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Bolton Bulletin The January 2024
Tomball 990 Village Square, Suite G1100 Tomball, TX 77375 (281) 351-7897
The Woodlands 2441 High Timbers Dr., Suite 400 The Woodlands, TX 77380 BoltonLaw.com
Building Bridges THE TRANSFORMATIVE POWER OF MENTORSHIP
Johanson an email with my question. He responded right away. Of course, he remembered me. My question was intriguing, and he happened to be sitting at his desk. Could I give him a call? I was a little stunned that I could pick up the phone and ask Texas’ leading probate authority a question about a legal application, and he would not only take my call but also seemed delighted to hear from me. After that, I deliberately started forming relationships and getting contact information for attorneys who impressed me without worrying if they were out of my league. I attended the Texas State Bar’s Advanced Family Law seminar one year and was blown away by Karen Marvel’s presentation on collecting past-due child support. During the next break, I found her Facebook profile and sent her a message telling her she had given the best presentation of the entire seminar and could I take her out to dinner the next night? She said yes, and we have been friends ever since. Over the years, I have made a point of forming relationships with anyone who impressed me with their legal ability. At this point, I have developed a network that includes some of the most prominent attorneys from all over the state of Texas and family law attorneys from all over the country. I also call many judges and former judges, respected colleagues, and friends. We enjoy bouncing legal questions or ideas off of each other. At some point, I was surprised to realize that younger attorneys were seeking me out for advice and mentorship. I have come full circle and now participate as a mentor as often, or more often, than I do as a mentee. But I continue to learn almost every day from the other attorneys around me. Serving on the Professionalism Committee for the State Bar of Texas, I understand the importance of fostering ethics, professionalism, and mentorship among legal practitioners. January is National Mentoring Month — a time to acknowledge the significance of mentorship in all walks of life. Let’s embrace the opportunity to mentor others and share insights and experiences that contribute to the collective growth of the professional community. As I celebrate the mentors who have shaped my journey, I encourage every professional to fortify the bonds that propel our collective success. -Ruby Bolton
Practicing law is hard — I won’t beat around the bush. Law school teaches us an incredible amount but cannot fully prepare a new attorney to tackle real-world legal problems. An attorney needs to distill a complex situation into a simple but compelling story, handle disruptive opposing attorneys, and exude confidence and calmness walking into the courtroom. Those are skills that come with years and sometimes decades of practice. Most bar associations provide mentoring programs to help young attorneys develop these skills, assigning each new attorney who requests help a seasoned veteran.
But formal mentoring programs just brush the surface of what is needed and what is available. I am beginning my 30th year practicing law. I am grateful to say that I have benefited from the friendship, example, and mentorship of some of the best family law attorneys practicing in the state of Texas. My first mentors began as opposing attorneys. Often, they did not have much more experience than I did, but we would strike up friendships after our cases were over and call each other for guidance when we were presented with a challenging situation. I was honored that some much more experienced attorneys were also open to friendships and sometimes initiated them. One day, I was sitting in my office trying to figure out the details of a complex probate, and I wished I could ask Professor Stanley Johanson, my probate professor at UT Law School. Email was new then, but I had one, so I looked it up, and sure enough, UT had his email listed. I sent Professor
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In today’s world of video games and streaming for entertainment, one of the most powerful — and rewarding — steps you can take is engaging your child’s imagination without electronic devices. A Make-Believe Store One great way to do that is by putting your child in charge of a make-believe ice cream store. It’s easy and only takes a few common household items, starting with a few bowls. First, squirt a generous helping of shaving cream into each bowl, then add different colors of food coloring to each. After stirring with a spoon, your child will suddenly have a variety of make- believe “flavors” to offer to their customer — you. They’ll have fun scooping up the flavors you want from each bowl into a plastic cup. You can even have other small household items in other bowls (such as buttons and small craft items) that can serve as the ice cream “toppings.” Balloon Sports You can also engage your child’s hand-eye coordination skills with a fun game of balloon tennis or volleyball. UNPLUGGED FUN Ignite Your Child’s Imagination Beyond Screens
To start, simply blow up a few balloons of different sizes. Then find a chair or other items around your house that can double as a “net” between you and your child. The fun comes in batting the “ball” (a balloon) back and forth across the net. When your child bats the balloon to your side and you hit it back without it passing back over the net, the point goes to your child, just like in real tennis or volleyball. You can keep score if you’d like. You can also make up your own rules, like players can hit the balloon two times before returning it to the player on the other side of the net. Or, if you want to really challenge your hand-eye coordination, you can use two balloons and try to keep both in play at the same time. At the end of the day, with fun activities like these, you can engage your child’s imagination with a true brand of homemade fun!
Bumbling Burglars Prove Crime Doesn’t Pay
he found something else instead. A tip jar containing over $200 caught his eye, so after filling out the application, Mark left. A few hours later, he returned, snatched the tip jar, and ran out of the restaurant. However, his getaway was short-lived, as his completed application had provided his real name and address. Plus, he left behind a backpack that verified his identity, so he was eventually caught by police. Finally, Alberto Saavedra Lopez demonstrated why you can’t go back home to the scene of your crime. While living in Cottonwood, Arizona, he stole $5,000 from the bank where he worked. For two years, he got away with it by moving to Phoenix. In time, however, he moved back to Cottonwood and applied for a new job — at the local police station. But, as he applied to become a dispatcher, officials did a background check, discovering he was an at-large suspect in the theft. So, when he showed up for his job interview, they greeted him with handcuffs.
power. He miraculously managed to survive, though with severe burns and a damaged skull, and was given 12 months of community service.
