FBI To Review Use of Forensic Evidence In Thousands of Cases 133
NotSanguine writes in with a story about a review of the forensic evidence in thousands of criminal cases to see if any defendants were wrongly convicted. "The Justice Department and the FBI have launched a review of thousands of criminal cases to determine whether any defendants were wrongly convicted or deserve a new trial because of flawed forensic evidence, officials said Tuesday.
The undertaking is the largest post-conviction review ever done by the FBI. It will include cases conducted by all FBI Laboratory hair and fiber examiners since at least 1985 and may reach earlier if records are available, people familiar with the process said. Such FBI examinations have taken place in federal and local cases across the country, often in violent crimes, such as rape, murder and robbery."
Whether? (Score:2, Insightful)
The question is which.
Re:Whether? (Score:5, Informative)
This is a PR move by the FBI. It makes them APPEAR to be an actor for justice - it matters of little consequence, except those personally involved.
Another oxymoron for America? How about "Justice Department"?
4 Years - and not ONE criminal indictment perused against the "investment" and reserve Banksters. Surely, the FBI could better spend their time and resources to ensure that the entire country is safe from another criminal fraud, costing tens of Billions, no?
http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2012/05/06/why-can-t-obama-bring-wall-street-to-justice.html [thedailybeast.com]
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2012/may/20/wall-street-role-financial-crisis [guardian.co.uk]
http://www.propublica.org/article/why-no-financial-crisis-prosecutions-official-says-its-just-too-hard [propublica.org]
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2011/nov/10/should-some-bankers-be-prosecuted/?pagination=false [nybooks.com]
http://www.globalresearch.ca/PrintArticle.php?articleId=30979 [globalresearch.ca]
BTW: The Fed knew about LIBOR fixing specific to Barclays and beyond... in 2008.
http://news.firedoglake.com/2012/07/14/barclays-employee-to-ny-fed-2008-we-know-that-were-not-posting-um-an-honest-libor/ [firedoglake.com]
So what's our precious FBI doing about examining THAT evidence?
Not their jurisdiction? (Score:2)
Isn't this kind of fraud the realm of the SEC [sec.gov]?
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Federal crimes are just that. SEC has a duty to investigate - of course. But I think we have indication of conspiracy, racketeering, price fixing and numerous Interstate Commerce issues...
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My understanding is that the FBI will work with the SEC by turning over relevant information and collaborating when possible, but generally will not duplicate work in order to prevent waste and other managerial problems.
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Here's one for FBI/DEA:
BofA in collusion with Mexican drug cartels.
http://www.thedailysheeple.com/are-western-banks-and-the-mexican-drug-cartel-inter-dependent-boa-implicated-in-drug-related-money-laundering_072012 [thedailysheeple.com]
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This is a PR move by the FBI. It makes them APPEAR to be an actor for justice - it matters of little consequence, except those personally involved.
Quite the opposite actually, as the FBI look like a bunch of idiots because they have to go back and check all of this again.
4 Years - and not ONE criminal indictment perused against the "investment" and reserve Banksters. Surely, the FBI could better spend their time and resources to ensure that the entire country is safe from another criminal fraud, costing tens of Billions, no?
They don't have to be mutually exclusive actions.
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But they seem to be... :-)
It's been 4 years.
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I completely agree with you, because we all know that there is only 1 guy at the FBI, and he can only do 1 thing at a time, therefore if they do this, then they can't also possibly be doing anything else.
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Care to debate the points raised?
Recommended Reading (Score:5, Interesting)
"The Innocent Man" by John Grisham. It details a case in which a man was wrongfully sentenced to death on bad evidence.
I'm a good law-and-order conservative when it comes to things like this, but fair is fair. If someone is wrongfully convicted, it needs to be reviewed. In particular, the use of hair samples and other forensic evidence decades ago, before the advent of DNA testing, resulted in quite a few such wrongful convictions.
Re:Recommended Reading (Score:5, Insightful)
Learning how likely we were to wrongfully convict is a benefit in and of itself. If it looks like a rare occurrence after testing a random sample, then we can feel confidant about the rest. If it's frequent, then we must look at all cases again-it's better for the guilty to go free than the innocent to wrongly lose their freedom.
