Order Without Law
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
Law
and order continues its rapid collapse in the United States, not
only because of criminals but also because of prosecutors and police.
Those
declining crime rates you have been hearing about might be nothing
but public relations propaganda. On February 20 the Atlanta Journal-Constitution
reported that an audit released that day concludes that Atlanta
crime reports have been suppressed in order to protect the city’s
image for tourism.
Before
you decide to avoid Atlanta or any big city, know that one reason
crime is exploding is the over-criminalization of behavior. Today
a woman who pushes away a male who is annoying her can be arrested
for assault. A school child can be arrested for eating on public
transportation. You can even be arrested for using politically incorrect
words or phrases.
Two
Alabama seafood importers are currently serving eight years in prison
because lobsters that they imported from Honduras arrived in plastic
bags instead of cardboard boxes, and 3 percent of the lobsters were
one-half inch too short in length. Moreover, the cardboard/size
regulations were Honduran, not American, and have been overturned
in Honduras.
Many
Americans refuse to believe that US law enforcement would put Americans
in prison for such flimsy reasons, but the case is now before the
US Supreme Court.
Many
of the worst crimes are committed by police and prosecutors themselves.
On February 12, Congress released a transcript that shows that FBI
agents protected their mob informants from indictments, helped mobster
gunmen to murder their rivals, and then framed innocent men for
the murders.
And
this was 40 years ago when honor and integrity were still words
with meaning.
Today
law enforcement integrity has hit rock bottom. Steven and Marlene
Aisenberg reported their five-month year old daughter missing on
Nov. 24, 1997. Instead of looking for the baby and the abductor,
the police in Hillsborough County, Florida, decided to frame the
parents. Police eavesdropped on the couple’s conversations for two
years, wrote out a transcript allegedly based on the recordings
and indicted the couple.
When
federal district judge Steven D. Merryday demanded the actual recordings
and compared them with the police transcript, he found "the
disparity was shocking."
Judge
Merryday ordered $2.7 million to the Aisenbergs for "bad faith
prosecution" and ordered the grand jury transcript released
to the public as a way of holding the corrupt police and prosecutors
accountable.
To
protect themselves, "law enforcement" appealed. The 11th
Circuit appeal panel reduced the award to $1.3 million and overturned
the district judge’s order to release the grand jury transcript.
If the transcript is released, "law enforcement" cannot
pretend that the wrongful prosecution of the parents was a mistake.
The appeal panel evidently decided that a whitewash was needed in
order to protect the public’s confidence in law enforcement.
Police
and prosecutors are increasingly aggressive and unaccountable. Recently,
police in Columbus, Georgia, blew out Kenneth Walker’s brains with
a submachine gun, leaving his widow with a three-year old child.
Walker, an insurance manager, was in a SUV with friends, a Columbus
high school basketball coach and a probation officer. Their vehicle
was mistaken for that of a drug dealer, and that was the end of
Kenneth Walker’s life.
Last
December the US Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit forcefully
ordered the release of Thomas Lee Goldstein, wrongfully convicted
for murder 24 years ago. A California state court has also thrown
out the murder conviction.
The
only evidence against Mr. Goldstein was a notorious jailhouse fink,
appropriately named Edward F. Fink, who on nine occasions testified
for prosecutors against cellmates, claiming they had confessed their
crimes to him. In exchange for his testimony, Fink received leniency
on numerous felony convictions.
Americans
should be outraged that they live under a criminal system in which
prosecutors are able to convict people on the sole basis of purchased
perjury.
The
Los Angeles County district attorney is defying both the state and
federal courts, claiming that he is going to retry Goldstein and
refusing bail on the grounds that he would run away. Be prepared
to read a news report that Goldstein, after confessing his guilt
to another paid jailhouse snitch, committed suicide in his cell.
The
federal appeals court has ordered a federal district judge to determine
whether the Los Angeles district attorney is guilty of contempt
of court for refusing to comply with the order to release Goldstein.
Of course the DA is in contempt. He should be promptly arrested.
The corrupt police and prosecutors who framed Mr. Goldstein should
be indicted and put on trial.
But
it won’t happen. The purpose of "criminal justice" is
to protect the government, not the innocent public.
In
the meantime, smile no matter what the provocation as you undergo
airport security screening. You can now be arrested for "having
an attitude." A snide remark can get you placed on a "no
fly" list for life.
Be
very careful what you have in your luggage as fines have been instituted
for "inappropriate items." That decision is a subjective
one at the screeners discretion. According to USA today, a bride
recently drew a $150 fine for having a wedding gift in her baggage a
silver cake server. Expect no consistency. Just because you clear
one airport with an item, don’t expect the next screener to have
the same view.
The
brand new Transportation Security Agency has
already turned fighting terrorism into the business of robbing the
public.
Whatever
you do, don’t get mad. You will be arrested for disturbing the peace
and carted off to jail.
February
24, 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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