Residents of Delaware and Otsego counties should feel fortunate to be protected by their respective district attorneys -- Richard Northrup and John Muehl. I have opposed hundreds of prosecutors at the state and federal levels, and can say without hesitation that these two men are among the fairest, most knowledgeable and hardest-working prosecutors I've ever faced.
I began my law practice by serving clients in Delaware and Otsego counties nearly a decade ago and had immediate admiration for Northrup and Muehl, despite the fact they were always opposing counsel. From the start I could tell they were effective, old-school, high-integrity, ethical attorneys, the kind of men you could seal a deal with via handshake and feel confident it would be valid months later.
I was spoiled by those early years and assumed all prosecutors worked the same way. Then I moved operations to Albany, won landmark cases, opened offices in Washington, D.C., and New York City, and turned my firm, Tully Rinckey PLLC, into one of the fastest-growing, full-service law firms in the Northeast. Despite working with some of the most high-profile attorneys in the country, Northrup and Muehl remain my standard for evaluating prosecutors. Rarely does anyone measure up.
What I admire most about these men is that they know their jobs require more than simply winning cases and fighting for maximum sentences. As representatives of the community, they work tirelessly to serve the best interests of the people, whether that means pushing for long-term incarceration or suggesting a defendant get the necessary treatment to be a productive member of society. For Northrup and Muehl, it's always about doing the right thing.
That kind of professionalism was evident numerous times during my association with both of them, but when I think about the kind of attorneys and prosecutors they are, one memory rises above the rest. About seven years ago I represented a young client who had broken into drugstore, loaded a backpack with prescription pills and taken off, only to be arrested less than a mile down the road a short time later.
My client was not a drug dealer or veteran criminal; he was a kid with an addiction. The problem was that because of the amount of pills he had shoveled into his backpack, he was charged with multiple felonies and could have spent the rest of his life in prison.
Northrup was the prosecutor in the case and could have easily socked it to my client by following the recommendation of the state police and pushing for long-term incarceration, which most prosecutors would have done. But Northrup is different. He realized the case for what it was and realized that while my client needed to pay for his crime, he also needed help. Northrup knew he was not serving the best interests of his community -- a community that included my client -- by sending a young addict who had no intention of hurting anyone to prison for life.
So Northrup and I did research and discovered a complicated formula that would allow my client to qualify for a specialized drug program by making a very particular plea agreement and admitting guilt. My client agreed, entered a rehabilitation program, paid restitution, went on parole supervision and, last I knew, had not repeated his crime and had become a good member of the community.
This was Northrup at his best, using his knowledge, dogged determination and real-world sensibilities to do the right thing for his community and those involved in the case. That's just one story. Northrup and Muehl have built their careers on that sort of professionalism, which is why I can say without hesitation that these men made me a better attorney. I commend their dedication, honesty and concern for the people they represent. My hope is that the residents of Delaware and Otsego counties share this appreciation.
Mathew B. Tully is a founding partner of Tully Rinckey PLLC of Albany.
Guest Column
Northrup and Muehl are first-rate district attorneys
- Guest Column
-
-
Who's really benefiting from education reform?
-
A disgrace to New York
It pays to save emails. As far back as February 2010, I've been getting e-mails about the shady dealings, bullying tactics, and misuse of non-profit funds that Vito Lopez was dishing out from his privileged position of elected official for the 53rd district, in Brooklyn.
-
Wise choices can help grads fulfill their potential
This is the first of a series of columns by city of Oneonta Police Chief Dennis Nayor about issues involving police departments and public safety.
-
Hey Gov. Cuomo, are you in or out?
Message to Gov. Andrew Cuomo: the data's in but you're out. The decision on drilling that was supposed to be science-based seems more and more political.
-
A closer look at the Oneonta town survey
The Town of Oneonta conducted a survey of town residents during February and March of this year. The survey indicated that generally town residents are satisfied with the quality of services provided and they are happy to live here. They want to balance the quiet, rural way of life we have with additional commercial development and environmentally sound practices.
-
Farmers markets are in full bloom
It's hard to believe that just a few short months ago the thermometer on our farm was reading 15 degrees Fahrenheit.
- Saturday, May 18, 2013
-
Records seizure is an insult to free press
Distrust of government secrecy has been elevated to an exceptional level with the disclosure the Justice Department covertly examined two months of Associated Press phone records to determine who leaked details to the AP about a foiled terrorist plot.
- Saturday, May 11, 2013
-
The evangelical view of same-sex marriage
The issue of same-sex marriage seems to appear on a daily basis in the media these days.
- Saturday, May 4, 2013
-
Manor's fate will be Otsego board's legacy
The Otsego County Boards (plural) of Representatives, more in the past than in the present, have negotiated the county into a financial corner leaving the present board between a rock â€" increased taxation and/or deficits â€" and a hard place â€" selling the Manor.
- Saturday, April 27, 2013
-
A closer look at our economy - Part II
We have talked about the public sector component of our economy. Now let's take a brief look at the manufacturing and retail/services sectors.
-
Use fracking to fill budget gaps
- Saturday, April 20, 2013
-
The kind of people we 'antis' are
In the controversy over the extraction of petroleum resources from shale, people who oppose this energy industry expansion have been called hypocrites. Claims have been made that practically every dollar diverted from petroleum development defaults to coal, and those who try to promote renewable energy resources wind up assisting that default. I am writing, not to dispute these allegations, but to lament them.
- Saturday, April 13, 2013
-
Social Security is a system worth saving
- Saturday, April 6, 2013
-
Gun column fuels lawlessness, paranoia
- Saturday, March 30, 2013
-
Here's how you fix the national debt
Presidents Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush, having scorned income taxes and budget-balancing, have left the U.S. in a desperate economic fix by unnecessarily selling national debt bonds.
- Saturday, March 23, 2013
-
The true meaning of the story of Easter
The weather for Easter 2013 promises to cooperate in helping us to ponder the real mystery of Easter more deeply.
Easter is not about fuzzy bunnies, bonnets, colored eggs or budding azalea bushes. Easter is not a way to mark the return of warmth and light after a long winter. Easter is the foundation rock of all that is Christian â€" the Gospel, the Church, the Sacraments, the Scriptures.
- Saturday, March 16, 2013
-
A flesh-and-blood expert won't hoodwink you
- Saturday, March 9, 2013
-
Let the markets determine our energy sources
In the Crime section of your local Barnes & Noble, you'll find Elmore Leonard's recent novel "Raylan." In it, Marshal Raylan Givens encounters with a pair of thieves who steal kidneys from the healthy, then sell those vital organs back to their victims. Talk about creating a market! Move down the aisle to economics and change the heist from organs to electricity, and Mr. Leonard could have a category-busting best seller.
- Saturday, March 2, 2013
-
Taking a closer look at our regional economy
- Saturday, February 9, 2013
-
Investment in DEC isinvestment in state's future
What is the relationship between Gov. Cuomo's proposed budget and your desire to protect New York's environment? What is the relationship between Gov. Cuomo's proposed budget and the economic potential of tourism to upstate? What is the relationship between Gov. Cuomo's proposed budget and the value you get back from your hunting or fishing license? What is the relationship between Gov. Cuomo's proposed budget and his claim that New York is once again business friendly?
-
Who's really benefiting from education reform?



