIMULTANEOUSLY BEFORE A CHEROKEE COUNTY JURY. THE RESULT? NOT GUILTY VERDICTS FROM THE JURY IN BOTH CASES.

State v. Jett Worl
State v. Brandon Neal
NOT GUILT VERDICTS, Cherokee County Court at Law, Cherokee County Courthouse, Rusk, TX
28 July 2021

12/27/2021

VICTORY FOR THE DEFENSE, 28 OCTOBER 2021

MURDER CASE THAT WENT TO TRIAL, A LONG HARD FIGHT.

THE JURY DELIVERED A "NOT GUILTY" VERDICT ON ALL COUNTS.

THE CLIENT DROVE HER CAR AND WENT HOME THAT NIGHT.

State v. Keiuna Roshell Paul
Cause No. 21457
2nd District Court
Cherokee County, TX

Address

329 S Fannin Avenue
Tyler, TX
75702

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