Innocence is not enough to get you out of prison.

Started by jimmy olsen, March 25, 2015, 08:12:35 PM

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garbon

Quote from: Kleves on March 27, 2015, 02:34:42 PM
Quote from: crazy canuck on March 27, 2015, 02:09:20 PM
What we do know is that the American system of justice has elected judges and prosecutors who consider convictions as wins.  I am not so sure such a system is created to ensure that innocent people are not convicted.
In order to convict, you need proof beyond a reasonable doubt.

:lol:
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MadImmortalMan

Quote from: Barrister on March 27, 2015, 02:40:44 PMAs a prosecutor it's very difficult to walk up to the microphone and say "there's not enough evidence to have a trial".

I would totally respect the guy if he did that. It mostly seems to happen when the defendant is a cop though.
"Stability is destabilizing." --Hyman Minsky

"Complacency can be a self-denying prophecy."
"We have nothing to fear but lack of fear itself." --Larry Summers

Drakken

#47
Quote from: Valmy on March 27, 2015, 02:39:38 PM

Because new information came to light?

I swear Alfred Dreyfus would have never gotten off Devil's Island if it was up to you people.

Uh, Dreyfus was never declared innocent by military justice. New evidence had surfaced he was innocent and framed, but despite this he was in fact condemned a second time with "mitigating circumstances", ostensibly so that the Army would save face. He finally relented and accepted the offer of presidential pardon because he was too exhausted to fight on, despite doing so meaning he had to accept he was guilty before accepting it. The only reason Dreyfus was not returned on Devil's Island to die, was that doing so would have triggered a major political crisis, perhaps even insurrections. Dreyfus has never been officially exhonerated; neither Guillaume Seznec by the way, another atrocious victim of judicial error.

The Dreyfus Affair is in fact a very poor example to bring forward because it was politically tainted AND shows that the threshold needed for exoneration by innocence is way beyond the reasonable doubt needed to convict. Absolute certitude is needed, not a mere deduction, however highly probable, that one might be innocent.

grumbler

Quote from: Drakken on March 28, 2015, 12:11:55 AM
The Dreyfus Affair is in fact a very poor example to bring forward because it was politically tainted AND shows that the threshold needed for exoneration by innocence is way beyond the reasonable doubt needed to convict. Absolute certitude is needed, not a mere deduction, however highly probable, that one might be innocent.

I agree that the Dreyfus Affair is a poor example, but would note that the case in hand is a question of whether Federal law requires that state and local judges order a retrial whenever the defendant claims that they have new evidence that demonstrates their innocence. Right now, the trial judge is presented the evidence and, if he thinks it was reasonably could have changed the verdict, orders a new trial.  That's what happened with the guy we were talking about who was falsely imprisoned for rape and murder for 20 years - he got a new trial when the DNA was tested.
The future is all around us, waiting, in moments of transition, to be born in moments of revelation. No one knows the shape of that future or where it will take us. We know only that it is always born in pain.   -G'Kar

Bayraktar!

The Minsky Moment

Quote from: Berkut on March 27, 2015, 10:15:16 AM
Truth cannot determine anything, since it is not an actual process or person capable of making judgement.

Yes -we must rely on people and processes to make judgments, and that means the judgments will be fallible and error-prone.

So if we care about outcome- about truth - why put in place an absolute rule that places fallible judgments beyond challenge?  In no other area of governance that I can think of is that done - why do it when the stakes to the individual at their most severe.

QuoteThe process favors the defense enough that most cases never make it to trial

That is the first time I have ever seen the prevalence of guilty pleas cited as evidence that the process favors the defense. The reality is totally backwards.

Quoteand for the most part only those that have significant evidence to overcome the presumptive hurdles are even tried.

The presumption of innocence is rarely a factor in a criminal trial tried to a jury. It is a fairly tale for law school classes, the last refuge of desperate defense counsel (along with the reasonable doubt standard).  Whatever practical value it could have in theory vanishes when "The United States" or "The People" stands up and accuses.  Before the defense speaks or a single piece of evidence is presented, the actual presumption is guilt.

Then, to make sure, the government gets to speak last at the end of the case too.

QuoteThe "objective evidence" is that very, very few innocent people are wrongly convicted.

Contradicting your first point  . . .

QuoteEven those who are "wrongly convicted" are mostly actually guilty of their crimes (in the non-legal sense), I suspect.

