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Est. April 5, 2002
 
           
May 04, 2017 - Issue 697

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Where's the Justice in Our
Criminal Justice System?



"One contributing factor that doesn’t get
discussed enough is the public’s naive belief
in the fairness of our justice system. You
don’t have to be a rocket scientist to see that
the United States has a legal system that
dwarfs that of every other nation—but calling
it a justice system seems to be a stretch."


Ive been listening to a podcast I wish I could have heard while in high school—I probably would have gone to law school earlier than I did. Listed by Rolling Stone magazine as one of the 10 podcasts everyone should follow, “Actual Innocencewas started by Brook Gittings, a social worker who—after watching the Netflix series “The Making of a Murderer”—realized how little she knew about our judicial system.  Her desire to learn more led her into the world of wrongful convictions, which has now become the driving force behind her podcasts. Each episode tells the story of a person who has served time in the system for a crime they did not commit. Actual Innocence gives the uninitiated a view of our criminal justice system that won’t be found on CSI or Law & Order.

Like Gittings, most Americans have little to no direct contact with the judicial system. With the exception of minor traffic violations, divorce proceedings, or an occasional dispute in small claims court, what they think they know about the judicial system has come to them through the movies or television dramas. Nevertheless, if asked, the average Joe would probably say that our system is just and fair.

We are reared to believe that ours is a nation of laws. That the U.S. criminal justice system is blind to race, religion or station in life. Unless you are an attorney, a police officer, law student, or are in some other way associated with the law, you probably don’t know that one out of nine people on death row has been exonerated since the introduction of DNA evidence—or that the overwhelming majority of people serving time for a criminal offense in the United States never had a trial.

 

As much as 97% of federal criminal cases end with a plea bargain, which means the defendant and the prosecution struck a deal—a guilty plea in exchange for a lighter sentence. This business of having your day in court as depicted on TV and in the movies is largely fiction. Our criminal justice system today is almost exclusively a system of plea bargains—no trials, no juries, and no discovery with defense counsel and judges having little to no say.

What was designed to be one of the greatest assets of our criminal justice system—the discovery process with a trial by jury—is largely a relic of the past. And the system it was supposed to support has increasingly become a predatory one or, as famed defense attorney Bryan Stevenson says, “We have a system of justice that treats you better if you’re rich and guilty than if you are poor and innocent.”

In fact, the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia believed that actual innocence was not a strong enough reason to overturn a conviction, even in the face of a death sentence. He once said that the execution of a convicted defendant who has had a full and fair trial but is later able to convince a court that he is ‘actually innocent’ is not a legal basis to overturn the conviction or, in other words, not enough reason to stop an execution. So, it appears we’ve come to the place where actual innocence can be treated as if it were irrelevant.

This jaw-dropping truth stands in sharp contrast to the protections most Americans believe are enshrined in the Bill of Rights of the U.S. Constitution. Surely the Founding Fathers did not intend to create a system that results in tens of thousands of innocent people incarcerated annually and—in a few cases—being put to death.

Our system is so bloated and so prone to mistake and frankly, prosecutorial misconduct, that today there are enough people convicted of a crime who were later determined to be wrongfully convicted that they have an annual conference. In 2016, one such gathering, the Innocence Network Conference held in San Antonio, attracted 500 attendees.

In a piece published by Mother Jones magazine titled, “How Many Innocent People Are in Prison?” writers Beth Schwartzapfel and Hannah Levintova admit that answering that question definitively is almost impossible. But they say,

Extrapolating from the 281 known DNA exonerations in the US since the late 1980s, a conservative estimate is that 1 percent of the US prison population, approximately 20,000 people, are falsely convicted.”

Several studies by respected institutions support this estimation—some believe the number is higher. So the question is what can be done?

