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But U.S. District Judge Nancy Edmunds has allowed Chambers, an attorney for 26 years, to do more than stand by. He filed detailed challenges to the government's use of Abdulmutallab's incriminating statements made from a hospital bed and without Miranda warnings. He thoroughly cross-examined a pharmacologist who testified during a pretrial hearing about the effects of a painkiller given to Abdulmutallab for his burns before the FBI interview. Chambers and his staff also have done research that Abdulmutallab could not have accomplished behind bars awaiting trial. "The goal of the court is to get the best representation so no one down the road can claim (Abdulmutallab) was railroaded or forced to assume a responsibility he could not handle," explained David Steingold, a longtime Detroit defense attorney. At 6 feet 4 inches tall and with a smooth, deep voice, Chambers has a "commanding presence," Steingold said. "But what makes him an excellent lawyer is his attention to detail and his demeanor in court. You rarely see him rattled. If he does get upset it is righteous and the jury recognizes that. ... If there's a hole in the government's case, Tony will find that hole and rip into it." Earlier this year, Chambers was in the Virgin Islands for a high-profile hospital corruption trial, which ended without a unanimous verdict. Among his Detroit federal cases, he defended a man in 2004 who was charged with killing a former police officer over drugs. Thelmon Stuckey III insisted on testifying and was convicted. A judge called it "self-destruction." "No one could hold Tony responsible for that result," Steingold said.
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