That suspicion doesn't surprise me, it is quite common.  Another reason why presumption of innocence is of little practical value.

Quote
Don't we live in that alternative right now?

We lived in something like it before AEDPA.  Now we live in the world where a federal appeals court confirms that a trial was grossly constitutionally defective but there is no remedy because of AEDPA. 
The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists.
--Joan Robinson

The Minsky Moment

Quote from: DGuller on March 27, 2015, 11:16:33 AM
Quote from: The Minsky Moment on March 26, 2015, 10:47:26 PM
How would one conclude that the system "heavily favors the defense"?  The objective evidence -- conviction rates -- says otherwise.
Objection!  Counselor is bullshitting with statistics.  These statistics have big ass selection bias at work.

Yes it's a flawed measure. But still some signal through the noise.  And keep in mind selection goes two ways.
The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists.
--Joan Robinson

The Minsky Moment

Quote from: Admiral Yi on March 27, 2015, 11:10:11 AM
Joan, can you do me a favor and lay out what this ruling actually does?

AEDPA is a statute.  It's late so a longer explanation some other time.
It severely limits the ability to challenge convictions on constitutional grounds.
The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists.
--Joan Robinson

jimmy olsen

Heartbreaking :(

http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/jurisprudence/2015/04/michael_mcalister_wrongful_conviction_will_gov_mcauliffe_exonerate_an_innocent.html
QuoteThis Man Deserves a Pardon

Virginia is still imprisoning an almost certainly innocent man—even after he did the time.

By Dahlia Lithwick

DNA testing has been used 329 times now to prove the innocence of people wrongly convicted of a crime. But what happens when there is no DNA evidence to prove someone's innocence? What happens when there is only his word, and the mounded doubts of the team that prosecuted and convicted him? And what happens when—despite growing certainty that it has imprisoned the wrong man for more than 20 years—the Commonwealth of Virginia stands poised to keep him locked up, possibly forever?



Of all the maddening stories of wrongful convictions, Michael McAlister's may be one of the worst. For starters, he has been in prison for 29 years for an attempted rape he almost certainly did not commit. For much of that time, the lead prosecutor who secured his conviction, the original lead detective on the case, and more recently, the current Richmond Commonwealth's Attorney, Michael Herring, have argued that McAlister is innocent and that someone else—a notorious serial rapist with the same MO as the perpetrator of the crime for which McAlister was convicted—is in fact the real criminal. "I think our justice system is one of the best on the planet," Herring told the Richmond Times-Dispatch last week. "But this case makes me ashamed of it."

Beyond the injustice of his wrongful conviction, McAlister, now 58, faces yet another legal nightmare: His release date of Jan. 15, 2015, has come and gone, and he is still locked up. He faces the possibility of almost indefinite commitment because Virginia plans to hold him as a sexually violent predator based largely on his 1986 conviction, a conviction that prosecutors long ago began to doubt. The indispensible Frank Green of the Richmond Times-Dispatch, who has been reporting on this case since 2002, has the whole story here. The short version is that McAlister may well continue to be imprisoned indefinitely by a justice system that operates along your basic "Hotel California" principles: You can check out anytime you like, but you can never leave.



In a last-ditch effort to end this march of the surreal, McAlister's lawyers and Herring filed a petition Wednesday to Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe for an absolute pardon. Absent that, the system will grind onward and an innocent man may be incarcerated for years for a crime nobody truly believes he committed.

Here are the facts: In 1986, McAlister was convicted of attempted rape and abduction with the attempt to defile, after a 4½-hour bench trial. The only evidence presented was the victim's identification based on her partial glimpse of her assailant's face, much of which was covered with a mask. The photo array she was shown by the police did not include a picture of Norman Derr, a serial rapist who had already attempted to attack another woman in the same apartment complex. But it did include a photo of McAlister, and the two men looked astonishingly similar.



Derr is currently serving three life sentences. He was caught after the brutal rape of a woman in 1988 and is now linked to six other violent offenses through DNA cold-case testing. (There was no biological evidence from the crime McAlister was convicted of, and thus nothing to implicate Derr and exonerate McAlister.) But the similarities between Derr's crimes and the alleged McAlister assault are remarkable: Derr attacked women with a knife in apartment-complex laundry rooms, wearing a plaid shirt and a stocking mask. These details all match the crime for which McAlister is still in prison. Subsequent police affidavits reveal that Derr was already being trailed by the police in 1986 and that he had in fact pulled on a stocking mask and approached a female undercover cop in the same apartment complex in which McAlister allegedly later assaulted his victim. Several other laundry room attacks happened after McAlister was already in jail but before Derr was caught.