The bullets below are a small sample of suggestions I’ve found searching the web.  Using sites like the Equal Justice Initiative, the Innocence Project, the Sentencing Project, and the Prison Policy Initiative I cobbled together a small sampling of actions average people can take:

  • Get rid of the money bail system. The money bail system is used in just two countries—the United States and the Philippines. Every year thousands of people in the U.S. are jailed while they await their trial simply because they can’t afford to post bail. These people are technically innocent. Recent research found that, compared to people who are released sometime before their trail starts, people held in jail the whole time before their trial were four times more likely to be sentenced to jail and three times more likely to be sentenced to prison.  There are alternatives to this system that have a proven track record of success.

  • Support Alternatives-to-Arrest and Alternative-Incarceration Programs. Fifty years ago the U.S. incarceration rate in the United States was on par with similarly situated nations. Over the past four decades, changes in law and policy have resulted in the nation’s prison population ballooning by 500%. This growth has outpaced the crime rate and research suggests over the long term, that it has actually increased the crime rate.

  • Support Laws That Reduce Overly Harsh Sentences. People are serving life sentences for non-violent drug offenses. The United States is unique among countries in the “civilized” world to handle these types of offenses this way. Clearly this method is not producing the desired outcome as is evidenced by our high recidivism rate. We should work on eliminating mandatory minimum sentences and cut back on excessively lengthy sentences by using an alternative to incarceration for these types of offenses.

  • Hold Prosecutors and Police Responsible for Deliberate Misconduct. Police and prosecutors who deliberately engage in misconduct are almost never held accountable for their actions—actions like hiding or destroying evidence that could clear the accused of charges, or fabricating evidence to make a defendant appear guilty, or relying on testimony that is known to be false, or obtaining and then using coerced confessions.  In fact, 40 years ago the U.S. Supreme Court granted prosecutors absolute immunity for acts committed in their prosecutorial role.

  • Require All States to Provide Compensation to the Exonerated. Only 30 states, plus Washington D.C., have laws that provide compensation to the wrongly convicted. Some of these laws provide only token support to the exonerated, while 20 states provide no compensation at all. When the criminal justice system makes a grievous mistake by sending an innocent person to prison, the state has a moral and ethical responsibility to make amends by providing adequate financial support, counseling, educational and job training, and housing. If your state doesn’t have a law, ask your legislator to pass one.

  • Reform or abolish Plea Bargaining. Timothy Lynch of the Cato Institute has presented a strong argument in favor of abolishing the plea bargain system. He believes it is unconstitutional because the plea bargaining system encourages the government to pressure an individual to waive a Constitutional right and then punishes defendants who chose to exercise their Sixth Amendment right to a trial by jury.

  • End the Death Penalty. Judge Boyce F. Martin, Jr. of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit called the death penalty arbitrary, biased, and so fundamentally flawed at its very core that it is beyond repair.” The number of innocent people exonerated who were on death row continues to grow and, according to the American Bar Association, in 96% of states where there have been reviews of race and the death penalty there was a pattern of either race-of-victim or race-of-defendant discrimination, or both. Few countries continue this barbaric practice among them are the United States, China, North Korea and Pakistan.


Over the past 40 years we’ve witnessed a prison population explosion of unparalleled proportion in the U.S.. Social scientists and other scholars can give you a laundry list of reasons. Most striking is that missing on those lists is a need to increase public safety. Most experts agree that the U.S. locks up more of its citizens than any other nation at great expense with little impact on public safety.

One contributing factor that doesn’t get discussed enough is the public’s naive belief in the fairness of our justice system. You don’t have to be a rocket scientist to see that the United States has a legal system that dwarfs that of every other nation—but calling it a justice system seems to be a stretch.

If, at any point during the judicial process, actual innocence is deemed to be irrelevant, how the hell can we call what we have a justice system?


BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member and Columnist, Sharon Kyle, JD, is the Co-Founder and Publisher of the LA Progressive an online social justice magazine. With her husband Dick, she publishes several other print and online newsletters on political and social justice issues. In addition to her work with the LA Progressive, Ms. Kyle holds a Juris Doctorate, is an adjunct professor at Peoples College of Law in Los Angeles, and sits on the board of the ACLU Pasadena/Foothills Chapter and the Progressive Caucus of the California Democratic Party. Click here to contact the LA Progressive and Ms. Kyle.


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