First, Judges aren't unionizing, although they probably should, based on this story.
Second, we start this post by inviting the prosecutor who is the subject of this post to email us a response which will be posted word for word without edit or comment. That is our policy.
Third, we have obviously not written the name of the individual. And that policy will continue in the comments section. Attack our reasoning, or the prosecutor's comments- but do it as we did without using a name, or your efforts will be for naught as we will NOT post the comment. Period. End of discussion.
The League of Superheroes a/k/a League of Prosecutors had their annual awards dinner this past weekend. And trust us, considering that we do not attend the FACDL Awards banquet, which is this weekend BTW, we wouldn't be caught within ten miles of that soiree. But we did receive several emails and they all were of a similar bent: that the veteran prosecutor who won the award could not have been more condescending and started his speech by stating that he was going to be politically incorrect or words to that effect. He then launched into a diatribe against Judges and defense attorneys, stating that it was "a bad time to be a victim in the State of Florida."
When you start hearing voices and seeing things that aren't occurring, perhaps it's time for the old prosecutor's home.
Every single case handled by this current State Attorneys Office is based on the plea offer the victim wants, whether or not it's grounded in reality. Prosecutors have abandoned their constitutional mandate to do justice, deferring to the irrational demands of victims who are admittedly traumatized and entitled to be angry and seek vengeance. But ours is a justice system, not a vengeance system, although the current State Attorneys Office doesn't act like it.
"Attempted car burglary. 19 year old neighbor with no priors and mental issues was seeing trying to break into a neighbor's car. Car was scratched. Plea offer is five years judge- victim wants the max."
How many times a day does the state say "victim wants the max?"
The Judge cannot get involved in plea negotiations or they forfeit their ability to really rocket the defendant who goes to trial and loses.
So the defendant is squeezed between a prosecutor who won't exercise discretion and a Judge who can't lest they be tagged as soft on crime by disillusioned prosecutors whose prime was sometime in the late 1980s.
When the guidelines were initially enacted there was a minimum and maximum penalty the judge could not exceed without reasons. But that resulted in a few people getting a sentence less than the max that the victim wanted, so the legislature removed the maximum sentence and made it the statutory maximum, unless the guidelines are higher than the statutory maximum, and then the higher sentence applies. But it's good to be a defendant these days according to Wyatt Earp.
A judge used to be able to go below the guidelines if a defendant was addicted to drugs or alcohol, but too many judges were doing that (because most state court crimes are committed by poor, drug addicted defendants) so the legislature specifically removed that as a reason for a downward departure. But it's good to be a defendant these days according to Dirty Harry.
There used to be a drug minimum mandatory and a gun minimum mandatory, now there are dozens of min mans in which the legislature has said a Judge does not have the wisdom to impose a fair sentence.
A second degree murder used to carry 17-22 years under the original guidelines. Now there is absolutely no difference in a first or second degree murder conviction with a firearm- both carry mandatory life sentences. But it's good to be a defendant these days according to Vincent Van Gogh.
The United States incarcerates more of it's citizens than the former Soviet Union did; more than Iran or South Africa do, but judges are soft on crime and disrespectful to victims according to Donald Trump Jr.
Is it hard to be a victim in the criminal justice system? You bet it is. If you are tragically next of kin on a murder case, it might take years to see the case proceed to trial or the defendant accept a plea. It can be a long and frustrating road for innocent people whose lives have been disrupted if not wrecked by crime and a defendant. Of this there is no doubt. But it is not the Judge's fault and it is not the defense attorney's fault and in the scheme of things as bad as it is to be a victim in the criminal justice system, it is worse to be a defendant in a system where they do not belong by virtue of their innocence or facts of the case. Each side has a case for why their client is being hurt by the system. But what we do know is that nobody runs for office and wins promoting a "defendant's bill of rights" (yes we know about the constitution) but every candidate for every elective office supports a Victim Bill of Rights and a "lets get tough on crime and get rid of liberal judges" platform.
We could go on and on but the alcohol is running low.
Prosecutors who get awards and spend their time disparaging judges and defense attorneys are one reason why the justice system is in the poor shape that it is in. Not every defendant is guilty and not every defendant is innocent. Not every defendant deserves the maximum sentence and not every defendant deserves to have her case dismissed with an apology and dinner at Joes. But if one side brings the mentality that Judges are soft on crime and allow defense attorneys to disparage and re-victimize victims, then we are as bad as congress and this system is doomed.
(Apologies to Messrs.. Earp; Eastwood; Van Gogh; and Trump, Jr.).
