Forgive Us Our Injustices
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
How
would you like to spend Christmas season in prison? Millions of
Americans do. Many are imprisoned for victimless crimes, such as
marijuana possession. Others are totally innocent.
Experts
estimate that there are several hundred thousand innocent Americans
in prison. Among these many is Christophe Yves Gaynor. In my considered
opinion, Mr. Gaynor was framed by a corrupt Arlington, Virginia,
prosecutor and railroaded by a corrupt Arlington, Virginia, judge.
Mr.
Gaynor was a skateboard coach in Virginia who took his team to a
New York competition. One of the team members attempted to purchase
drugs. To restrain him, Mr. Gaynor threatened to tell his parents.
The boy struck first by accusing Mr. Gaynor of molesting him. The
entire team knew the charge to be false, but the improprieties of
the trial defeated justice. The governor of Virginia should remove
the stain of injustice and pardon Mr. Gaynor.
William
R. Strong, Jr., is another victim of our injustice system. DNA evidence
exists that Mr. Strong says would clear him, but the state of Virginia
somehow cannot get around to giving him the benefit of the evidence.
On February 8, 2002, Sheriff C.W. Phelps of the County of Isle of
Wight informed state authorities, including the Commonwealth Attorney,
that he had found the misfiled perk kit containing DNA evidence.
Almost two years later Mr. Strong still hasn’t been tested to see
if his DNA matches the evidence.
Mr.
Strong was an early victim of Virginia’s wife rape law. He says
his unfaithful wife was into rough sex with her boyfriend and took
advantage of the new law to get him, her husband, out of the way.
The semen in the perk kit, Mr. Strong says, is the boyfriend’s,
not his.
Mr.
Strong was convicted prior to the advent of DNA testing. A simple
test can establish the truth. Does Virginia care?
Conservatives
have hardened their hearts against the wrongfully convicted. Mistakes
happen, they admit, but they believe most mistakes result from liberal
judges letting the guilty go free.
Conservatives
are right that the guilty often go free, but the reason is that
the innocent are convicted in their place. Justice is no longer
a concern of the justice system. Careers depend on conviction rates.
It is easier for police and prosecutors to get convictions by piling
charges on a convenient suspect until they coerce a plea than to
solve a case and find the truth.
Mary
Sue Terry, former attorney general of the Commonwealth of Virginia,
has this to say: "Our concern has turned from seeking truth
to seeking convictions, and our post-conviction efforts are focused
on denying any further review."
Judges
have written to me about the breakdown of our justice system. They
confirm that injustice is rife.
With
the advent of DNA evidence, every week we learn of new cases of
wrongful conviction. People on death row and people who have spent
most of their lives in prison are being released as DNA evidence
proves them to be innocent of the crimes for which they were convicted.
Each case of wrongful conviction is a scandal, but the scandals
have little impact on the public and none whatsoever on the conviction
mill that continues its destruction of innocent lives.
Forensic
evidence, once thought to be conclusive, has turned out to be unreliable
and often fraudulent. From time to time we see news reports of forensic
experts whose work has fallen under suspicion: Pamela Fish in Illinois,
Fred Zain in West Virginia. Joyce Gilchrist in Oklahoma City. Even
the FBI’s vaunted crime lab turned out to be unreliable.
Many
convictions are obtained by prosecutors who pay "snitches"
with money, dropped charges, or reduced sentences to produce testimony
that can be used to convict other defendants. Most often, the testimony
is false, but the prosecutor has his "evidence."
The
advent of men-hating feminist and lesbian prosecutors allows the
criminal justice system to be used to act out gender grudges.
Privatized
prisons require convictions to keep the profit rate up.
Americans
are extremely naïve and uniformed about the criminal justice system.
Until they, a friend or relative becomes personally ensnared in
the system, Americans believe that police and prosecutors would
never convict an innocent person. Once they experience the system,
they are terrified by the system’s indifference to whether a defendant
is innocent or guilty. Conviction of the defendant is the system’s
sole concern.
Ever
widening arrest powers are bringing a reality check to more and
more Americans. Just before Christmas the US Supreme Court ruled
that a police officer who discovers contraband in a car can arrest
every occupant if no one admits to ownership of the illicit item.
Warn your teenagers never to get into a car with acquaintances who
might have alcohol, drugs, or weapons. And be careful whose car
you get into yourself.
Yes,
there still are some honest police, prosecutors and judges. But
the pressures they are under to match the conviction rates of the
corrupt and to clear court dockets will eventually leave our justice
system entirely in the hands of a heartless breed that never suffers
the pangs of a bad conscience.
December
23, 2003
Dr. Roberts [send him mail]
is John M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy, Senior
Research Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University,
and Research Fellow at the Independent Institute. He is a former
associate editor of the Wall
Street Journal and a former assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury.
He is the co-author of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2003 Creators Syndicate
Paul
Craig Roberts Archives
|