About Vic Sasso
Vic Sasso is licensed to practice law in all of the courts in the State of Texas, as well as the federal courts of the Northern District of Texas, the Eastern District of Texas, and the United States Court of Appeals For The Fifth Circuit, in New Orleans. He has appeared pro hac vice in other federal jurisdictions.
Vic was born in 1955 in Memphis, Tennessee, and moved to Dallas in 1961. He is a 1974 graduate of Dallas Jesuit, a 1978 cum laude graduate of Spring Hill College (a small liberal arts Jesuit college in Mobile, Alabama) where he was the Presidential Scholar of Sociology. His senior undergraduate paper was on the historical growth and evolution of the political power structure in the City of Dallas, starting with the 1793 settlement, La Reunion, on the banks of the Trinity River. He is a 1981 graduate of Southern Methodist University Law School.
His 3rd-year ethics paper was entitled “On General Deterrence and the Death Penalty” concluding that, based on the empirical evidence, there was none. He is a strong proponent of abolishing the death penalty in America, based on his core values, as well as his experiences dealing with an imperfect system.
Vic has been honored by being asked to speak and instruct at various seminars and events for
Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association
“Old Problems-New Solutions”- Cross-Examination of Police Officers in DWI Cases (Hyatt Regency -Dallas-December of 1998)
“Cross-Examination of Police Officers in Driving While Intoxicated Cases” (Hilton Inn-Jefferson County – Beaumont, Texas, April of 1994)