Update:The February 5 portion of this program has been cancelled.
February 6, 2026

8:00 – 9:00 AM Central Breakfast
9:00 AM – 2:30 PM Central Program (Lunch Provided)
Danny M. Sheena Courtroom · In Person Only
John M. O’Quinn Law Building
4170 Martin Luther King Blvd.
Houston, Texas 77204
Time |
Session |
8:00 – 9:00AM |
Breakfast |
9:00 – 9:10AM |
Introductions |
9:10 – 10:00AM |
Bail Litigation from Bell to ODonnell Kellen R. Funk |
10:05 – 10:55AM |
The Evolving Jurisprudence of Bail Sandra Mayson |
11:00 – 11:50AM |
Pretrial Friction Zina Makar |
11:50AM – 12:20PM |
Break to Pick Up Box Lunches |
12:20 – 1:10PM |
Win-Win Misdemeanor Bail Policy: Lessons from Data on Harris County Reforms Brandon L. Garrett Sandra Guerra Thompson Dottie Carmichael |
1:15 – 2:30PM |
Roundtable Discussion: Implementing Bail Reform in Harris County Porscha Brown Genesis Draper Paul Heaton Natalie Michaelides Sean Teare Moderator: Anna VanCleave |

Porscha Brown
Executive Director
Harris County Office of Managed Assigned Counsel

Dottie Carmichael
Principal Investigator
Texas A&M University
Public Policy Research Institute

Genesis Draper
Chief Public Defender for Harris County

Kellen R. Funk
Michael E. Patterson Professor of Law
Columbia Law School

Brandon L. Garrett
David W. Ichel Distinguished Professor of Law
Director, Wilson Center for Science and Justice
Duke Law

Paul Heaton
Professor of Law
Academic Director
Quattrone Center for the Fair Administration of Justice
Penn Carey Law
University of Pennsylvania

Zina Makar
Assistant Professor of Law
University of Baltimore

Sandra Mayson
Professor of Law
Penn Carey Law
University of Pennsylvania

Natalie Michaelides
Director
Harris County Pretrial Services

Sean Teare
Harris County District Attorney

Sandra Guerra Thompson
Newell H. Blakely Professor of Law
Former Director, Criminal Justice Institute
University of Houston Law Center

Anna VanCleave
Director of the Criminal Defense Clinic
Associate Professor of Law
University of Connecticut School of Law
This event is made possible with support from:
The University of Houston Law Center Criminal Justice Institute
Houston Law Review
The University of Houston Law Center is part of a Carnegie-designated Tier One public research university and an EO institution.