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Judge Declares Lawyer Drunk in Court

LAS VEGAS (AP) -- A judge ordered a blood-alcohol test for a defense lawyer who was slurring his words, then declared a mistrial after declaring him too tipsy to argue a kidnapping case.

''I don't think you can tell a straight story because you are intoxicated,'' the judge told Joseph Caramango as she declared a mistrial for his client.

Caramango, 41, acknowledged in court that he was drinking the previous night, but maintained he was not drunk. If convicted, his client faces life in prison.

''I don't believe I've committed any ethical violation,'' Caramango said Tuesday, disputing the accuracy of the breath-alcohol test. ''If it proved anything, it proved I was not intoxicated.''

Clark County District Judge Michelle Leavitt announced Caramango had a blood-alcohol level of 0.075 percent. Nevada's legal blood-alcohol limit for drivers is 0.08 percent.

Details here from the AP via the New York Times.

UPDATE: Oh, Jesus. CourtTV has full coverage -- 'Dazed and confused' Vegas lawyer causes mistrial after showing up to court drunk -- including video. The video segments are very long, and beyond painful to watch. I recommend it. (via FBK)

Comments (< $MTEntryCommentCount$>)

Excellent blog here John -- I hope you'll permit me to link to some of your material while I guest blog at Overlawyered.

John:

Thank you, kind wavemaker. And please -- link away!

Maybe it's the state...when I interned with a judge in Reno, in the middle of a criminal trial the defendant accused his court-appointed attorney as being drunk in court (and of having hit him during an interview). Interesting stuff.

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This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on August 8, 2006 6:55 PM.

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