Guilty When Charged
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
While enjoying
the Christmas season in the comfort of your home, take a minute
to say a prayer for the wrongfully convicted.
American prisons
are full of wrongfully convicted persons. Many were coerced into
admitting to crimes they did not commit by prosecutors’ threats
to pile on more charges. Others were convicted by false testimony
from criminals bribed by prosecutors, who exchanged dropped charges
or reduced sentences in exchange for false testimony against defendants.
Not all the
wrongfully convicted are poor. Some are wealthy and prominent people
targeted by corrupt prosecutors seeking a celebrity case in order
to boost their careers.
Until it happens
to them or to a member of their family, Americans are clueless to
the corruption in the criminal justice (sic) system. Most prosecutors
are focused on their conviction rates, and judges are focused on
clearing their court dockets. Defendants are processed accordingly,
not in terms of guilt or innocence.
"Law and
order conservatives" wrongly believe that the justice (sic)
system is run by liberal judges who turn the criminals loose. In
actual fact, the system is so loaded against a defendant that very
few people, including the totally innocent, dare to risk a trial.
Almost all (9597%) felony indictments are settled by a coerced
plea. By withholding exculpatory evidence, suborning perjury, fabricating
evidence, and lying to jurors, prosecutors have made the risks of
a trial too great even for the innocent. Consequently, the prosecutors’
cases and police evidence are almost never tested in court. Defendants
are simply intimidated into self-incrimination rather than risk
the terrors of trial.
According to
Yale University law professor John Langbein, "The parallels
between the modern American plea bargaining system and the ancient
system of judicial torture are many and chilling." Just as
the person on the rack admitted to guilt in order to stop the pain,
the present day defendant succumbs to psychological torture and
cops a plea, whether he is innocent or guilty, in order to avoid
ever more charges.
Michael Tonry,
director of Cambridge University’s Institute of Criminology, reports
that the US has the highest percentage of its population in prison
than any country on earth, including dictatorships, tyrannies, and
China. The US incarceration rate is up to 12 times higher than that
of European countries.
Unless you
believe Americans are 12 times more criminally inclined than Europeans,
why is one of every 80 Americans (not counting children and the
elderly) locked away from family, friends, career, and life? Part
of the answer is the private prison industry, which requires inmates
to fuel the profits of investors. Another part of the answer is
career-driven prosecutors who want convictions at all costs. Yet
another is the failure of judges to rein-in prosecutorial abuses.
Another part of the answer is the hostility of Americans to defendants
and indifference to their innocence or guilt.
The US invasion
of Iraq has brought the breakdown in American moral fiber to the
fore. The horrific tortures and abuses at Abu Ghraib prison, the
public justifications of torture by the president and vice president
of the United States, and the CIA kidnappings and torture of detainees
in secret prisons put the American "liberators" in the
same camp as Saddam Hussein. It is ironic that mistreatment of Iraqis
is one of the justifications that Bush uses for overthrowing Saddam.
In his book,
"Constitutional Chaos: What Happens When the Government Breaks
Its Own Laws," Judge Andrew P. Napolitano reports on cases
of torture, psychological abuse and frame-ups that he discovered
as presiding judge.
I have reported
a number of wrongful convictions. Anytime a new offense is created,
the word goes out to "produce convictions." Over a decade
ago William R. Strong, Jr., was made a victim of Virginia’s new
wife rape law. Strong discovered his wife in an affair with her
boyfriend and was about to serve her with divorce papers. She found
out and struck first, accusing him of rape. Mr. Strong has been
trying to get a DNA test for many years, confident that the semen
in the perk test is that of the lover of his unfaithful wife, but
Virginia’s criminal justice (sic) system is unresponsive.
Another innocent
victim of Virginia justice (sic) is Chris Gaynor. Gaynor took his
skateboard team to a competition. When one of the kids tried to
buy drugs, Gaynor threatened to tell his parents. To preempt Gaynor,
the kid accused him of sexual abuse. There was no evidence against
Gaynor, and the entire team knew the real story. However, Gaynor
was framed by a corrupt prosecutor, reportedly a man-hating lesbian,
with the connivance of a corrupt judge, who intimidated Gaynor’s
young witnesses by jailing one of them without cause. Gaynor’s innocence
was of less importance to the criminal justice (sic) system than
a desire to increase convictions for child sex abuse.
In
America, defendants are no longer innocent until they are proven
guilty. They are guilty the minute they are charged, and the system
works to process the guilty, not to determine innocence or guilt.
Americans
in their ignorance and gullibility think that only the guilty would
enter a guilty plea. This is the uninformed opinion of the naïve
who have never experienced the terror and psychological torture
of the US criminal justice (sic) system.
December
22, 2005
Dr.
Roberts [send him mail]
is
John M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy and Research
Fellow at the Independent Institute.
He is a former associate editor of the Wall Street Journal,
former contributing editor for National Review, and a former
assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury. He is the co-author of
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2005 Creators Syndicate
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