Samuel, Donald F.

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Address: 3151 Maple Drive, N.E., Atlanta, GA 30305
Lawyer Firm: Garland, Samuel & Loeb, P.C.
Phone: 877-650-0825
Fax: 404-365-5041
Email:
Website: https://www.gsllaw.com

Areas of Practice Criminal Trial Practice State & Federal, Criminal Appellate Practice State & Federal
Description

Donald F. Samuel graduated from Oberlin College in 1975 and the University Of Georgia School Of Law in 1980 (cum laude), where he was an editor of the Georgia Journal of International and Comparative Law. He served as law clerk to United States District Court Judge Harold L. Murphy (N.D.Ga.) following his graduation from law school and then joined what is now known as GARLAND, SAMUEL & LOEB, P.C. He is past-President of the Georgia Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (GACDL) and a member of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL). In 1999, he was elected to membership in the American Board of Criminal Lawyers. In 2000, he was inducted into the American College of Trial Lawyers and currently serves on the state committee of the ACTL.Don Samuel is the author of a treatise on Georgia Criminal Law, GEORGIA CRIMINAL LAW CASE FINDER (3rd Edition 2014) published by Lexis Law Publishing, and a treatise on criminal law in the Eleventh Circuit, ELEVENTH CIRCUIT CRIMINAL HANDBOOK also published annually by Lexis Law Publishing. He publishes a compilation of federal cases that are favorable to the defense that is currently 1,700 pages long and includes over 6,000 cases on all topics of criminal law that can be accessed on line at www.gsllaw.com/Publications. He co-authored a compilation of criminal practice forms in 2011, Georgia Criminal Law Forms (Lexis Law Publishing); and is the Editor of a treatise on Georgia Evidence Law, published by Lexis Law Publishing. In 2005, he served as a contributing author for Agnor’s Georgia Evidence (3rd ed., West Publishing Co., 2005) and wrote the chapter on the law governing cross-examination.He is the author of several law review articles, including five in the Georgia Bar Journal, Georgia RICO (Winter 1984); The Money Laundering Control Act of 1986: Will Attorneys Be Taken to the Cleaners? (Spring 1988); The 1994 Georgia Criminal Procedure Discovery Bill (January 1995); Abolishing the Forfeiture Laws (Spring 1995); and Searching and Seizing Computers (Winter, 2009)Don has been listed in Best Lawyers in America every year since 1993. In a 2015 survey of 24,000 practicing lawyers in Georgia, Super Lawyers magazine ranked Don in the top ten lawyers in Georgia. In 2014, Best Lawyers in America named him Lawyer of the Year in the field of criminal law in the State of Georgia. He was awarded the Rees Smith Lifetime Achievement Award by the Georgia Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers in 2014, one of only five lawyers in Georgia to win this award in the past twenty years.Don is an adjunct professor of law at Georgia State University, where he teaches the White Collar Criminal Defense course. In 2016, he is teaching a course in Business Crimes at the University of Georgia School of Law along with Larry Thompson, the former Deputy Attorney General of the United States.Over the course of the past 34 years of practice, he has appeared in federal courts in New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, New York, Delaware, Maryland, Washington, D.C., Pennsylvania, North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, South Dakota, Indiana, Minnesota, Illinois, Ohio, Tennessee and Arizona. He has argued cases in federal courts in the DC Circuit, the Fourth Circuit, the Fifth Circuit, the Sixth Circuit and the Eleventh Circuit.Among his more notable cases are:

