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Once
You Are Accused
From The Front Line
By: Jim Love 06/03/2002
Statistically
93% of all prisoners plead guilty to their crimes in open court. Yet the Department of Justice recognizes 8 to 12% of state prisoners are innocent, and 4% of Federal prisoners are innocent. Why is there an overlap? This article answers that question.
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Once you are accused
of a crime, the indoctrination that society receives on a daily basis
attaches to you, regardless of whether you are guilty or innocent. How
many times have you heard the phrase, "All of them say they are
innocent," or, "All convicts lie," in your life? I once had
a supervisor that frequently repeated these cliches to his workers. Tired
of hearing it one day, I asked him to do something for me. I asked him to
go to the prison record office and find out what percentage of the men in
the prison had entered a guilty plea and admitted their guilt in open
court. I asked him to look at the prison records and find out how many men
in the prison were incarcerated on perjury charges. He quit using those
phrases a couple of days later.
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Statistically 93% of all prisoners plead guilty to their crimes in open
court. The numbers of prisoners incarcerated for the crime of perjury are
insignificant. Maybe one out of a thousand, if that.
The United States Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, (DOJBJS),
admits that statistically 8% to 12% of all state prisoners are either
actually or factually innocent. The DOJBJS finds that 4% of all federal
prisoners are either actually or factually innocent. For the non-lawyers,
I must explain the difference between actual and factual innocence.
Factual innocence means the person was guilty of some crime, but not
necessarily what they were convicted of by society. For instance, I know a
man who was convicted of a robbery for staggering drunk into a Kroger's,
stuffing $26.00 worth of meat down his pants, and trying to leave the
store without paying. In truth he was guilty of shoplifting and subject to
maybe a maximum of six months in jail, probably suspended, and a fine. In
reality, he has done almost 15 years for that meat he tried to steal,
without ever hurting anyone. He is factually innocent.
Actual innocence means that the prisoner did not commit any crime at all.
For instance, in my case, the first three rapes I am serving consecutive
life sentences for were testified to have occurred, "The week after
Christmas in 1988," and, "at least once a month each month after
the first time." From November 17, 1988 (with the exception of three
days in late May 1989 when I returned to the U.S. and then left by
automobile for Belize), until July 20, 1989, I was living continuously in
southern Mexico and Belize. That is actual innocence.
There is a discrepancy in these numbers that I'm sure many of you saw
immediately. If 93% plead guilty, how can between 8% and 12% be innocent?
The discrepancy is caused by two ingrained practices in the administration
of justice in this country. First, the "plea bargain" system.
Faced with shortages of courtrooms, judges and money, the present judicial
system relies heavily on over 90% of all persons accused of crimes
entering into a plea bargain. If everyone demanded a jury trial, the
system would collapse under the shear numbers of trials required. There
would not be enough courtrooms, judges or jurors available to bring the
millions of people arrested each year to trial. As a result, the
government has a great interest in obtaining guilty pleas.
To ensure that high numbers of persons arrested plead guilty, the
prosecutors of this nation have an unwritten policy of over-indicting all
persons accused of crimes. Part of this policy is enacted through the
prior offense sentencing enhancements applied to ex-felons. Even a crime
carrying only two or three years in prison can be extended for an ex-con
to ten or twenty years in prison by the prosecutor adding a sentencing
specification that the person accused was previously convicted of a
felony.
This results in ex-cons accused of relatively minor crimes facing up to
twenty years in prison if they go to trial, even when they are falsely
accused of a crime. Whereas, even if they are innocent of the crime, they
plead guilty, the prosecutor will drop the sentencing enhancement and
allow them to be sentenced to the time they would have had to do if they
had been guilty. The difference is sometimes as much as 10 or 15 years.
Ex-cons, faced with pleading guilty to something they did not do and doing
two or three years in prison, or going to trial, facing a jury that will
be told of their prior felony conviction through the sentencing
enhancement, and receiving fifteen or twenty years if convicted, almost
always take the guilty plea, even to crimes they did not commit, but of
which they cannot conclusively prove they're innocent. The supposed
presumption of innocence is negated by the jury hearing of their prior
conviction.
Persons who have no prior dealings with the police or the law sometimes
fair even worse if they are innocent. They, like most of you, do not
believe they would ever be convicted of something they did not do. They
make the mistake of believing the police are searching for the truth, as
opposed to a name to close out the case. They do not understand that a
police officer's only job is to arrest people and turn them over to the
prosecution. They too are systematically over-indicted.
