Fake Crimes
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
Studies
show Americans close to being the worst educated and least aware
population among first-world countries. Americans easily stumble
into war and give up their rights because of exaggerated fears of
terrorists and criminals. Americans have been losing accountable
government, liberty and justice for a long time. At some point these
values become irretrievable.
Consider
justice. The US has the highest rate of incarceration in the world
and imprisons 6 to 10 times as many people as any other industrialized
country. Between 1990 and 2000 the US population increased 13%.
The US prison population more than tripled.
There
are hundreds of thousands of innocent Americans in prison. They
are there because the criminal justice system no longer works to
discover the truth of a crime, but to convict at all cost whoever
happens to be charged with a crime. And they are there because the
US criminalizes more acts than any other country in the world, including
tyrannical police states.
In
the US there are three categories of prisoners: the guilty, the
innocent, and those convicted as a result of prosecutors’ interpretations
of vague and broad statutes that deem conduct to be criminal that
reasonable people and every other country do not recognize to
be criminal.
For
example, in the Martha Stewart case, the prosecutor criminalized
her exercise of her constitutional right to declare her innocence.
He said it constituted fraud for her to declare her innocence and
tacked on the charge. Remember that if you ever stand before a judge.
Almost
everyone in prison is wrongfully convicted, even the guilty. According
to the US Dept. of Justice (sic), 95% of criminal convictions result
from plea-bargains. What is a plea bargain but self-incrimination,
conviction without a trial by jury and without a test of the evidence
against the defendant?
An
uninformed public believes plea bargains to be sweet deals for criminals.
Sometimes they are, but more often pleas result from prosecutors
piling on charges until the defendant, innocent or guilty, cries
"uncle" and gives up.
Prosecutors
not only coerce defendants, they coerce witnesses to give false
testimony. Sometimes coercion takes place behind closed doors. Other
times it takes place in full public view.
Consider
husband and wife defendants Andrew and Lea Fastow in the Enron case.
The Fastows have two young children. In order to coerce "cooperation"
and testimony against Enron executives, the federal prosecutors
threatened to put both father and mother in prison, effectively
rendering the two young children orphans.
In
Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz’s immortal words, Andrew Fastow
is being taught not only to sing but also to compose. To keep his
wife out of prison, he will give the prosecutors whatever testimony
they want against his bosses.
The
American public watches all this in plain view and then believes
the testimony!
You
may think that Enron officials deserve what they get. But do you
approve of the illegal and unethical methods used to produce the
convictions? In effect are the prosecutors as guilty of criminal
behavior as those they pursue?
"Junk
bond king" Michael Milken was put into a similar situation.
Unless he agreed to a plea, the prosecutors threatened to indict
his younger brother.
If
prosecutors can so easily frame the wealthy and politically connected,
what do you think happens daily to the inner city poor?
Prosecutor
Rudy Giuliani was a master at using the media to destroy the reputations
of his victims, thus pre-empting a trial where evidence of a crime
could be tested. Giuliani climbed over the bodies of his high-profile
victims to become mayor of New York and a 911 hero.
Now
it is Martha Stewart and mutual funds who have been targeted as
a prosecutor’s path to a political career.
Martha
Stewart is falsely charged with "insider trading," an
offense of which she cannot be guilty as she is not an insider and
had no information from an insider.
Legal
scholar and law school dean Henry Manne has shown (Wall St. Journal,
1-8-04) that prosecutor Eliot Spitzer’s charges against mutual funds
are largely trumped-up. The offenses are partly the unintended result
of a Security and Exchange Commission "reform," which
capped redemption fees that mutual funds used to discourage market
timers.
Prosecutor
Spitzer’s claims about mutual funds are based, not on law, but on
an academic paper written at the Stanford University Graduate School
of Business. In other words, the prosecutor has a "theory."
Professor Manne has shown the academic paper to be incorrect. What
we are witnessing is a mutual fund witch-hunt based on an incorrect
academic theory.
And
Americans think they live under a rule of law!
No
doubt some mutual fund managers exercised bad judgment and some
may have broken some rules. But Spitzer’s ambition has blown the
cases out of proportion. We certainly do not want to criminalize
bad judgment. It is hard to find a worse case of bad judgment than
the Bush administration’s invasion of Iraq.
February
4, 2004
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
© 2004 Creators Syndicate
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