Motion to dismiss indictment due to gross prosecutorial misdonduct. The motion and brief seeks to have an indictment dismissed for the reason that the government agents fabricated a plan to conduct an armed robbery of an imaginary person and then had an informant pitch the plan to the defendants.
Motion to withdraw gulty plea (plea not knowingly and intelligently entered) The defendant alleges in this motion, made prior to sentencing, that he is entitled to withdraw his guilty plea to a federal drug conspiracy because he was misled by the terms of the plea agreement concerning the alleged temporal scope of the drug conspiracy.
Motions to suppress evidence (illegal search) and motion to identify confidential informer. This document contains a federal motion to suppress evidence on the grounds that the police conducted a warrantless search of a residence. It also contains a motion to identify the confidential informant who tipped off the police that drugs might be found in the home.
Sentencing Memorandum. This is an example of sentencing memoranda that are filed in federal court especially since the sentencing guideline became advisory rather than mandator.
Motion to suppress evidence of illegal wiretapping under Title III: This is a motion and brief to suppess evidence of illegal wiretapping in a federal prosecution for using a telephone in conjunction with drug trafficking. Federal agents obtained authorization to tap the defendant's cellular telephone; however, the application contained information that government agents could not have known unless they had already been intercepting the defendant's telephone communications.
Expert testimony "interpreting" drug code language used in intercepted telephone calls. This trial brief filed in the matter of United States v. Pedro Romo argues that government case agents may not testify as expert witnesses who can intrepret drug code language used by alleged members of a drug conspiracy in cell phone calls that were intercepted by the agents.
Milwaukee criminal defense attorney Jeffrey W. Jensen, of the Law Offices of Jeffrey W. Jensen, a Milwaukee law firm with offices located at 111 E. Wisconsin Avenue, Suite 1925, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, has represented persons throughout the State of Wisconsin. If you will face felony charges in either state court or in federal court you should call 414.671.9484. Attorney Jensen regularly appears in Milwaukee County (Milwaukee criminal defense lawyer), Waukesha County (Waukesha criminal defense lawyer, Brookfield criminal defense lawyer), Washington County (West Bend and Germantown criminal defense lawyer), Racine County (Racine criminal defense lawyer), Kenosha County (Kenosha criminal defense lawyer), Brown County (Green Bay criminal defense lawyer), Fond du Lac County (Fond du Lac criminal defense lawyer), and Winnebago County (Oshkosh criminal defense lawyer)
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