Re:Recommended Reading (Score:4, Interesting)
It's a reasonable principle, but it may be a bit too simplistic. So you'd rather let one guilty go free than have one innocent person convicted. What if it was not just one guilty you had to let go free, but say two, would you still say it was better? How many guilty would have to go free, before it was better to let one innocent person get convicted?
If the number you answer is high enough, then the logical consequence is to let everybody go free regardless of evidence.
Is it always better to let one guilty go free, than take away one innocent persons freedom? If you let a likely serial killer go free, he might murder another innocent person. So the choice might be between an innocent person losing his freedom or another innocent person losing her life. That makes the choice look less clear.
I don't say I have the answers to what is right and what is wrong, but I do have some of the questions.
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Let's split the difference and release 50% of all prisoners. We'd still have the highest incarceration rate in the world.
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Nice try of nitpicking ;)--put it in the right light of statistics, and it becomes irrelevant.
Sure.
Sure.
Never-ever should an innocent person get falsely convicted.
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>If you release convicts randomly, you will have to deal with your logical consequence. If you'd only release in doubtful cases (better yet, don't convict in doubtful cases), the percentage of released/not convicted criminals would be negligible.
I think this is the crux of the matter: What are the doubtful cases? The ones where there is a 10% chance that the person is innocent? A 1% chance? 0.01%? Or, to put it another way, how many wrongly convicted should we accept per guilty person going free? There is no way of ever being 100% sure of anything, so if we have to make sure that we never convict anyone wrongfully, we can never convict anybody.
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It's a reasonable principle, but it may be a bit too simplistic. So you'd rather let one guilty go free than have one innocent person convicted. What if it was not just one guilty you had to let go free, but say two, would you still say it was better? How many guilty would have to go free, before it was better to let one innocent person get convicted?
You can answer that yourself: How many guilty people need to go to prison correctly in order for you to be happy for you to be the one innocent person to be sent to prison incorrectly?
How understanding would you be of your own point of view if you had just spent the past 10 years in prison getting raped every other day? You might even die in prison fighting that sort of shit off, even if you survived a 10 year stretch your life would be utterly changed by the experience.
I'll bet that would make the choice a
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Misguided prosecutors maybe. The rate of wrongful convictions has nothing to do with that. You have some messed up "lawyer" friends.
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If that is indeed true, then the system is seriously screwed up. The question is "just" another case of deciding the cost of a false negative vs. a false positive. If you want one of them to be at 0% you'll have to accept the other going to 100%. But as long as you accept that both probabilities will be above 0%, then you can decide how you want to balance them.
However it doesn't stop there. Even if you have decided
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I would prefer all of the guilty people go free over convicting one innocent. The state denying life or liberty is the most heinous crime of all. This goes well beyond silly political ideologies. It is a fundamental principle of freedom.
Anarchy is preferable to tyranny. It is not as complicated as you make it out to be.
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That's just another way of saying you don't want anybody to go to jail ever regardless of what the evidence shows. Because you can never be 100% sure the person is guilty.
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If [...] 100 or 1,000 or 10,000 guilty people go free so that [...] any [...] innocent person [...] don't lose [their] freedom it's a net win.
So we should not convict a person if there is a 0.01% chance that they are innocent? I would imagine that kind of certainty being quite hard to obtain, so wouldn't the logical consequnce be that we should not convict anybody? What kind of evidence would you demand before you would accept convicting somebody?
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Certainty of guilt is not the same thing. Reasonable doubt is a fine standard. The burden of proof being on the states helps as well. Prosecutor that are slave to justice and not conviction is the ultimate gatekeeper.
If they do find any wrongful convictions, misguided police and prosecutors will be at the heart of each one. Will they always be malicious? Absolutely not, but they will still be negligent.
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Certainty of guilt is not the same thing. Reasonable doubt is a fine standard.
But what is reasonable doubt? If there is a 0.01% chance that a person is not guilty, is the person guilty beyond reasonable doubt?
If they do find any wrongful convictions, misguided police and prosecutors will be at the heart of each one. Will they always be malicious? Absolutely not, but they will still be negligent.
Doesn't this mean that nothing is beyond reasonable doubt? If somebody was guilty beyond reasonable doubt, it wouldn't be negligent to punish them, would it?
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Personally, unless there is someone sitting behind bars who is in disagreement with their sentence, leave the cases alone. I question benefit vs. cost in those cases.