If they have committed a crime, they are faced with being charged for
crimes much more serious than they actually did. In most cases, the
prosecution drops the over-indicted charges and allows the person to plead
guilty to what they actually did. In some cases, however, because the
nature of the crime is especially heinous, such as child molestation
cases, the prosecutor maintains forcible rape charges when the actual
crime committed more resembled "playing doctor." Since those
charges carry life sentences, the defendant is forced to trial, and
frequently convicted of a much greater crime than was actually committed.
If, however, the defendant happens to be innocent, and has no experience
with the judicial system, they sometimes plead to a lessor offense offered
as a plea bargain based on simple fear of conviction on the greater
charges brought. It is common knowledge in the county jails that if you go
to trial, you will receive the maximum sentence possible. The prosecutor
always punishes the defendants who go to trial by maintaining the
over-indicted charges that were originally intended just to
"scare" the defendant into taking a guilty plea. It is also how
prosecutors maintain high rates of guilty pleas through it being common
knowledge in the jails that if you go to trial you will be sentenced to
the maximum possible sentence.
Thus, innocent defendants of both factual and actual nature, plead guilty,
including those experienced with the judicial system and those inexperienced
with the judicial system, and the statistics between the numbers of guilty pleas and the
numbers of innocent in prison overlap.
Second, the Grand Jury system in this nation is a one-sided proceeding.
Only the prosecutor presents evidence and arguments to the Grand Jury. In
the large numbers of honest charges presented to the Grand Jury, and the
confidence the Grand Jury gains in the prosecutor's "honesty"
during those proceedings, it is not hard for a prosecutor to slip in a few
cases that are shaky, and obtain indictments on those also. After all, one
in ten is all it takes to generate the numbers above.
Third. Why is obtaining a conviction so important, that prosecutors who
are charged by oath to uphold the law will sometimes go to extremes to
ensure a conviction in a particular case? Because if they do not, then in
the next election their opponent will be pointing to the cases they lost,
and to the lawsuits for false arrest the county had to pay. Further, the
prosecutors have to work daily with the police on serious legitimate
prosecutions. They cannot afford to alienate the police by seeking any
other "truth" than the "truth" the police present to
them, even when it later becomes questionable as to whether or not the
right person, or the right charges, are being pursued. It is simple
politics. My observations are that the prosecutors would rather keep an
innocent person in prison and counteract that person's protestations of
innocence through sound-bite press releases, than admit that the person is
innocent, even when faced with overwhelming proof of innocence. For
instance, it was either Professor James S. Liebman of Columbia University
of New York (co-author of Federal Habeas Corpus Practice and Procedure),
or attorney Barry Scheck of the Innocence Project that related in a recent
PBS Frontline Report on Innocence that when faced with DNA evidence
proving a prisoners' innocence, prosecutors frequently come up with a
"third party co-defendant" theory as a defense, even though in
eight or ten years of trials and litigation, no co-defendant was ever even
alluded to in the testimony presented. What is more surprising is that
judges, such as the judges of the Texas Criminal Appeals Court, have
adopted these totally fictitious theories to deny appeals in DNA cases.
Fourth. Defendants face former prosecutors at every stage of appeals as
the elected judges in state courts and on Petition for Writ of Habeas
Corpus in federal courts. Former prosecutors are your federally appointed
judges, they are your Attorney Generals, they are your Governors, they
represent you in the House of Representatives in both your state
legislatures and congress, and they are your Senators. Of course, if a
prosecutor does not "play ball," he will never see these jobs
offered. In the last 20 years more former prosecutors have been appointed
or elected as federal and state judges than at anytime in the history of
this nation. Almost all are backed by the local Republican party,
including the owners of the major media outlets charged with reporting any
wrong doing by them. In the past 20 years the Republican party has made major inroads into
getting elected or appointed to the judiciary conservative right-wing
judges who are almost all former prosecutors.
Criminal defendants face a stacked deck with the judges reviewing their
cases, or presiding at their trial, usually having been colleagues for
years with the prosecutors prosecuting their case. Prosecutors are
assigned to judges for months at a time, and present case after case to
that same judge, learning their strengths and weaknesses in the law.
Judges remember their frustration as prosecutors when other judges forbid
them to place inadmissible prejudicial evidence before a jury, and because
of that, some defendant who was obviously guilty walked free. Those
memories affect their rulings as judges when they are convinced by the
prosecutor that the defendant is guilty before the trial starts. By
skewing evidence rulings, that belief can result in a jury being skewed by
evidence that another judge may not have allowed into the trial. The
defendant loses the presumption of innocence through biased evidentiary
rulings that circumvent the right to a fair trial and a determination by
the jury as to guilt based on evidence as to the crime charged.