Don was counsel in the last three of the murder trials of Jim Williams, the antique dealer in Savannah, Georgia, whose case was chronicled in the best-selling book, Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. Williams was tried four times for murder before being acquitted in the last trial.Don was co-counsel in the United States Supreme Court case Georgia v. Randolph decided by the Court in March 2006, which held that a consent search of a residence is not permitted if one spouse objects, even if the other spouse consents.In 2015, Don and his partner, Ed Garland represented the Director and Producer of a movie that were charged with involuntary manslaughter in connection with the death of a crew member who was killed by a train. Both were facing ten years in prison. After a year of negotiating with the prosecutors, the case against the Producer was dismissed entirely and the Director entered a guilty plea and was sentenced to serve 12 months.In 2014, Don represented the southern regional president of the Outlaw Motorcycle Club on charges of obstruction of justice in federal court in the Northern District of Georgia. At the conclusion of the trial, his client was found not guilty of all charges by the judge who directed a verdict of not guilty.In 2011, Don was lead counsel in the successful defense of Dr. Lawrence Egbert, the founder and medical director of Final Exit Network. Dr. Egbert was prosecuted for voluntary manslaughter in Phoenix, Arizona. The State alleged that Dr. Egbert and the Final Exit Network was involved in assisting hundreds of people to commit suicide. Following a three week trial, the jury returned a not guilty verdict.In 2000, he was co-counsel for Ray Lewis, the Baltimore Ravens All-Pro Linebacker who was charged with a double murder in Atlanta. All charges were dropped just prior to the close of the state’s case in exchange for a plea to a misdemeanor with twelve months probation. Along with his partner, Edward Garland, he also represented All-Pro Baltimore Ravens running back Jamal Lewis in 2004.In 2010, Don and his partner represented Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback, Ben Roethlisberger in connection with allegations that he sexually assaulted a college student in Milledgeville, Georgia. The District Attorney was ultimately persuaded to bring no charges against Roethlisberger.In 2006 he was appointed by the federal court as lead counsel for one of the defendants in an Al Qaeda terrorism case brought in the Northern District of Georgia.Don was counsel in the case of US v. Sullivan, in which the defendant was charged with hiring a hit man to murder his wife. His wife was killed by a man delivering roses to her house. The case was tried in the United States District Court in Atlanta and the judge dismissed the charges at the close of the government’s case.Don was counsel for the Chief Financial Officer in The Gold Club Trial. This resulted in a misdemeanor plea for his client in the fourteenth week of trial.Don was co-counsel in the case of State v. Dorsey, involving murder charges against the Sheriff of Dekalb County who was charged with arranging for the assassination of the man who was elected to replace him as Sheriff.Don has spoken at seminars throughout the country, including at the Eleventh Circuit Judicial Conference in 1999; the Georgia Superior Court Judges’ Conference every years since 2005; over fifty Continuing Legal Education seminars in Georgia; the American Bar Association annual meeting and the national conference of Federal Public Defenders. He has been a featured speaker at conferences of criminal defense attorneys in Maine, Arizona, Utah, Florida, Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi. His most recent seminar presentations include:

Federal Defenders of the Middle District of Alabama (December 2008): "Overview of United States Supreme Court Term, 2008-2009"Eleventh Circuit Appellate Practice Institute (October 2008): "Rehearings and Rehearings En Banc in the Eleventh Circuit" Advanced Criminal Law Seminar, State Bar Of Florida (2009, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2015): "Recent Developments in the Eleventh Circuit and the United States Supreme Court"Featured Speaker at the Utah Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers at the September, 2009 annual meeting.Batson and other jury selection jurisprudence; Georgia Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, August 29, 2009.Criminal Motion Practice, United States Conference of Federal Magistrate Judges, San Francisco (April, 2010).Conference of Arizona Public Defenders, Keynote Speaker, August, 2012.Mississippi Public Defenders (October 2012).National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, New Orleans conference on Defending Sexual Assault Cases (2012).Northern District of Georgia Federal Public Defenders and CJA counsel annual St. Crispin’s Day seminar (2010 – 2014)

Don is also a frequent guest at CNN and local television programs concerning legal matters. He is married to the author Melissa Fay Greene, who wrote Praying for Sheetrock, a non-fiction account of the civil rights movement in McIntosh County, Georgia and The Temple Bombing, which chronicled the story of the 1958 bombing of The Temple in Atlanta, Georgia. Both books won several national awards. Melissa also wrote Last Man Out, which describes the ordeal of fifteen coal miners trapped in a mine cave-in in Nova Scotia for ten days. Her most recent books are There Is No Me Without You, a non-fiction work about AIDS in Africa and the orphan crisis it has spawned and No Biking in the House Without a Helmet, a book about raising nine children from three continents.Don and Melissa have eight children, including one child they adopted from rural Bulgaria and four children from Ethiopia.

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