Jeralyn Elise Merritt (born September 28, 1949) is an Americancriminal defense attorney in private practice in Denver, Colorado, since 1974. She served as one of the trial lawyers for Timothy McVeigh in the Oklahoma City bombing case in 1996 and 1997. In 2002 Merritt founded and is the principal author of the blogTalkLeft: The Politics of Crime. She also serves as a legal commentator for news media programs and as an internet journalist.
In 1996 and 1997 she served as one of the trial lawyers for Timothy McVeigh in the Oklahoma City bombing case, after the court venue moved to Denver.[3] In 1995 she received the first annual Marshall Stern Legislative Achievement Award, from the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL), for which she has served as a member of the Board of Directors (1995–2001), secretary (2002–2003) and treasurer (2003–2004), as the vice-chair of NACDL's Innocence Project from 1998 to 2002[4] and on other committees.[5] In 2008 she received the Al Horn Award from the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), "a Lifetime achievement award for advancing the cause of justice and extraordinary support of NORML."[6]
After giving up her practice for a year and a half in order to work on the McVeigh defense team, since 1997, Merritt has continued her own criminal defense practice emphasizing federal drug and white collar crimes and has served as a legal analyst for and commentator on television news programs.[2] From 1997 to 1999, she served as a television legal analyst for MSNBC, and, from 1996 to 2008, as a guest legal commentator on television for NBC, MSNBC, CNBC, CNN, Court TV and Fox News, presenting her perspective as a criminal defense attorney on contemporary legal cases being covered on national media news programs.[7] Merritt is also a specialist in the use of the internet as a legal research resource and presents seminars and speeches on its use in investigation, on handwriting analysis, and on other matters pertaining to her legal specialties.[8]
Areas of practice
Federal and State Drug Offenses
Complex Federal Criminal Cases (including multi-defendant drug and fraud conspiracies)
Criminal and Civil Forfeitures
Pre-Indictment and Grand Jury Representation
White Collar Defense (financial crimes, including fraud, money laundering, criminal forfeitures)
Electronic Surveillance (cases involving the use of electronic surveillance, including wiretaps)
Merritt is the creator of CrimeLynx, an online legal resource for legal professionals and the general public, and a blog called TalkLeft: The Politics of Crime, which is a three-time winner of a Koufax Award for best single-issue blog in 2002, 2003 and 2004 (in 2004 TalkLeft shared the award with Grits for Breakfast), and a 2006 winner of the Weblog Awards for "The Best of the Top 250 Blogs".[2][9]TalkLeft became one of the blogs featured in "The Ruckus" section at Newsweek Online in 2007.[10][11]
Merritt covered the United States v. Libby trial on TalkLeft, and with Jane Hamsher and Marcy Wheeler, was among the first bloggers to receive fully accredited media passes to a U.S. federal trial and during which they also appeared on PoliticsTV.com for a round up summarizing each day's trial events. Her blog posts on the Lewis "Scooter" Libby trial appeared in FireDogLake and The Huffington Post. On August 2, 2007, Merritt moderated a panel discussion at the 2007 YearlyKos Convention, featuring Christy Hardin Smith of Jane Hamsher's Firedoglake and Marcy Wheeler of The Next Hurrah, relating their experiences "liveblogging" the Libby trial. The panel also included Sheldon L. Snook, Chief of Staff to the Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, who was "the court official in charge of news media at the Libby trial."[12][13][14]
TalkLeft was accredited as a national blog at the 2008 Democratic National Convention, held in Denver, Colorado, from August 25 through 28, 2008,[15] posting photographs of celebrities from both the Pepsi Center and various other convention venues in Denver and cross-links to other bloggers' reports and photographs.[16] Recently, she has consolidated spaces on TalkLeft for archived and ongoing discussion board topics such as the Duke Lacrosse Rape Case and the killing of Trayvon Martin.
Merritt, Jeralyn E. (co-author) USA Patriot Act of 2001: An Analysis (2002).
Was Justice Denied? Merritt appeared as a member of the legal team in a feature-lengthdocumentary film re-examining two murder cases which the defendants claim resulted in wrongful convictions.[19]
^"Jeralyn Merritt," in ""YearlyKos Convention Speakers"". Archived from the original on October 9, 2007. Retrieved 2012-10-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link), YearlyKos Convention: Building a Netroots Nation, yearlykosconvention.org, October 9, 2007, archived by the Internet Archive, accessed October 1, 2012.
Mailman, Stanley, Jeralyn E. Merritt, Theresa M. B. Van Vliet, and Stephen Yale-Loehr. Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism (USA PATRIOT Act) Act of 2001: An Analysis. Newark, NJ and San Francisco, CA: LexisNexis (Matthew Bender & Co., Inc.), 2002. ISBN978-0820554105.
TalkLeft: The Politics of Crime – "the online magazine with liberal coverage of crime-related political and injustice news" – blog created by Jeralyn Merritt