Americans Stand Naked Before Injustice
By Paul Craig Roberts
October 23, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - In 2000 Larry
Stratton and I published The Tyranny of Good Intentions,
the story of how Americans lost the protection of law. In 2008
Randon House published a new edition. Inthe 15 years that the book
has been in print, only 23,000 Americans were interested to learn
that law is no longer a shield of the people but a weapon in the
hands of the state.
The percentage of Americans who have even the
slightest comprehension of their loss of liberty is so tiny that the
American people have no prospect of regaining their liberty.
Defense attorney Harvey Silverglate has captured a
central part of our book in one short article. As Americans are too
absorbed with reality shows and spectator sports to see their rights
disappearing before their eyes and one short book is too much
distraction from what is important to them, perhaps they can work
their way through one short article
Would Obama
Recognize Criminal Justice Reform If It Stuck Him In The Eye?
By Harvey Silverglate
October 23, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "WGBH"
- The Marshall Project’s Bill Keller (former editor of the New
York Times) had a golden opportunity—and he blew it. Today’s
panel on criminal justice reform, filmed at the White House and
live-streamed on The Marshall Project’s website, had the potential
to inform the public of the real and hidden problems that plague our
state and federal justice systems. But the wrong people were invited
to join Keller and the President, and the conversation suffered for
it.
It is sometimes
said by us criminal defense lawyers – with a dose of cynicism – that
in the halls of justice, justice is often done in the halls. What we
mean by this tongue-in-cheek phrase is that the informal processes
among prosecutors, lawyers, defendants and witnesses has more to do
with whether true justice is rendered than any of the phenomena
discussed by Keller and the panel. By inviting only higher-ups to
engage the President, Keller limited the panel to discussions of
macro policy and left out how those policies play out on the ground
– particularly the ways that prosecutors routinely misuse their
power.
Indeed, it is true
that our state and federal justice systems over-incarcerate by a
huge margin, and it is one of America’s greatest shames that we have
the largest prison population in the world. But all of the reforms
discussed by President Obama, Colorado United States Attorney John
Walsh, and Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck belie a central
scandal: a vast number of defendants are prosecuted for either (1)
engaging in conduct that should not be criminalized at all, or for
(2) acts that they did not commit but which a rewarded witness
fingered them for. Nor did the discussion take into account (3) the
thousands of people serving sentences for violations of criminal
statutes so vague that no person of ordinary or even elevated
intelligence – including many lawyers and judges – would
instinctively consider crimes.
These structural
defects of the criminal justice system will continue to result in
over-incarceration of our innocent fellow citizens, even if all of
the reforms discussed at Keller’s White House extravaganza come to
pass. The reforms mentioned at the panel – the reduction of long
sentences, the targeting of only the “worst-of-the-worst,” an
increase in federal community policing grants – will only put a dent
in the problem.
The panel only
briefly touched upon the toxic plea bargaining culture that has
developed throughout the country. U. S. Attorney Walsh proposed that
mandatory-minimum sentences be reserved only for the most violent
offenders. But he failed to mention a practice that goes
hand-in-hand with these sentences: government cooperation in
exchange for lower sentences. Endowed with the immense power of
imposing long prison sentences, a prosecutor can single-handedly get
a defendant to say almost anything about almost anybody. Such
witnesses, as the saying goes, will “not only sing, but compose.”
Many an innocent defendant has gone to prison for decades based on
such bought testimony of dubious accuracy.
The White House
discussion also failed to address the kinds of crimes such as
“conspiracy,” violation of “national security,” or “fraud” – that
are not defined with sufficient clarity so that a typical citizen
can discern what conduct is allowed and what is prohibited. There is
an ancient precept of the English common law that a person not be
designated a criminal unless he intentionally and knowingly violates
a clear legal requirement. Too many people are prosecuted today,
mostly in the federal courts, who have no idea that they violated
some obscure or vague statute buried in the federal criminal code.
(I wrote a whole book on the subject, my 2007 volume entitled Three
Felonies a Day: How the Feds Target the Innocent. My thesis was that
the typical American arguably commits three federal felonies a day
without even knowing it. I guess the President never got around to
reading my book.)
Once during the
discussion U.S. Attorney Walsh complimented the President on his
vast command of the issues in this sprawling area of law and life.
Chief Beck reiterated the compliment. But in reality, none of the
panelists, nor the host of the panel for that matter, really
appeared to understand the deeper ills of our state and federal
criminal justice systems. Perhaps this was due to the panel’s utter
and obvious lack of a member of Washington D.C.’s Public Defenders
office, or an ACLU attorney, or Washington Post columnist
Radley Balko, who covers these issues in detail week after week.
Without these sorts of panelists, this “conversation” on criminal
justice was rendered completely asymmetrical and incomplete from the
outset.
We not only
incarcerate too many defendants for too-long periods, but we convict
and incarcerate a vast and largely unknown number of individuals who
are in fact innocent of crime properly understood. The system is
broken, yes, but in many more ways than we heard about today.
Harvey Silverglate,
an occasional WGBH/News contributor, thanks his research assistants,
Samantha Miller and
Timothy Moore, for their
assistance in the preparation of this piece.
Copyright WGBH
Dr. Paul Craig Roberts was
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy and
associate editor of the Wall Street Journal. He was columnist for
Business Week, Scripps Howard News Service, and Creators Syndicate.
He has had many university appointments. His internet columns have
attracted a worldwide following. Roberts' latest books are
The Neoconservative Threat To International Order:
Washington’s Perilous War For Hegemony,
The Failure of Laissez
Faire Capitalism and Economic Dissolution of the West
and
How America Was Lost.