I contend that there are probably few individuals that agree with their sentences. Sure there may be a handful of inmates that admit guilt but most are either truly innocent or would never admit to guilt.
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One thing you have to understand about the federal court system is they stack the books so much against you, and the federal prosecutors can literally conjure up the most ridiculous bullshit and sell it to a grand jury to get an indictment or tell a judge such ridiculous bullshit to put you behind bars in solitary (like the hacker Kevin Mitnick case where they claimed he could call NORAD and whistle into the phone and start World War III).
I've known people who have had to deal with federal indictments, and
Nope. (Score:5, Insightful)
Just because someone "admitted" guilt as part of a plea bargain doesn't mean they are actually guilty. Plea bargaining itself is a form of coercion, it's like putting a gun to someone's head and telling they you'll shoot them if they don't confess and give up their conspirators. Plenty of people have gone on to recant their pleas. The Norfolk Four [wikipedia.org] is an example you may be aware of. Most sensible people realize that plea-bargaining for easy convictions is a deeply flawed way of getting "justice". It puts innocent people behind bars and gives guilty people lighter sentences.
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90% of convictions never go to trial and All of those that accept plea bargains are required to admit guilt AND agree to the penalty.
Your contention is not based on reality.
Some of those people who accepted a plea bargain may have done it simply because their lawyer told them there was zero chance of them being found innocent based on the governments forensic evidence. This is often the case because a cheap public defenders lack the financial resources to challenge government expert witnesses with experts of their own.
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Great plan, overturning all those wrongful convictions would make the criminal law system look terrible. You might even have to wipe peoples criminal records making them employable again....
Thus raising the measured unemployment rate--yet another conservative plot to smear Obama for the failings of the Bush administration.
(Sigh. I guess I'd better point out that this is a joke...)
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Yes. There are people who plead guilty because they know they are guilty and deserve to go to jail. They enter their plea knowing what the possible sentences are, and implicitly agree to said sentence.
Granted most people would plead not guilty and take a spin of the Wheel of Justice, but there are a few exceptions.
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Actually if I recall correctly, the number of people who are taking plea bargains has increased significantly, meaning that trial by jury is not nearly as common for criminal cases as it should be. No doubt many of those who take the plea bargain are innocent, but believe the odds are stacked against them when it comes to a trial and would rather take a shorter sentence over risking a much longer one if they are convicted.
I suspect that DNA evidence is a big reason for that behavior, since it's popularly b
Re:Recommended Reading (Score:5, Insightful)
However, perhaps there needs to be a line drawn here, since this type of investigation (or re-investigation) comes with a significant price tag (likely to the taxpayer).
As opposed to the price tag associated with keeping someone in prison?
I question benefit vs. cost in those cases.
Anything that reduces our prison population is worth the cost -- we have the largest prison population on Earth, and it is continuing to grow. We will soon have the largest prison population in human history (currently, only Nazi Germany and the USSR had larger populations). That has massive direct and indirect costs to our society, both in terms of money and in terms of the destructive effect that overly broad legal codes and overly powerful police forces have had on our rights and freedoms. Communities have been decimated by having 1/4 of their male population imprisoned. Once out of prison, people often have difficulty finding employment, which can and does lead to recidivism -- prison can turn an innocent, wrongly convicted person into a criminal.
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Re:Recommended Reading (Score:5, Insightful)
And why is it that we have such a large prison population?
The admittedly glib answer would be growing poverty, the idiotic war on drugs (that alone contributed to an enormous spike), piss-poor education/kids 'slipping through the cracks', inadequate focus on rehabilitation in lieu of punitive measures in the prison system itself, the privatization of the prison system which leads to prisoners being a commodity (Kids For Cash [wikipedia.org])...but there are a lot of reasons, obviously.
Still, I fully believe it has little to do with having 'too much freedom' and everything to do with our failure to address the social ills that lead to criminal behavior.
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You're committing the same fallacy hardliners usually do when it comes to crime. Their usual one-stop answer:
Harsher punishments.
However, for deterrence (and that's what we're talking about here) to work, you need to factor in three things:
- Adequacy of punishment (yes, adequacy. Punishment should be neither too harsh nor too soft.)