Committing a crime will never be a get- rich-quick scheme or a successful career path, but we’ve had plenty of would-be criminals who had to learn that lesson the hard way! One example is James Sorby, a Scottish man who decided he wanted to cash in on the rising price of copper. As he thought about how to get his hands on the metal prized for its ability to conduct electricity, he decided it would be a good idea to go right to the source, so he targeted a local power plant in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. As he started to carry out his mission, he forgot he was in a truly electric environment. He ignored the signs warning of the dangerous high-voltage lines in the plant. But as he collected coils of copper and prepared to make off with them, he was instantly jolted with an estimated 22,000 volts of electricity, and around 400 homes were left without
Another man, Nicholas Mark, entered a Pennsylvania pizzeria looking for work, but
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TAKE A BREAK
The Gruesome History of Surgery Without Anesthesia
The introduction of anesthesia in the mid-19th century revolutionized the field of surgery, allowing for more complex and precise procedures to be performed while minimizing the agony patients had to endure. However, the era of surgery before anesthesia meant patients had to suffer unimaginable pain. They had to endure procedures that would be considered inhumane today, and the mortality rate for surgeries was alarmingly high. Here are some of the challenges doctors and patients had to face. Speed In the absence of anesthesia, surgeons had to prioritize speed above all else. One of the most harrowing experiences was amputation. During wars and battles, soldiers often had limbs amputated without anesthesia. Surgeons had to operate swiftly, with little regard for the patient’s pain. Many soldiers died from the shock and pain of the sudden amputation rather than any other wound they received. Alcohol and Opiates to Dull Pain While these substances provided some relief, they also carried their own risks, including addiction and overdosing. Patients would often have to be restrained during the procedure due to their erratic behavior under the influence of these substances. Unclean Tools Surgical procedures in the pre-anesthesia era were fraught with the risk of infection. Without modern sterile techniques, post- operative infections were common, and many patients did not survive surgery due to complications. In fact, before Louis Pasteur developed modern germ theory in the 1860s, doctors did not wash their hands before operating, unintentionally causing the deaths of many patients post-surgery due to secondary infections. Surgeons Characterized as Dispassionate and Cruel No doubt, performing an agonizing surgical procedure on a suffering patient was difficult for any doctor to endure. So, they had to detach themselves emotionally to get through it quickly and as safely as possible — sometimes in front of many onlookers in an operating theatre. Unfortunately, because of this, surgeons were thought of as coolly dispassionate or even brusque. Because of modern anesthesia and other developments, doctors today are able to show compassion toward their patients, and it allows for a more careful and safe procedure for all involved.
Baked Salmon With Garlic and Lemon Prepare to tantalize your taste buds with a zesty dish that combines salmon with the vibrant flavors of garlic and lemon!
Ingredients
• 1 tsp dried oregano • 1 tsp dried thyme • Salt and pepper, to taste
• 2 lbs salmon fillets • 4 cloves garlic, minced • Juice of 2 lemons • 2 tbsp olive oil
Directions 1. Preheat oven to 375 F. 2. Line a baking dish with parchment paper. Place the salmon fillets on the baking dish. 3. In a small bowl, mix together the garlic, lemon juice, olive oil, oregano, thyme, salt, and pepper. Pour the mixture over the salmon. 4. Bake for 15–20 minutes or until the salmon is cooked through. Serve and enjoy!
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(281) 351-7897 BoltonLaw.com 2441 High Timbers Dr., Suite 400 The Woodlands, TX 77380
INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Embracing the Influence of Mentors
1
Engage Kids in Creative Play Without Electronics
2
3 Not-So-Bright Burglars
Baked Salmon With Garlic and Lemon
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Evolution of Anesthesia in Surgery
4 From Tragedy to Outrage: Ethan Couch’s Sentencing and ‘Affluenza’ WHEN PRIVILEGE KILLS
A Look Back at the Case of ‘Affluenza’ Teen Ethan Couch
parents who never set limits for him, so he didn’t fully understand what it meant to have consequences for his actions. Prosecutors had sought 20 years in prison, but Couch received no prison time. Judge Jean Hudson Boyd gave Couch 10 years of probation, along with an order to undergo long-term therapy. The decision by the juvenile court judge outraged the victims’ families, drunk driving activists, and most of the country. Over the past decade, Couch has cycled through bouts of disappearing and continuing alcohol abuse. In 2016, he fled with his mother to Mexico to avoid being arrested for a parole violation but was arrested soon after. The judge in that case sentenced Couch to two years in prison. After his release in 2018, he was again arrested in 2020 for allegedly violating his parole, but the charges were later dismissed. His probation is due to end in 2024.
careening down the road at 70 mph in a 40-mph zone, he barreled into the town of Burleson, Texas. Speeding along the rural two-lane street, Couch plowed through an SUV that had stopped with car trouble on the side of the road, then slammed into another car that was stopped near the SUV. In the process, he killed four people and seriously injured two others. Upon his arrest shortly after the terrible crash, Couch’s blood alcohol level was reported as 0.24 — three times the legal limit for drunk driving in Texas. Two years later, Couch stood trial for the devastation he had caused. He pleaded guilty to four counts of manslaughter, but his attorneys put forth what came to be known as the “affluenza” defense. A psychologist testified for the defense that Couch was a product of wealthy, privileged
It was a case that enraged the nation: A teenager named Ethan Couch combined alcohol, arrogance, reckless behavior, and manslaughter in what became known as the “affluenza” case. On June 15, 2013, the 16-year-old and a group of friends stole beer from a store and had a party at his parents’ house before going for a drive. As Couch was
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