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in Re the State of Texas Ex Rel. Abelino Reyna, Relator v. Court of Appeals for the Tenth District
WR-83,719-01
Tex. App.
Sep 16, 2015
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Background

  • Amicus (Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association) filed a brief in In re State ex rel. Abelino Reyna challenging a trial-court gag order that restrained party and counsel speech during a pending criminal matter.
  • The gag order was adopted verbatim from the Houston Chronicle order used in the Andrea Yates prosecution; defense counsel here had no opportunity to narrow or negotiate its terms.
  • The trial court justified the order by predicting pretrial publicity would impair the defendant’s right to a fair trial and that delay would not reduce the publicity, and asserted a "specific threat" without identifying or introducing supporting evidence.
  • The Tenth Court of Appeals conditionally granted mandamus relief vacating the gag order; the Court of Criminal Appeals requested briefing on whether Davenport v. Garcia applies to criminal-case gag orders, the sufficiency of the trial-court findings, and whether the appellate conditional grant was supported by law/facts.
  • Amicus argues Davenport’s prior-restraint standard (presumption of unconstitutionality; specific findings supported by evidence; least-restrictive-means) should apply in criminal cases because it aligns with Sixth Amendment interests and this Court’s precedent, and that the gag order here fails that test.

Issues

Issue Relator's Argument Respondent/Amicus Argument Held (Amicus position / Court of Appeals action)
Whether Davenport v. Garcia governs judicial gag orders in criminal cases Davenport is a civil-case standard and should not control criminal gag-order review Davenport applies; its presumption and requirements fit and protect Sixth Amendment interests Amicus: Davenport should apply; Tenth Ct. conditionally vacated the order
Whether the trial court made sufficiently specific, evidence-supported findings to justify prior restraint Trial court made findings predicting prejudice and claimed a specific threat Findings are conclusory, unsupported by record, and fail Davenport’s "specific findings supported by evidence" requirement Amicus: findings insufficient; appellate vacation justified
Whether the gag order used the least-restrictive means to protect trial fairness Order was necessary to protect impartial jury and proceedings Order is not narrowly tailored, was wholesale and one-sided in effect, and deprived defense counsel of needed speech to rebut prosecution publicity Amicus: order not least-restrictive; vacatur appropriate
Whether the Tenth Court of Appeals’ conditional writ was legally and factually warranted Relator sought mandamus to sustain gag order Amicus contends the conditional grant was supported because order was presumptively unconstitutional, unsupported by evidence, and inadequately tailored Amicus supports the Tenth Ct.; urges this Court to deny mandamus and let vacatur stand

Key Cases Cited

  • Davenport v. Garcia, 834 S.W.2d 4 (Tex. 1992) (establishes presumption against prior restraints; requires specific findings supported by evidence and least-restrictive means)
  • In re Houston Chronicle Publ. Co., 64 S.W.3d 103 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th] 2001) (source of model gag order used in the Andrea Yates case)
  • Ex parte Graves, 217 S.W.3d 744 (Tex. App.—Waco 2007) (criticized overly broad gag orders; press and investigation aided eventual exoneration)
  • Ex parte Lo, 424 S.W.3d 10 (Tex. Crim. App. 2013) (courts must consider available alternatives and use least-restrictive means when limiting speech)
  • Gentile v. State Bar of Nev., 501 U.S. 1030 (U.S. 1991) (discusses defense counsel’s First Amendment interests and professional duties in extrajudicial statements)
Read the full case

Case Details

Case Name: in Re the State of Texas Ex Rel. Abelino Reyna, Relator v. Court of Appeals for the Tenth District
Court Name: Court of Appeals of Texas
Date Published: Sep 16, 2015
Docket Number: WR-83,719-01
Court Abbreviation: Tex. App.