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Texas Man held for 83 days for missing jury duty

May 9 2009 at 5:37 PM

ANNE PAGE  (Login AnnePage)

http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/localnews/columnists/problemsolver/stories/050909dnentjuryduty.3b78bf5.html

DMN Problem Solver: Collin County man held for 83 days for missing jury duty
12:39 PM CDT on Saturday, May 9, 2009

Douglas Maupin was held at the Collin County Detention Facility for 83 days on a warrant for failure to appear for jury duty. During those days of legal purgatory, he said he was unable to hire a lawyer, post bail or even get a clear explanation of what type of charge he was being held on.

His case was finally handled Friday afternoon a few hours after a judge heard from The Dallas Morning News about his situation.

"He should not have spent that much time. This is unacceptable," said 416th District Judge Chris Oldner, who returned to the courthouse late Friday specifically to handle the case of Maupin, who was released Saturday. "I don't know why the process failed to notify us."

Maupin, 34, who recently lived in Allen, was taken in on the 6-year-old jury duty warrant after he was stopped for speeding 65 mph in a 45-mph zone in Parker on Feb. 15.

He was then taken to the Collin County Detention Facility, where he said he spent the next 36 hours sitting on a plastic chair waiting for a bond hearing. A videoconference with a municipal judge set a $1,500 bond, which required the full amount in cash, according to court documents.

Maupin, a masonry contractor, says he didn't have the money, and his friends and family couldn't afford to help him. "My mother knows I'm in here, but she's on partial disability and a small income," he said during a jailhouse interview early Friday afternoon. He also said it was hard to reach his friends, because all of them have cellphones, and they could not receive collect calls.

When asked why Maupin was being held so long, John Norton, a Collin County Sheriff's Department spokesman, said, "We hold him until he posts bond or a judge says, 'Release him.' "

Wearing an orange jumpsuit and talking by phone from behind a glass partition, Maupin said that the notice of the original summons and contempt hearing back in 2003 was sent to his parents' home. That's why he didn't show up, he said.

"I understand I am partially responsible, but I just want my day in court," he said during the interview. "I do know I have the right to due process and a speedy trial. I've had neither. It's not right."

He said at one point he had asked for a form to try to get a public defender, but he was told by a clerk that he couldn't have one because his was a civil case even though the court's Web site identifies the case as a felony.

He also said that released inmates wrote him and told him they had tried to tell the court of his situation but were ignored.

So he wrote a letter, postmarked April 30, to the DMN Problem Solver column at The News. The letter was received on Thursday.

"I have been given conflicting pieces of information about my case," he wrote. "Also, I have been denied representation. There is still no court date set and I'm becoming quite concerned. My situation has become critical."

Maupin wrote that, because of his time in jail, he lost his rental home, his car and his dog. "I find myself now homeless, with no job, and a vehicle repossession," he wrote. "Along with the loss of all my personal possessions, and my beloved dog, Daisy."

In the interview, he said he wasn't sure what happened to his dog, or where his possessions are.

Aside from not appearing for jury duty, Maupin also had seven charges for failing to pay tolls with fines totaling $2,236. Five of those cases were canceled by the court on March 5. The remaining two were finally dropped for time served on April 17.

An examination of Maupin's case indicates several reasons why he might have fallen through the cracks. The judge who signed the original 2003 warrant has since retired. And while the case was assigned to the court of the judge who replaced him, it wasn't that court's responsibility.

Judge Oldner said that, as the administrative judge, the case was his but he had no idea that Maupin was in the detention facility.

He also said that Maupin should have been allowed to apply for a public defender. While the case wouldn't have qualified, it would have put Maupin on the court's radar.

"I'm disappointed this has happened. I am going to investigate," Oldner said.

The judge said cases like this are rare and if people are arrested, they're usually held for only a matter of days.

Late Friday, Maupin still had two outstanding warrants in Arlington for a speeding ticket and driving with no insurance.

But Arlington police spokesman Blake Miller said that a municipal judge had signed off on allowing Maupin to be released for time served. Arlington police sent an e-mail to Collin County to let authorities there know.

At an average cost of $69.70 per day for a Collin County inmate, the mistakes involving Maupin's case cost the county roughly $5,785.

But the Garland native said it has cost him far more. "After a while, I realized that this is about more than just me. If it can happen to me, it might happen to anyone," he said.

http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/localnews/stories/051009dnmetjurydutyfolo.ca8e531.html

Collin County man held for 83 days for missing jury duty is released
03:30 PM CDT on Saturday, May 9, 2009

By KATIE FAIRBANK / The Dallas Morning News
kfairbank@dallasnews.com
Douglas Maupin was released from the Collin County Jail today after serving 83 days for missing jury duty.

Maupin, 34, was caught up in the legal system and didnt have a court date set for almost three months until he wrote to The Dallas Morning News.

