Legal Question in Criminal Law in Washington

Reciprocity Re: Motions

My question concerns motions in criminal procedures. In a misdemeanor, are all defense motions answered by the prosecutor prior to trial? If a defense attorney asks to have a no contact order lifted, and the prosecutor disagrees, can the prosecutor wait until the motion hearing to state his or her grounds for disagreeing? Does the defense attn submit (to the judge and the prosecutor) the reasons to lift the nc order, then the prosecutor submits (to the judge and the defense attn) his reasons for opposing, and THEN they go to the judge. Thank you.


Asked on 6/03/03, 11:15 pm

1 Answer from Attorneys

Jeffrey A. Lustick, Esq The Lustick Law Firm

Re: Reciprocity Re: Motions

In prima facie motion practice, you are correct. Defense counsel files his or her motion and the prosecutor files a reply in written from with the court and a copy is served on the defense. However, there is no requirement at the trial court level for the prosecution to reply in writing to a defense motion. If the prosecutor does not respond, he or she can still argue against your motion at the hearing.

In my experience, on routine motions, it�s rare for the prosecutor to respond formally. And especially on motions to rescind no contact orders � most prosecutors have five to ten of these to deal with each court day, so it�s difficult to impossible to reply at all to these.

If you want to know what the prosecution is likely to argue in your case, I recommend calling the deputy prosecutor handling the case. If he or she is busy, ask to speak with the office�s victim-witness coordinator. Typically in the situation of a domestic violence no contact order, the coordinator will be making a strong recommendation to the prosecutor about whether the order should be lifted, so touching base with that person in a productive and convincing way can be helpful to your case.

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Answered on 6/04/03, 12:33 am


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