- Reliability of punishment
- Temporal adjacency of crime (meaning, that catching the perpetrator after several months has zero effect on deterrence)
All those three have to wor
Re:Recommended Reading (Score:5, Insightful)
However, for deterrence (and that's what we're talking about here)
Deterrence? Prisons should not be about deterrence, they are supposed to keep dangerous people separated from the rest of society, so that the rest of society remains safe, and people are released from prison when we believe that society will be safe with those people walking free. Putting people in prison for any other reason is wasteful; it wastes a person's life and it wastes the resources needed to house them in prison.
Non-violent crimes -- at least those that make sense to remain in effect (which excludes the entirety of the war on drugs, for starters) -- should be punished with community service, so that people can work for the benefit of the society they wronged. Bankers who defrauded people out of their money should be out picking up trash and helping to lay roads, as a form of restitution. Keep the punishment short, and make sure it does not prevent a person from working their day job; this should not turn into a system of slavery, just like it should not waste a non-violent person's life by locking them in a cell.
Punishment is not effective
Not as a deterrent; some people are capable of murder, and we need to keep them separated from everyone else. Stop thinking of things in terms of deterrence, and start thinking of how to maximize the benefit to society. It is detrimental to society to spend money and man-power keeping people in cages if those people pose no threat to anyone else. It is beneficial to society if people have a chance to contribute their labor as a way of righting their wrongs.
Which means that we should rather work on crime prevention measures
Not putting people in prison is a crime prevention method. There are communities that have been decimated by "lock 'em up" approaches to "justice," places where 1/4 of men are incarcerated. That breeds crime -- crimes on the part of children who were raised in unstable, impoverished homes, crimes on the part of former inmates who return home and discover that they cannot find a job (who wants to hire a convicted felon?), crimes on the part of families who are trying to help their incarcerated relatives.
People make connections with criminal gangs while in prison; what do you think happens when they get out and face diminished employment prospects? They turn to those same gang connections for help, and they start committing crimes for money -- driving contraband-laden trucks, driving getaway cars, etc. The disproportionately high rate of recidivism among former prison inmates is well known.
Which means, when it comes to adults, find them some work.
Spot on, and like I said, former prison inmates face problems finding employment -- so we need to stop sending people to jail, and stop classifying non-violent, non-serious crimes as felonies. We also need to stop arresting people over drugs, which is the leading cause of incarceration in this country, and we need to reorganize our legal code to restore faith in the justice system. We need to stop having knee-jerk reactions to infamous crimes -- laws that do not expire, which are meant to prevent rare crimes from happening and which wind up being applied in novel, unanticipated ways.
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I'd say that depends on the state of the art of the particular evidence. If the state of the art has advanced to the point that the earlier techniques are considered laughable by those of today, then it would certainly be reasonable to survey all the cases in which that evidence was used and review the evidence itself if relevant to the case (or even if the case was overwhelming by other evidence, it may be a good training exercise or baseline for evaluating the process.)
I don't think it's unreasonable to
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Oh no. It might, gasp, cost money to find out that the justice system has been murdering innocent people. If they've already been killed, wouldn't want to find out that you've killed the wrong person. Nope, just close your eyes and pretend that it's all fine and nothing bad ever happens. And hey, if you happen to be a murderer who got away because they stopped looking for you after they caught the wrong person, bonus!
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"The Innocent Man" by John Grisham. It details a case in which a man was wrongfully sentenced to death on bad evidence.
I'm a good law-and-order conservative when it comes to things like this, but fair is fair. If someone is wrongfully convicted, it needs to be reviewed. In particular, the use of hair samples and other forensic evidence decades ago, before the advent of DNA testing, resulted in quite a few such wrongful convictions.
I'm in agreement with you. However, perhaps there needs to be a line drawn here, since this type of investigation (or re-investigation) comes with a significant price tag (likely to the taxpayer). Personally, unless there is someone sitting behind bars who is in disagreement with their sentence, leave the cases alone. I question benefit vs. cost in those cases.
So if a person is now about 15 or 16 and looking at going to college but cannot afford to because the government wrongly executed his father 14 years back he is crap out of luck then?
This is obviously a purely hypothetical scenario but should illustrate things are not quite as cut and dried as you seem to believe.