In the petition asking McAuliffe to release McAlister, his lawyers write that the officers who convicted him are now certain Derr was in fact to blame and that they "believe it is highly improbable that another stocking-mask-wearing, knife-wielding, 6-foot-tall white man with shoulder-length blond hair was terrorizing women at night in the Town & Country apartment complex laundry rooms during that same period in time."

Bureaucracy and haste were responsible for the fact that in the moment the cops failed to draw the obvious conclusions. Instead, they focused their investigation on McAlister, who had been involved in several incidents of alcohol-related public indecency. A detective investigating the rape asked McAlister to wear a plaid shirt, took his photograph, and then included it in a photo lineup shown to the victim. The attacker had worn a plaid shirt. McAlister was the only one in the photo array wearing one. Derr was not in the original photo array at all.



The original assistant commonwealth's attorney assigned to the case, Mark Krueger, was reluctant to prosecute from the very outset because the victim was unable to give a definitive description of the suspect. He admitted to one Richmond police officer that he was feeling "he may have the wrong suspect."

Based only upon the identification testimony, McAlister was sentenced to 35 years in prison. After he was convicted, evidence continued to pile up that Derr had committed the crime. In 1993, both the prosecutor and the investigator appeared at a parole hearing for McAlister, testifying that they both believed the wrong man had been convicted. McAlister was not paroled or pardoned then, and he served out most of his sentence. In 2002 the Richmond Times-Dispatch's Green began writing about the case, quoting the prosecuting commonwealth's attorney, Joe Morrissey, saying "it's the one case out of thousands that has always troubled me. I'm literally shocked that he's still locked up." McAlister's 2002 petition to then-Gov. Mark Warner was denied in 2003 because there was no DNA evidence to exonerate him.

McAlister was finally paroled in 2004. He fell into a depression, started drinking, and violated parole by driving under the influence. He was sent back to prison the following year and has been there ever since. His release date should have been in January of this year.
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Here is where we are stuck. Virginia passed a statute in 1999 requiring civil commitment for "sexually violent predators," a designation that includes McAlister because of his initial, almost certainly wrongful conviction. As the time neared for his release, rather than being freed, he was shuttled into a system that will determine whether he is too sexually dangerous for release. He faces a probable cause hearing on May 18 at which a judge will decide whether he is a sexually violent predator and whether to initiate proceedings that could result in his indefinite detention at a secure state rehabilitation facility.

At this upcoming civil commitment hearing, McAlister is not allowed to challenge the validity of his prior convictions, and he cannot ask the judge to consider his actual innocence. Moreover, if McAlister declines to admit to the offense for which he served time, it will likely count against him. (It gets worse: McAlister admits to having a sexual disorder—exhibitionism—but he was not able to get sex offender treatment while in prison without first admitting to his guilt with respect to the attempted rape.) To summarize, he was jailed for a sexually violent act he maintains he didn't commit, and in order to avoid prolonged civil commitment for that act, he needs to admit that he did it. A Catch-22 without the laugh line.

Herring, the current Richmond Commonwealth's attorney, told the Richmond Times-Dispatch that, "McAlister's case presents the nightmare scenario we all fear—overwhelming evidence of systemic failure at just about every juncture." He added that although the prosecution team had contemporaneous doubts about his guilt, "the concerns were ignored. Roughly 29 years later, the commonwealth is poised to double down on its mistake by seeking to have him declared and held as a sexually violent predator for a crime he didn't commit."

Seeking an absolute pardon is a serious remedy. But unless he is pardoned for the underlying crime that will trigger civil commitment, McAlister is trapped in a world that makes no legal sense: Nobody believes he did the crime, but he will never, ever stop doing the time. As the petition filed with McAuliffe notes: "The power of the pardon is a weighty responsibility and is not to be exercised lightly. But there is unlikely to be another non DNA-based pardon petition in which the evidence of innocence is as strong as it is here."



Shawn Armbrust, executive director of the Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project, which involved itself in McAlister's case last year, choosing it from among thousands, explained in a phone interview that allowing this to play out in the civil courts may take years and years and that really the only recourse that could free McAlister immediately is action by the governor: "The only person who can end this nightmare is Gov. McAuliffe, and if he doesn't do it, there's no telling when it ends. It's already gone on for 29 years too long."

