To chase, follow or take legal action against someone or something etc in order to catch them, attack them or to get a legal remedy etc.
Jon May has handled some of the most important criminal cases of the last three decades. From his defense of General Manuel Antonio Noriega at trial, on appeal, at his successful resentencing, and in the habeas proceedings to stop General Noriega’s extradition to France, to his challenge to Florida’s election law during the contested election of George W. Bush in 2000, and his representation of the ACLU in the battle over Rush Limbaugh’s medical records, to his articles calling for revolutionary change in the way that criminal defense counsel prepare for trial and sentencing, Jon May has, and remains, at the cutting edge of criminal practice in the United States. Jon May’s work has been featured in the Journal of the American Bar Association, and in the books, Great American Trials and The Case Against the General. His articles regularly appear in The Champion (the journal of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers) and Criminal Justice Magazine (the journal of the ABA Criminal Justice Section). Mr. May has spoken nationally and internationally at seminars and conferences on issues as varied as representing heads of state at trial and plea bargaining. Mr. May was previously Chair of the White Collar Crime Section of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers and he is a past Co-Chair of the Defense Function Services Committee of the Criminal Justice Section of the American Bar Association. Mr. May was mentioned by name and his stratagem for forcing prosecutors to relinquish control over assets needed for the defense, which he pioneered in Noriega, was rebuked by the Supreme Court in its decision in Kaley United States, 571 U.S. 320, note 12 (2014). The argument he made in Noriega, that untainted assets could not be restrained pretrial by the government, was vindicated two years later in the decision of the Supreme Court in Luis v. United States, 578 U.S._ (2016). View More ›
English: Spoken, Written
J.D. (1978)
B.A. (1976)
Member
Current
Criminal Justice Section
Current
National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers
2009 - Current