Re:Recommended Reading (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm a good law-and-order conservative
I bet you would change your tune if you were arrested for something like this:
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/oct/05/criminalizing-everyone/ [washingtontimes.com]
"Law and order" attitudes are fine when the only people we imprison are murderers, rapists, etc. -- dangerous people who need to be separated from society to keep everyone else safe. These days, there are so many vague laws on the books that everyone is guilty of at least some felony, and by some estimates people are committing felonies every day just by living their lives.
Until we see major, sweeping reforms to our criminal laws, "law and order" approaches to crime are dangerous.
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That article fails to show how we are all criminals. Does anybody else have better articles? I'm curious to see if I really have broken the law or not.
Re:Recommended Reading (Score:5, Interesting)
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Fun fact: there are probably at least 6 million [amptoons.com] un-convicted rapists living in the US. The entire prison population is approximately 3 million.
Re:Recommended Reading (Score:4, Interesting)
Feminists have an unfortunate habit of using the word rape to shock people into action. At the time that the Koss study was first published, feminists had been so successful at shocking people into action that we were in the middle of a moral panic, imprisoning thousands of innocent men for child abuse that never happened (and going as far as to accuse some of subjecting children to satanic rituals and other witchcraft). We should be doing everything we can to avoid making that mistake again, not talking about the need to triple our already tyrannically large prison population.
I'll be the first to say that there are problems with the way many police forces and colleges deal with rape. I have heard stories of women who were never told about a "rape kit," who were advised by people in positions of power to not press charges, who were turned away when they went to the police, who were told to just get on with their lives, etc. That is a problem, and that is a problem that should be addressed. However, we must also be careful in our solutions to that problem: we must ensure that innocent men are not imprisoned as part of the hunt for rapists, we must ensure that there is no confusion about what a man is being accused of when he is accused of rape, and we must ensure that the word rape does not become associated with normal sexual activity.
I know two women who were raped (one by physical force, one by drugs), and the last thing I want is for people to doubt that they are victims of a serious crime.
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You're wrong, that number is for real rapists. It's not for some expanded definition. It's based on written surveys of male college students (stastically extrapolated, of course) who were asked using a question that didn't use the word rape but instead asked if they'd ever physically or through the use if drugs forced an unwilling woman to have sex. The written survey was followed up with an intview to confirm the result. That number is actually just the ones who'd done it more than once (on average 6 times
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in the furure, please read any linked material before jumping to conclusions like that. Who knows how many people have gotten the wrong idea from reading your uninformed comment.
The linked material says "asking them about if they had ever forced a woman to have sex against her will.", it doesn't detail it as physically or through drugs. Is there a source for the phrasing of the question in the study?
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who were asked using a question that didn't use the word rape but instead asked if they'd ever physically or through the use if drugs forced an unwilling woman to have sex.
They were also asked if they had unwanted sexual contact following verbal coercion or a coercive abuse of power. Had you bothered to read the post you were replying to, you would have seen that I actually read the study, not some feminist's blog post, and that the study itself found that most victims fell into the "verbal coercion" category.
You should read up on it, this isn't feminist nonsense like you've assumed.
Maybe you should read the study, and see what kind of definition of rape is used in that study. The definition is a typical feminist simplification of the crime:
Link To Study Please? (Score:2)
Could you please link to a PDF/PS/Whatever of the actual study then?
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Seems I misinterpreted some things the first time around (I was in a rush), which I apologize for, however...
Thanks, but... (Score:2)
Paywalled. Sigh :(.
It seems like you denying the existence of "rape culture". If so, you're quite wrong -- just look at how women are immediately threatened by rape if they speak up about discrimination(*) on the interwebs. The people who are making those threats are not necessarily rapists but they sure are implicitly "legitimizing" rape in the eyes of those who actually do rape. (I'm sure a lot of this is just general assholery, but it's still having the effect of legitimizing and/or trivializing rape.)
(*
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It seems like you denying the existence of "rape culture". If so, you're quite wrong
Where is the convincing argument for this phenomenon? We live in a cu
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The reason we count both rapes and attempted rapes is because both count. The same way murder and attempted murder will land you in jail. Ignoring attempted rapes would understate the size of the actual problem. And I was correct about the claims made in the article. Regardless of any issues with that study, two have conducted since and reached the same conclusions. Whether or not you agree this is "rape" it is a huge problem, and not one we can solve by throwing all rapists in jail.