A judge, who was notified by the paper on Friday about the situation, held a late afternoon hearing to handle Maupins case.

Meanwhile, a municipal judge in Arlington allowed his time served to apply to two minor traffic tickets in that city.

It was unclear what time Maupin was released.

 
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Mari
(Login auntiem2)

Re: Texas Man held for 83 days for missing jury duty

May 9 2009, 6:19 PM 

 

Good ol' texass....reminds one of other places where people are held forever, with no recourse.

 



America, we are better than these last eight years. We are a better country than this.

Barack Obama
Acceptance Speech at Democratic Convention Aug 28th 2008

 
 

gus.
(Login gus-mccrea)

Re: Texas Man held for 83 days for missing jury duty

May 9 2009, 9:13 PM 

Good ol' texass....reminds one of other places where people are held forever, with no recourse.

   Absolutely!  It's as bad as everything you've ever heard, and worse.  Be afraid, and by all means, keep your distance.

gus.

 


 
 

Mari
(Login auntiem2)

Re: Texas Man held for 83 days for missing jury duty

May 9 2009, 9:36 PM 

Be afraid, and by all means, keep your distance.

 

Don't you worry, gus....I've seen enough of texass to last me a lifetime.  You being there is only an added incentive to stay away!

 



America, we are better than these last eight years. We are a better country than this.

Barack Obama
Acceptance Speech at Democratic Convention Aug 28th 2008

 
 
AJC
(Login ajc122)

Re: Texas Man held for 83 days for missing jury duty

May 9 2009, 11:19 PM 

No problem unless someone abuses power or your paperwork gets lost.

And of course these always happen to the other guy.

 
 


(Login gus-mccrea)

Re: Texas Man held for 83 days for missing jury duty

May 10 2009, 12:13 AM 

Don't you worry, gus....I've seen enough of texass to last me a lifetime.  You being there is only an added incentive to stay away!

  See how well that all works out?  The spirit of compromise, (sigh)...  If only you could spell.

gus.

 

 


 
 

Jennifer
(Premier Login AquarianPath)

Re: Texas Man held for 83 days for missing jury duty

May 10 2009, 12:05 PM 

Yeah, beware because if you don't...they'll shoot you.

 

http://news.aol.com/article/texas-trespassing-shooting/472454

 

7-Year-old Boy Dies in Trespass Shooting

HOUSTON (May 9) - A 7-year-old boy who was allegedly shot in the head by a couple who thought he and three other people were trespassing on their property died Saturday, authorities said. Donald Coffey Jr. died Saturday morning at a Houston hospital, less than two days after the boy was struck in the head by shotgun pellets, Liberty County Sheriff's Cpl. Hugh Bishop said.

Come join me in Open Discussion!
http://www.network54.com/Forum/625438

"Watch your thoughts, for they become words.

Watch your words, for they become actions.

Watch your actions, for they become habits.

Watch your habits, for they become character.

Watch your character, for it becomes your destiny."-

 
 

(Login gillis7)

jennifer

May 10 2009, 12:11 PM 

you don't think killings happen in Detroit or Washington dc or Fargo or Boise?


just Texas?

 
 


(Premier Login AquarianPath)

Re: Texas Man held for 83 days for missing jury duty

May 10 2009, 12:15 PM 

Nah, I know they do.

What's your point?

 

But this sort of attitude : Be afraid, and by all means, keep your distance.

 

Perpetuates the sort of idiocy exhibited in the article I posted. *John Wayne voice* Keep your distance or I'll shoot ya - even if ya are a 7 y/o varmint just looking for a toilet.

 

pffft



Come join me in Open Discussion!
http://www.network54.com/Forum/625438

"Watch your thoughts, for they become words.

Watch your words, for they become actions.

Watch your actions, for they become habits.

Watch your habits, for they become character.

Watch your character, for it becomes your destiny."-


    
This message has been edited by AquarianPath on May 10, 2009 12:17 PM


 
 


(Login j2saret)

Re: Texas Man held for 83 days for missing jury duty

May 10 2009, 7:59 PM 

gus, you that texas old fart who never used his turn signals?


When they asked him why he said: "ain't nobody's business but mine which way I'm going to turn."

"If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be." -- Thomas Jefferson

We live in a society exquisitely dependent on science and technology, in which hardly anyone knows anything about science and technology. - Carl Sagan

I believe that every right implies a responsibility, every opportunity an obligation; every possession, a duty. - John D. Rockefeller, Jr.

 
 


(Premier Login susanklmr)
Admins

Re: Texas Man held for 83 days for missing jury duty

May 12 2009, 4:35 PM 

I would imagine he will be rich soon enough.  The lawsuit I would file would be enough to get me over whatever inconveniences I suffered. 




~~life isn't about how to survive the storm but how to dance in the rain~~

When the character of a man is not clear to you, look at his friends.
Japanese Proverb

 
 
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