Bexar County Judge Rosie Speedlin Gonzalez has been indicted by the Bexar County District Attorney for placing a defense lawyer in handcuffs and ordering her restricted to the jury box. The incident occurred over a year ago. Elizabeth Russell appeared in court and asked for time to confer with her client in preparation for a motion to revoke probation hearing. Somehow, that request led to the Judge ordering a defense attorney to be handcuffed and forced to stay in the jury box.
The Judge has been charged with Unlawful Restraint by a Peace Officer, which is a second degree felony. That offense punishable by 2 to 20 years in prison and a fine of up to $10.000. See San Antonio Express News report here for more information. See also a ABA Bar Journal report here. The Bexar County District Attorney’s office has recused itself from prosecution of the case. A special prosecutor has been appointed.
Suspended
A week after Judge Gonzalez was indicted, the state Judicial Commission on Judicial Conduct placed the judge on suspension. Her suspension will last until the criminal charges are resolved. Judge Gonzalez has been in trouble with the state Judicial Commission before. She was investigated in 2023 for allegedly congratulating attorneys on Facebook who had won in court and for displaying a pride flag in her courtroom. She was cleared of those accusations. See San Antonio Express News report here.
So, what happened that the Judge felt the need to place a defense lawyer in handcuffs? According to a more recent Express-News report, Ms. Russell appeared in court with her client on a motion to revoke probation. The client had agreed earlier to deferred adjudication. That meant if he completed his probation successfully, the charges would be dismissed. But, he did something that amounted to a possible violation of that probation. So, he was now in court to discuss that new charge and how he would plea to the new charge.
Motion to Revoke
If he pleads guilty or something like guilty, his earlier probation – the deferred adjudication – would be revoked. He would then have to deal with two charges, not just the new one.
According to the Express-News, the client at first pleaded “no contest.” Russell – apparently realizing the client had messed up and invoked the wrong plea – then spoke up and said her client wished to withdraw that plea and change it. Judge Gonzalez then accused Ms. Russell of coaching her client. The lawyer objected to that accusation. The Judge replied, essentially, “too bad, it’s already on the record.” The Judge then accused Ms. Russell of being argumentative. There was more back and forth.The lawyer then asked to recuse herself. At this point, both the lawyer and the Judge likely knew that recusal would postpone everything. Judge Gonzalez then ordered the bailiff to place Ms. Russell in custody. Still, Ms. Russell objected, noting that she cannot be held in contempt without a hearing. The Judge said no, she did not. She insisted she rums everything in her courtroom.
Later, Judge Gonzalez asked Ms. Russell if she could conduct herself professionally. The lawyer answered, yes. The Judge then ordered the handcuffs removed. See another San Antonio Express-News report here for more information.
It is, of course, exceedingly rare for a Judge to handcuff a defense attorney in the courtroom. The lawyer was correct that she cannot be held in contempt without a hearing. I am not a criminal law expert, but cannot imagine by what authority the Judge could handcuff a lawyer in court and hold her there – there than contempt. My fuzzy memory about criminal court is that defendant can indeed withdraw his plea. The courtroom is no place to play “gotcha.”