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Regardless of any issues with that study, two have conducted since and reached the same conclusions
Then cite them; like I said, I am at a university, so I should be able to find whatever articles you cite. Prove me wrong; my instinct is that the same problems with the 1987 Koss study will turn up in later studies, but I am willing to admit that I could be wrong about that.
Re:Recommended Reading (Score:5, Insightful)
It seems to me that the "law and order" attitude must be some form of poison to the soul. It always starts out well intentioned by getting unarguably harmful and bad people off of the streets. If it ended there it would be acceptable enough though perhaps not enlightened enough to actually solve the problem of crime. However, it doesn't seem to ever stop there.
Over time the person afflicted with "law and order" seems to become so focused on harming the guilty that they lose sight of protecting the innocent. They become increasingly willing to harm the innocent themselves so long as it's in pursuit of the guilty. That's where we get the fishing expeditions, cheating on warrants, crazy raids that end in dead children, etc. Because of the soul poison, the 'law and order' afflicted no longer see a need for even an apology when they get things so horribly wrong. There is nothing but a hole where the part of them should be that would tell them they've gone too far and are becoming what they despised.
Another sign of this poison is the prosecutor who is perfectly willing to hide exculpatory evidence and a judicial system that is willing to pretend that a public defender who doesn't meet the 'client' until the arraignment is actually underway and who has hundreds of current clients somehow provides meaningful legal council.
Where it gets really frightening though is the prosecutor who will actively fight the release of a person who has been proven innocent post conviction. They reveal their true nature in that. They truly have no care for guilt or innocence at all, no care for law and order, they are simply psychopaths who enjoy tossing people in prison (or executing them). They become indistinguishable from the serial torturers and serial killers of the world except that they have so expertly manipulated the system that they are paid to get their psychopathic jollies at the expense of the innocent.
Naturally, not everyone goes to that extreme, but if you sit back and examine the system as an outsider, it becomes apparent that few are truly untouched by it.
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If they didn't have the paperwork to prove the orchids were legal then the orchids were not legal. Sorry but this is a bad example. And given that it comes from the Washington Times, you know there is more to the story. Just another attempt by the looney right to show how all regulation is bad and hurts innocent people (i mean, how were they supposed to know that trafficking in endangered species is wrong). Stupid foreign orchids have more rights that good red blooded american citizens, why, the gestapo is
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http://threefelonies.com/Youtoo/tabid/86/Default.aspx [threefelonies.com]
Oh, and, by the way, turning everyone into a criminal, overly harsh sentences, overly broad and vague laws, and the massive increase in law enforcement power are what the right wing is going.
Mod Up (Score:1)
This is precisely why the death penalty should be abolished: because death is permanent, and government cannot be trusted. This argument supercedes every other argument, pro or con, regarding the death penalty.
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Re:Mod Up (Score:5, Informative)
I have three words for you: Cameron Todd Willingham. Convicted and executed on the basis of junk science. Actually, that's not true. The "expert" testimony was an insult to junk science even. There was no science involved, just pure speculation and mythology dressed up as "scientific".
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Simple solution: If somebody is convicted wrongly and executed, execute those responsible. I would call that fair. This will include the jury, key witnesses and the prosecutor. Maybe then they will make sure they are right....
Actually this is the only condition under which I would reluctantly agree to the death penalty.
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Simple solution: If somebody is convicted wrongly and executed, execute those responsible. I would call that fair. This will include the jury, key witnesses and the prosecutor. Maybe then they will make sure they are right....
Actually this is the only condition under which I would reluctantly agree to the death penalty.
The problem with that solution is no jury would ever convict anyone in a capital murder case. Why would a jury assume the risk of being wrong and being executed when there is no benefit whatsoever to them in those cases where they are right? If a juror is to assume a huge risk, there has to be a huge reward to balance it, otherwise they'll simply play it safe and acquit every time.
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Well, yes. This just proves the point that the death penalty is a bad idea. After all, if somebody gets executed while innocent, those responsible are not innocent at all and deserve death a lot more than the one that got executed.
Re:Mod Up (Score:4, Informative)
This gives plenty of time for new evidence to be discovered...
And prosecutors, with the power and budget of the state behind them, fight tooth and nail to prevent that new evidence from ever being considered in court. On the other side, you have an (often uneducated) inmate with a prison library.
