You Have No Empirical Evidence of Sanctions . . .
by
run75441
11/06/2009, 6:28 AM #
Sully (prosecutor?):
muchless out right conviction of prosecutors perjurying themselves in court. You are being ridiculous in your stance:
- That such an investigative body exists for prosecutorial misconduct. It may exist; but, it has rarely taken action.
- That the Attorney Grievance Commissions has the power, the will and the capacity to discipline prosecutors.
- That there is historical evidence of such discipline occurring. There isn't.
What is interesting is where this case is coming out of with regard to court systems. 8th district, a bastion for Federalists and hardly defendant friendly with regard to criminals or plaintiffs going after the Law. What is also interesting is your use of "criminal defendants" in describing the two plaintifffs who are suing the prosecutors for wrongful conviction. It must be tough to let go of that ivory tower image of Law and Order when it comes to Prosecutors. The case was reversed (?) so why not give them the respect of at least calling them plantiffs or citizens and let go of the prejudices.
Interestingly enough, the Cato Institute (a bastion of liberalism) in conjunction with the ACLU, and the National Defense Lawyers, have written an amici curiae (<link>) in support of the two plaintiffs, in opposition to the prosecutor arguments of immunity, and also refuting your stance that prosecutors face the sword of Damocles sanctions you purport to be in existyance. The three are rather strange bed fellows and often times find themselves on opposing ends. Other citations:
- Page 36, 3. "16% of all capital cases are reversed on appeal (after several years [me]) due to Prosecutorial Misconduct which tends to prove prosecutors are not sufficiently deterred." "A Broken System; Error Rates in Capital Cases" 2000, James Liebman
- Many Prosecutors accused of Prosecutorial Misconduct are repeat offenders. The California Justice Commission identified 20 of 30 such repeat offenders of the same offense out of 347 decisons. The issue appears to be a lack of transparency as the Prosecutor is typically not named in the decision.
- 14 of 74 Bronx prosecutors were found to have committed prosecutorial misconduct and cited. Andrea Elliot, "Prosecutors Not Penalized," NYT December 17, 2003
- "While individual prosecutor's office, unlike Bar committees, may have the resources or the knowledge to investigate or discipline, they have not demonstrated the will. Altough amici argue that prosecutor's offices often have the internal mechanisms for discipline, Nat'l Assoc. of AUSA, they cite no specific examples other tha the Department of Justice Office of Professional Responsibility. And compelling evidence suggests otherwise. The New York Task Force and the the California Justice Commission found that prosecutor's offices in their respective states lacked consistent or transparent internal policies for attorney discipline. <link> "Task Force on Wrongful Convictions" New York State Bar, April 2009
- A 1999 Chicago Tribune study found out of 381 nation wide reversals since 1963, (67 carried the death penalty) one 1 prosecutor was ever fired only to be reinstated with back pay, another received a 30 day suspension, and a 3rd had their license suspended for 59 days. "The Verdict: Dishonor." Chicago Tribune, January 11, 1999;
- "Who Is Keeping the Gate, What Do We do When Prosecutors Breach The Ethical Responsibilities They have Swore to Uphold" Shelby Moore . . . a study of all reported cases of misconduct only 27 cases were disciplined for misconduct
- "Wrongful Convictions; It is Time to Take Prosecution Discipline Seriously;" Ellen Yarsoshefsky 2004 cites hundreds of caes of misconduct without resulting discipline.
- "Disciplinary Sanctions Against Prosecutors for for Brady Violations: A Paper Tiger;" Richard Rosen, Only nine cases of discipline for Brady-type violations sought and only 6 imposed.
- 10 years later and only 7 more cases where discipline was sought added in an update to Rosen's research; "No Wrong Without a Remedy;" Jeffrey Weeks 1997
- "The Flipside of A Fair Trial;" Between 1980-1999 the Chicago Tribune could find no instances of prosecutors being internally disciplined or facing discipline in Cook County even though it did find multiple instances of prosecutors lying, cheating or spinning out of control
- In Michigan, one attorney abandons ~500 cases, steals $thousands in retainers and fees, fails to properly prepare for trial and in one case admits to it in COA, has an exparte conversation with judge and prosecutor and lies about client, is convicted of possession of cocaine, is on trial, is on trial for contributing to the death of another by supplying heroin, is found in a hotel room high on drugs while out on bond. Suspended for 2 years by the Grievance Commission. Now that is a real slap on the hand . . .
The American Bar Association, other associations, and the states have no interest in disciplining attorneys or prosecutors for misconduct. The references and citations of which there are many more make my point and provide a foundation (other than an opinion) for my statements. I suggest you google the percentages of wrongfully convicted and sentenced to death. Use Marquis and Scalia and you will eventually find it and Scalia/Marquis's misuse of statistics (prosecutorial fallacy?) to make their claim. I am not going to be your research assistant here again.
There is another guild, so to speak, facing similar problems as what the ABA and other legal associations face. The American Medical Association also has issues with a percentage of doctors who are repeat offenders and doctors overall who are guilty of malpractice and are not disciplined. The issue can be in the ABA and the AMA hands if they choose to take action, which historically (as shown for atorneys), they have not done so. To grant attorneys complete immunity, I believe is a bridge to far especially in this case. 25 years and justice finally caught up with them.
If you care to continue this conversation with me, I expect you to return with something more than just an opinion which has no foundation to it. It may work for you in court; but, it will certainly not work here.