It is far better for the truth to tear my flesh to pieces, then for my soul to wander through darkness in eternal damnation.

Jet: So what kind of woman is she? What's Julia like?
Faye: Ordinary. The kind of beautiful, dangerous ordinary that you just can't leave alone.
Jet: I see.
Faye: Like an angel from the underworld. Or a devil from Paradise.
--------------------------------------------
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Valmy

I have been told we have to leave innocent people in prison because we could never charge anybody for a crime otherwise. So his sacrifice is not in vain.
Quote"This is a Russian warship. I propose you lay down arms and surrender to avoid bloodshed & unnecessary victims. Otherwise, you'll be bombed."

Zmiinyi defenders: "Russian warship, go fuck yourself."

grumbler

Quote from: Valmy on April 14, 2015, 07:46:47 AM
I have been told we have to leave innocent people in prison because we could never charge anybody for a crime otherwise. So his sacrifice is not in vain.

I doubt that you have been told that.  You might think that your statement reflects what the other person was saying, but I'd bet dollars to donuts you just couldn't understand their argument.
The future is all around us, waiting, in moments of transition, to be born in moments of revelation. No one knows the shape of that future or where it will take us. We know only that it is always born in pain.   -G'Kar

Bayraktar!

Valmy

Quote from: grumbler on April 14, 2015, 08:06:41 AM
Quote from: Valmy on April 14, 2015, 07:46:47 AM
I have been told we have to leave innocent people in prison because we could never charge anybody for a crime otherwise. So his sacrifice is not in vain.

I doubt that you have been told that.  You might think that your statement reflects what the other person was saying, but I'd bet dollars to donuts you just couldn't understand their argument.

I thought you were kidding. I thought that was obvious in my tone. Oh well.
Quote"This is a Russian warship. I propose you lay down arms and surrender to avoid bloodshed & unnecessary victims. Otherwise, you'll be bombed."

Zmiinyi defenders: "Russian warship, go fuck yourself."

grumbler

Quote from: Valmy on April 14, 2015, 08:10:06 AM
I thought you were kidding. I thought that was obvious in my tone. Oh well.

The problem is that I read you saying so many silly things when trying to be serious, I can't readily tell when you are being deliberately silly.  Sorry.  I'll try to avoid commenting on this kind of silliness in the future.
The future is all around us, waiting, in moments of transition, to be born in moments of revelation. No one knows the shape of that future or where it will take us. We know only that it is always born in pain.   -G'Kar

Bayraktar!

Valmy

#57
Quote from: grumbler on April 14, 2015, 08:14:32 AM
I'll try to avoid commenting on this kind of silliness in the future.

Why? Are you required to be serious 100% of the time?

QuoteThe problem is that I read you saying so many silly things when trying to be serious

Is this kind of thing really necessary grumbler? Do you get something by saying incredibly rude things like this? I was just trying to have a little fun with you.
Quote"This is a Russian warship. I propose you lay down arms and surrender to avoid bloodshed & unnecessary victims. Otherwise, you'll be bombed."

Zmiinyi defenders: "Russian warship, go fuck yourself."

LaCroix

lots of people recant or question their prior conclusions. recantations don't prove anything conclusively. also, story is odd because there doesn't appear to have ever been an appeal. and, the article isn't exactly honest because it omits the guy's public exposure conviction. so, who knows what else the prosecutor had on the guy.

while eyewitness testimony is heavily flawed, criminal defendants can (and do) call expert witnesses to defang eyewitness testimony.

grumbler

Quote from: Valmy on April 14, 2015, 08:48:27 AM
Why? Are you required to be serious 100% of the time?

See, this is the sort of post which I can't tell if serious.

QuoteIs this kind of thing really necessary grumbler? Do you get something by saying incredibly rude things like this? I was just trying to have a little fun with you.

Is honesty necessary?  No.  I provide it anyway.  If it offends you, that's a pity, but there we are.  I have commented before (like in the Bibi thread), and you have complained about my comments before (like in the Bibi thread), so this isn't new, and you don't need to be re-offended.
The future is all around us, waiting, in moments of transition, to be born in moments of revelation. No one knows the shape of that future or where it will take us. We know only that it is always born in pain.   -G'Kar

Bayraktar!