Yeah, that's fair.
Seriously though, the prosecutors who make this mistakes, and their successors, have a vested interest in never letting mistakes be revealed to the public, and sometimes go to absolutely ridiculous lengths to prevent DNA from being considered.
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And prosecutors, with the power and budget of the state behind them, fight tooth and nail to prevent that new evidence from ever being considered in court. On the other side, you have an (often uneducated) inmate with a prison library.
In my opinion, prosecutors should never be allowed to stop evidence being presented in court, unless the evidence has been pre-evaluated to be ridiculously unreliable. Even then, I would prefer that happens in court.
In fact, I would go as far as saying, prosecutors should be mandated to bring all evidence in court, including evidence that might exonerate the accused. Prosecutors should only have the objective of finding the guilty party, and not convicting at all costs.
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In my opinion, prosecutors should never be allowed to stop evidence being presented in court, unless the evidence has been pre-evaluated to be ridiculously unreliable. Even then, I would prefer that happens in court.
I certainly agree with that--and of course DNA is not ridiculously unreliable ;-)
Problem is after the trial, when new technology becomes available, like DNA for instance, then it really is up to a judge, as it should be, whether the new evidence is sufficient to possibly alter the outcome of a trial, and thus allow a new trial. I suspect that some minor tweaks to standards here might make a huge difference...
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I'm unconvinced. Who's supposed to look for new evidence ? the guy from his prison cell, or the army of lawyers working for him for free ? Or the police/prosecution trying to undermine their own work ?
Also, you often don't have due process, with the justice system banging on you then offering a deal.No due process here.
Or you can get a free lawyer, he'll certainly do well against a full team from the DA, especially because there are never any connections between DA office and judges
Remember the cases of tho
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They're SUPPOSED to be employed to find the truth. They have DECIDED that they're employed to secure convictions.
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This isn't Soviet Russia where a kangaroo court declares you guilty and they pop you in the head as soon as you walk out of the courtroom
No, this is America, where the majority of inmates never had a trial and just pleaded out on the advice of their lawyers. No, we are not the USSR yet -- the USSR was one of only two countries in the history of the Earth to have a larger prison population than the United States.
We have due process
Coupled with a legal system that makes so many activities crimes that most people cannot live their lives without breaking the law. The US government has actually lost track of how many laws are on the books -- we don't even kno
Re:Mod Up (Score:5, Insightful)
And yet, the state has managed to murder several people who were proven innocent posthumously. And it WAS murder since executions are only for the guilty.
The truly horrifying part is the way in other cases where the wrongly accused happens to still be alive prosecutors often fight tooth and nail to proceed with the execution on procedural grounds in spite of irrefutable evidence of innocence. They show their true colors in that, clearly they have no interest in justice, they're just psychopathic serial killers who have found a legal way to do it.
When we have people like that willing to lie cheat and steal if necessary to make sure the 'wheels of justice' grind the defendant/victim without regard for actual guilt, I would say we better stick strictly to reversible penalties. Note that custodial sentences are only somewhat reversible.
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Taking away 10 years of someone's life is just as permanent.
Not disagreeing with your larger point, just stating that all wrongful convictions are damaging to our society and its members regardless of the punishment involved.
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The FBI policing itself doesn't wash. If they're going after states it's in their interests to find something but not if they go after their own. But who would police the FBI?
Re:Recommended Reading (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm a good law-and-order conservative when it comes to things like this.../p>
Things like what? Justice?
How are truth and justice different for "conservatives"? You seem to imply that liberals are "bad" and not for "law and order". I live in a state that is rife with "good law-and-order conservatives" and our penal system is famous for housing wrongfully convicted me and women. You're right about one thing, fair is fair. Given that, how do we explain that it's always the poor who are wrongfully convicted? There's a lot more wrong with the system than not enough DNA testing.
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Re:Recommended Reading (Score:5, Informative)
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"The Real CSI" on PBS' Frontline program.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RzymPoQs9nE [youtube.com]
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"before the advent of DNA testing"
Even with the advent of DNA testing there are still forensic evidence issues. The FBI's own DNA evidence board has been trying for years to get the statistics quoted in cases changed to match the way DNA evidence is used nowadays. When the statistics were originally created DNA evidence was used in a very specific way, a crime was committed, DNA evidence was discovered at the scene, and DNA samples were taken from a limited number of suspects to be compared to evidence at
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In particular, the use of hair samples and other forensic evidence decades ago, before the advent of DNA testing, resulted in quite a few such wrongful convictions.