At this point the second major ingrained practice comes into play. When
the United States Supreme Court decided in 1963 that every person accused
of a felony was entitled to assistance of counsel, the States were left on
their own to fund representation for indigent defendants. The compensation
system set up has several serious flaws.
First, attorneys get paid based on the seriousness of the charge, whether
or not they go to trial. So it is in the attorney's personal interest for
the client to plead guilty in 15 minutes, as opposed to taking the
attorney away from paying clients for a two day, or two week, trial. The
attorney receives the same compensation either way.
Second, more experienced attorneys, with thriving practices, are able to
avoid taking many court appointed cases by showing conflict with other
trial dates, or a heavy case load. Thus many persons accused of serious
crimes, but unable to afford $400.00 an hour attorneys who generally want
25 to 50 thousand dollars up front to take a serious criminal case, are
assigned new attorneys fresh out of law school as their defense counsel.
These attorneys, new to the legal community, have little in the way of
funds to investigate the cases assigned. They are struggling to make ends
meet. These new attorneys are anxious to "get along" and not
make waves with judges who can break them by appointing cases to other new
attorneys, or by appointing cases the judge feels have a great chance of
going to a lengthy trial. These same attorneys cannot afford to alienate
prosecutors who solely decide what cases they will take a plea bargain in,
and what cases they force to trial. A "quid pro quo" system
develops where prosecutors "urge" these attorneys to push their
clients into a guilty plea to a lessor offense in cases where the
prosecution has doubts about being able to convince a jury of guilt. This
is one of the best kept secrets of the judicial system. In many cases of
men that I have talked with over the years, the first time they saw their
court appointed attorney was the day they went to trial. I have met murder
defendants who have talked to their attorneys less than an hour in the
nine months they sat in jail before trial. In many other cases, the first
words out of the attorney's mouth were, "I think I can get you a good
deal." They didn't even ask the man if he was guilty or innocent.
If they do go to trial, they are faced with a prosecutor who tries
criminal cases day in and day out, month after month, and defended by an
attorney who makes a living doing divorces, probating wills, or writing
contracts.
Appeals for
indigent defendants are represented by similarly unqualified attorneys,
most of whom in Ohio, have no clue as to what is required by the
Exhaustion Doctrine to preserve the errors raised for federal review.
One of the more "illustrious" law firms out of Dayton Ohio filed
an appeal for a man here last week. He asked me to review it.
One of four assignments of error was preserved for federal review.
All the rest were procedurally defaulted by the raising of the error
strictly as state law errors. But that is another story for a later
time.
As a result of the
above combined flaws in the system, 8% to 12% of all State, and 4% of all
federal prisoners, are either actually or factually innocent.
The mean of 8 to 12
percent is 10%. There are 1,550,000 State prisoners in the United
States. 10% of that number is 155,000 innocent people. There
are 450,000 federal prisoners. 4% of that number is 18,000 innocent
people. 155,000 + 18,000 = 173,000.
As you read this
article, somewhere down the road from you an innocent man or woman sits on
a prison bunk, as I am right now, looking in despair at concrete walls and
steel. Across this nation, as you read this article, 173,000
innocent men and women sit in prisons and jails. That’s 87 entire
prisons full.
I know, it would
never happen to you, so why should you care? Well, I never thought
it would happen to me either.
The discourse in
the media concerning the numbers of innocent death-row prisoners is a
smoke screen designed to focus your attention on the tip of the problem
and away from below the surface of the problem. By focusing your
attention on the artificially visible tip, maybe you will miss the iceberg
below the surface of innocents sentenced to life, or what might as well be
death in relation to their statistical life expectancy.
You might see a
headline in the New York Times that reads, "83 Innocent Death Row
Prisoners Released From Prison," but you’ll never see a headline
that reads, "Department of Justice Admits There Are 173,000 Wrongful
Convictions Nationwide."
Until next time this is Jim Love reporting From the Front Line.
James was convicted in a manufactured rape with no evidence whatsoever and a solid
alibi. After waiting eight years, the complaining witness alleged the felony took place while he was out of the country, and before they met!
SEE - PROOF OF INNOCENCE
More About
JAMES LOVE
You can contact
the author at:
JAMES LOVE
#329-475
P.O. Box 56
Lebanon, OH 45036
JimLove@PrisonerLife.com
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