Let me state now I am not going to print the name of the prosecutor. It's easy to find out who won the prestigious "Victim wants Max award" and there can be a discussion of the issues without naming names. If you want to write something supportive of the prosecutor or those ideals, you can do it without naming a name. If you spend the time and write a post and include the name, you will have wasted your time. I will not post it.
ReplyDeleteI started as a law enforcement officer with Dade PSD in 1975 and was quick to learn that no matter what we did on the street if the person in the courtroom wasn't as good or better than the person on the other side what we did was all for not. While working the street I went back to school, got my BA then got into law school while continuing policing and after passing the bar started prosecuting in Broward. The office had policies but if an ASA felt facts of the case and the defendant warranted an exception one could articulate the reasons and request a deviation which I did from time to time. Too many times I heard an ASA state, "it's office policy" because I felt they were to lazy to take the time to justify reason(s) for the exception. Spent 20 years in Broward as a trial ASA 'doing the right thing for the right reason', and sometimes LEO's and victims disagreed with me. Been in the 5th Circuit since 2002 where I have continued with same process. I do the right thing for the right reason following the law and facts as they are. Defendants, defense counsel, law enforcement and victims may disagree with me but I have NO second thoughts when I look at myself in the mirror in the morning. A robot can ask for the max on every case, but is it the right thing to do.....I think not. Thanks SAO5
ReplyDeleteWell, let this guy get arrested for some BS offense at 11 pm while out with his gf, get thrown in the back seat of a police car handcuffed for 4 hours while some cop finishes up his paperwork on another case. Then it is off to a 10 X 15 holding cell with 20 real criminals for another 4 hours after you get every crevice of your body searched by a CO who might as well think you are a piece of meat. As Tom Wolf put it on The Bonfire Of The Vanities, a liberal is a conservative who has been arrested.
ReplyDeleteGenius who thought listing initials would work- It didn't. Just call him the prosecutor.
ReplyDeleteAs to the other comment about the complaints filed- while I have heard of those complaints and believe they are common knowledge, I cannot verify them and therefore although I initially posted the comment, I removed it. I know you wrote it in good faith, but since I cannot verify that those complaints were made, or the resolution of those complaints, I didn't feel comfortable. I try hard to not make mistakes when people's reputations are at stake. It's probably too conservative a stance, but its the decision I am comfortable with.
HR
Complete and total overreaction. Bigly. You want the prosecutor to respond? LOL. Respond to what?
ReplyDeleteThe prosecutor is one of the best at the SAO (and you obviously know this person was also very well respected when they were at the PDO) and I have firsthand knowledge that he/she refuses out of principle to read this blog because of exactly this type of gossip-mongering. I'm sure someone will show your disparaging post to him/her but he/she will not dignify you with the response you crave.
ReplyDeleteYour attack is very undignified and uninformed. You state that you weren't at the event, and then quote one line that someone told you about in an email that you decided to tee off on. Where's the text from the rest of the speech? How can you honestly write a 1000 word diatribe on one line from a speech and not let your readers see the rest of the speech so they can form an educated opinion for themselves? I know this is an opinion blog and not a news blog but your post is on par with a Breitbart take-down and very disappointing compared to your regular content.
Complaining about due process and defendant's rights would have more impact from people who were vocal about the Kavanaugh hearings. Obviously Justice K was not a criminal defendant, per se, but the culture that surrounded that fiasco is the same motiving force behind such comments. If someone is accused, they should be presumed guilty. No great lengths should be taken to ensure procedural justice, certainly not if it offends or inconveniences the claimed victim.
ReplyDeleteAnd my God, how have we ceded the ground with this "victim" word? I know the PDs tried their damnedest to call the Domestic Violence division the Domestic Issues division or something like that, but how about the PDs taking the lead in refusing to assent to the use of "victim" prior to a verdict. Complainant is sufficient. Imagine being an innocent person lied about and hearing the judge routinely ask about the "victim" who put you in a cage?
9:43 - Not one email. perhaps 8 to 10. A few from purported members of the judiciary who were present and were offended by the remarks, and more than a few from prosecutors who felt very uncomfortable with the remarks being made in public with judges and defense attorneys in the room where the remarks disparaged both.
ReplyDeleteIf I wanted to attack the prosecutor as I think he deserves, I would have splashed him name all over the blog. I'm not sure I shouldn't since he made the remarks in public. Of more concern is that a prosecutor with such Neanderthal views holds them to be true. If I wanted to attack this prosecutor, I could have included the numerous scandalous incidents and bar complaints that are in the public, but I did not.
My personal opinion is that he claims he doesn't read the blog because he is jealous he could not create something this popular.
But that's my opinion.
This was the same ASA publicly spanked on the front page of the Herald for fighting for years against a wrongly convicted defendant until finally the right defense lawyers and Judge did justice.
ReplyDelete