DNA testing is not foolproof by any means. In fact cases have collapsed in the UK because it emerged that DNA evidence was flawed.
The initial claims about a "1 in 1 billion" match turned out to be bullshit. Depending on the sample quality it is more then one in a few million or less. In a country of 60+ million (UK) or 250+ million (US) that is a lot of false positives. The odds get even worse with a poor sample, and after "amplification" it becomes basically worthless.
Lawyers like to talk about how DNA "pl
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There are no "good" law-and-order conservatives. Law-and-order is a fundamentally flawed way to view the world.
So what happened? (Score:3)
Seriously, the FBI have been an international laughing stock for decades for that one.
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Did they suddenly work out that lie detectors were a fraud?
No. Lately, they discovered that keeping a person in jail (and building new jails) costs much more than re-examining the case.
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If it doesn't fit, you must acquit! (Score:2)
If it doesn't fit, you must acquit!
wow good job... (Score:3)
its a good job the USA doesn't have the death penalty for those crimes!!!
oh... wait
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its a good job the USA doesn't have the death penalty for those crimes!!!
oh... wait
It's a shame we don't have a very lengthy appeals process.
oh... wait
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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how many cases were settled outside court?
So many criminal cases are pleaded out that if everyone exercised their right to a trial, the entire system would come grinding to a halt:
https://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/11/opinion/sunday/go-to-trial-crash-the-justice-system.html [nytimes.com]
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What is even more worrying is that it happened in thousands of cases and nobody picked up on it.
Not the defense. Perhaps because they were lied to.
Not the judge. Who should know that.
The problem is that if the defence is told that the prosecution will call an expert to testify that someone's fingerprints were found on an object or that their DNA was recovered from a crime scene they tend not to challenge it. Experts are supposed to be impartial and their testimony is often just accepted at face value. At the very least the defence should question them on the reliability of the evidence, but even then they are likely to say "99% match" no matter what.
Cases in the UK where forensic eviden
Free Leonard Peltier (Score:3)
To hell with forensic evidence... (Score:4, Insightful)
...how about they review eyewitness testimony? Eyewitness accounts are known to be highly unreliable in many situations, including stress, poor lighting, poor angle relative to event, and more. Additionally, identifying a person is difficult if the person is not already known to the witness, especially if the witness is not of the same race as the person being identified. Worse, the witness interview process by the police may result in suggestion to the witness' memory - either intentionally or unintentionally.
I would personally bet - though cannot prove - that more bad convictions are due to bad witness testimony than bad forensic evidence. By all means bad evidence should be cleaned up - a recent example is identifying bullets by trace metal composition, which was recently found to be questionable [forensicsguy.com]
In the end, however, it's only a start in the right direction, and somehow bad witness IDs need to be reviewed as well. It would be great if there was some sort of independent auditing agency (independent of the adversarial justice system) that reviewed questionable convictions based on changes in what we know about the validity of evidence.
Here's [stanford.edu] a good site that discusses eyewitness testimony effects. Scary, really.
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Eyewitnesses don't contribute a helluva lot anyway in most trials. I transcribe court cases and there's a lot of, "I just saw the defendant a few hours before the murder. I always knew he was a murderer, I could tell by the way he looked he just murdered someone!" Then they get objected by the defense counsel and end up having to take back half their testimony. Most witnesses get destroyed by defense counsel unless they're completely composed and do not contradict themselves and most of the jury believe
So in essence... (Score:2)
New Tech (Score:2)
Great chance for the FBI to use a new budget to test equipment, and smell like roses in the public
Limited Gov and the Death Penalty (Score:2)
This is what REALLY drives me crazy about political conservatives in the US.
They constantly complain about "big government" and its ability to interfere in your life. Obamacare "death panels" are a prime example. However, these same conservatives are *totally OK* with giving the government what is literally the most powerful tool possible: To legally KILL YOU!
Conservatives constantly complain that government can never do anything right, that it's full of both incompetence and corruption, yet they're more