Eric’s criminal practice has a wide-ranging scope in both state and federal courts throughout Ohio and Kentucky. He is known not only as an impassioned trial attorney, but also as a thorough litigator of federal and state appeals, including habeas petitions. He has conducted oral arguments before appellate districts across Ohio, and he has argued many times before the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals.
Eric’s criminal practice includes every type of criminal case. He has represented doctors, pharmacists, lawyers, police officers, politicians, political consultants, entrepreneurs, and business owners of all kinds. He routinely handles complicated federal conspiracy cases. He has defended clients against allegations of capital murder, rape, kidnapping, child pornography, terrorism, human trafficking, robbery, racketeering/RICO charges, bribery, tax fraud, embezzlement, healthcare fraud, wire/mail fraud, and distribution of drugs resulting in death. In other words, there is no type of criminal case that he is not prepared to take on.
Eric has served as an adjunct professor at both the University of Cincinnati College of Law and Chase College of Law at Northern Kentucky University. At each law school, he teaches Trial Advocacy. He has been invited to speak throughout the country on a variety of criminal defense topics for the following organizations:
Eric graduated magna cum laude from The Ohio State University. He earned his J.D. from the University of Cincinnati, where he graduated summa cum laude and was elected to the Order of the Coif, an honorary scholastic society recognizing graduates who have attained a high grade of scholarship. He was also an Associate Member of the Cincinnati Law Review, an Articles Editor for the Human Rights Quarterly, and received a Rosenthal Institute for Justice Fellowship working for the Ohio Innocence Project.
Eric is licensed to practice law in Ohio and Kentucky. He is admitted to practice in the United States District Courts for the Southern District of Ohio, the Eastern District of Kentucky, and the Western District of Kentucky. He is also licensed to practice before the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, and the Supreme Court of the United States.
Eric was interviewed about the Ohio Innocence Project’s 20-year celebration:
It’s tempting to imagine “villains” scattered throughout the criminal justice system, scheming to mete out unjust punishment. Eckes sees a less malevolent but more pervasive culprit.
“It’s human nature,” he said. “This ball gets rolling and it doesn’t allow for reflection. We’ve got the malleability of human memory. We’ve got the perseverance of prejudice. We’ve got the prevalence of confirmation bias. There’s a sense of ‘I’m doing the just thing; I’m the one locking up the bad guys.’ The system is almost built to where you’re offending it if you suggest that your client didn’t do it.”
Then he added, “You know, the concept of justice is very flexible to almost all people. Justice is what you feel it is at the moment. The system crushes ambiguity, like there’s no such thing permitted in the courtroom. But the courtroom is about life, and life is about ambiguity.”
