Thomasson: Too much prosecutorial misconduct

In television's long running "Law and Order" series, the prosecutors are portrayed as righteous, dedicated searchers for the truth who seldom, if ever, fail to find it and the defense attorneys are depicted as a necessary evil, capable of underhanded, devious action to free their clients whom everyone knows are guilty. Other entries in the legal free-for-alls that have been a TV staple have taken just the opposite tack, giving the edge to those representing the downtrodden accused.
Reality, of course, lies somewhere in between with the justice scales tipping one way or another on an individual basis. But it is safe to say that the modern prosecutor now bears a share of the blame in a series of dramatic instances that make it clear that ambition at the expense of truth and, therefore, of the accused is often a motivating factor. One celebrated miscarriage after another obviously brought on by the career enhancing rush for conviction has certainly shown that.
The blizzard of revealed cases of unjust jailing for everything from murder to rape is breathtaking. More than 100 of those sentenced to death or life in prison have been freed by scientific evidence and prosecutorial misconduct and efforts are underway to make DNA testing where possible a mandatory requirement, especially in capital cases.
But few cases of ethical laxity reaches the magnitude nor threaten to undercut the fairness of the criminal justice system than the conviction of Ted Stevens, who until his defeat in the last election was the longest serving member of his party in the U.S. Senate. At the recommendation of U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, Stevens' conviction was overturned and six members of the Justice department team involved in his case face investigation and possible criminal indictment. So furious was the presiding federal judge, Emmet Sullivan, that he ordered a special inquiry into the action of the government's lawyers.
Stevens lost his bid for reelection narrowly after his indictment and there seems little doubt that he would have been sent back to Congress otherwise. It was a brutal blow to his family and to his party and, for that matter, to the state he had served for so long. And sadly it appears there was plenty of suppressed evidence that might have exonerated him or even convinced a more prudent prosecutor not to indict in the first place. There have been calls for a new election, but that seems doubtful.
Sullivan himself must bear some of the blame in this instance. There were signs throughout the entire proceedings that something was amiss with the federal lawyers and that their case clearly was not as strong as it should have been. On more than one occasion, the judge challenged the government's actions in strong language and issued orders from the bench.
After the conviction an FBI agent came forth to blow a whistle and Holder conducted his own investigation. He was appalled, concluding quickly that there were major ethical and possible legal breaches within the department, including the devastating withholding of notes that would have completely suborned the testimony of the key witness.
If there is a glimmer of hope for the system, it is in the new attorney general's quick recognition of impropriety and an even quicker decision that Stevens had been seriously wronged. He also moved rapidly to overhaul the department's Office of Professional Responsibility. So often prosecutors refuse to concede flaws in their actions, standing pat even in the face of overwhelming evidence. Their standard response is that the jury has spoken, even when the most legally untutored of us understands that most panels ignore the reasonable doubt mandate, shifting the burden of proof to the defendant.
Henry Peterson, who was the career head of the Justice Department's criminal division and a key figure in the investigation and prosecution of Watergate, demanded of his lawyers that any case they brought against a public figure be 99.9 percent provable. The potential loss to both sides, he said, could be devastating otherwise.
Stevens, at 85 and still vital and irascible, is clearly a case in point. Both the system and the man are victims.

(E-mail Dan K. Thomasson, former editor of the Scripps Howard News Service, at thomassondan(at)aol.com.)
COLUMN

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FBI WATCH

to view a partial list oc crimes committed by FBI agents over 1500 pages long see

http://www.forums.signonsandiego.com/showthread.php?t=59139

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