eCourse art

eCourse

Ethics Lessons from the Michael Morton Wrongful Conviction

Contains material from Sep 2013

Ethics Lessons from the Michael Morton Wrongful Conviction
4.51 out of 5 stars
What was the overall quality of the course (presentation, materials, and technical delivery)?
Rate the overall teaching effectiveness and presentation skills of faculty for the course.
How would you rate the value of the materials provided as part of the course?

Excellent

IF possible, it would have been great to actually see video feed of this conference.

I really enjoyed this course. It was one of my favorites that I have done so far. I like how Patricia gives us the background for the Morton trial and then goes into the meat of it, which is all the ethical violations that the DA Ken Anderson committed. Putting it into perspective this was great for a new prosecutor like myself to listen to.

powerful story and presentation . . the credit inquiry asks for a verification code presented during the ecourse - there was no verification code that I could find

Truly captivating - lessons learned - hopefully never repeated (on the prosecution side).

Technical Questions?
512.475.6700
service@utcle.org



A first-hand account of work on this case and the ongoing review into prosecutorial misconduct from a member of the legal team responsible for exonerating Michael Morton after serving 25 years of his life sentence.

Includes: Audio Slides


Preview mode. You must be signed in, have purchased this eCourse, and the eCourse must be active to have full access.
Preview Sessions

Show session details

1. Ethics Lessons From the Michael Morton Wrongful Conviction (Sep 2013)

Patricia J. Cummings

1.00 1.00 0.00
Preview Materials

Download session materials for offline use

(mp3)
54 mins
Slides
(pdf)
11 pgs
Session 1 —54 mins
Ethics Lessons From the Michael Morton Wrongful Conviction (Sep 2013)

A firsthand account of work on this case and the ongoing review into prosecutorial misconduct from a member of the legal team responsible for exonerating Michael Morton after serving 25 years of his life sentence.

Originally presented: Aug 2013 Advanced Texas Administrative Law Seminar

Patricia J. Cummings, Law Office of Patricia J. Cummings - Round Rock, TX