Thursday

Political Hiring in Civil Rights Division

This Washington Post expose is a must read.

More kindness...


Weird Pic huh? A google image of "kindness"

So this Slate piece is like the gift that keeps on giving. There are heated discussions about it on blogs (including LawProfs) and the amazon ranking for the book shot up crazily (and yes I really did check). And then today, just as I was feeling a bit blue (for reasons I'll omit here), I got an e-mail that really made my day. Here's what it said:

The day that your book appeared in my mailbox at work... I had ended a long week in court with a difficult judge. I got an envelope with your book and a note from my former training attorney that said he thought I could relate to what you went through and that you wrote well about the struggles of being a public defender....

I read your book in two days. I couldn't put it down. I started shouting out loud while I was reading at some points, I read entire paragraphs to my best friend here at the office, and I passed it along to another good friend here as soon as I was done. Your book reminded me that even hard-working, super-talented lawyers like you feel like case processors a lot of the time. It reminded me to appreciate the small victories. It made me want to go to work the next day and be a better lawyer.


Wow. It doesn't get much better than that.

Thanks.

A trial for Nancy Grace...

That very interesting wrongful death action against Nancy Gracegoes to Court.

Wednesday

I get mail....




I usually get some comments about my Slate pieces, but this last one must have struck a nerve. Leaving aside the huge number of posts and the rollicking debate in Slate’s “Fray”, I’ve personally received many more e-mails that usual. And while I’m sure that had something to do with posting my web address (thus making it easier to write) I’m beginning to think that these questions of prosecutorial misconduct have really hit a nerve.

So just for fun (and without attribution) here’s a lightly edited sample of the feedback I’ve gotten on the piece. Some good, some not so happy…

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“As a former prosecutor, I read your Slate article, One-Off Offing, with interest. I agree with your statements that prosecutors are “afforded almost unparalleled discretion to do their jobs,” and that “young prosecutors too often see their goal as winning rather than doing justice.” But I must take issue with your statement that it is a “rare [state] case in which problems involving the withholding of potentially exculpatory evidence don’t arise.” Really? In my experience, the exact opposite is true. And in a small jurisdiction such as I served, the spotlight on the prosecutor to “win” a big case shines very brightly.

One other small point. Twice you refer to Evans, Seligmann and Finnerty as “boys.” In North Carolina juvenile cases involve children under the age of 16 who are delinquent and children under the age of 18 who are undisciplined, dependent, neglected, or abused. Evans, Seligmann and Finnerty are not “boys.” Why choose to identify them as such?”

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You are the man, what can I say. As usual, it needed to be said, and everyone is afraid to say it lest they be ostracized as crazy or biased. But you and I both know it's true that the type of crap Nifong pulled is standard operating procedure. The hypocrisy of vilifying this guy while keeping our heads in the sand on the larger issue is mind-boggling. Let's all go watch unlawful interrogations by the Good Guys on Law & Order! Ugh.


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Your Slate article about the Nifong disbarment was right on the money and should be distributed far and wide. I have spent my entire career (15 years in legal services and 21 as a public defender --- now doing only death cases) representing the poor, powerless and disliked (to say the least) and though I have seen the misconduct you wrote about, no prosecutor has even been reprimanded. Thanks for the article and keep up you good work.

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That was a very strong and troubling piece in Slate on prosecutors.

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I just wanted to write and tell you that I thought your last Slate piece on the Nifong case was great. I have been saying much the same thing to our local media down here for the last couple of months. I also am enjoying your book very much (I was a public defender in San Francisco for a couple of years) and may assign it as my optional "book club" book for my 1L Criminal Law class next year.

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Sorry, but I thought it was an especially weak article that appeared in Slate today. There are number of factors that you don't mention or don't give sufficient weight to that at least weaken your major points. The two I would like to mention are: the egregious flim-flam that Nifong was running; and second, his motivation. Both of these in combination serve to ameliorate the otherwise wretched behavior of the legal profession and the press during the few weeks early in this case.

To consider motivation first: Nifong had 28 years in as a Durham County prosecutor, and was recently named to the DA position by the governor, an otherwise elective office. Mike's first action was to fire Freda Black, an assistant DA. When the Duke case broke, the primary season was in full swing in Durham with Mike showing a distant second to Freda in the
race for Democratic nominee for the DA's office. There was every likelihood that Freda would win the nomination and also win the pro forma election in the fall, and that her first act as DA would be to fire Mike. After 28 years. That was the motivation.

Egregious behavior: Nifong was so positive, so assertive, so graphic in his presentations to the press about what he knew and what the evidence would show, that even skeptics like myself thought he had the goods on the Duke lacrosse players. It was beyond imagination at the time that he could have behaved, not so badly, but so foolishly. If he didn't have the goods, we would find out eventually and he would be in serious trouble. We were assuming guilt until innocence was proven, on the basis of a trust in the DA. When the DNA tests came back showing 100% negative results, Nifong lost all trust. I think we have to give a pass to all those who acted in good faith in believing the district attorney. Nifong was acting out of desperation, and we couldn't appreciate how far he was capable of going.

I could say more but don't want to try your patience.


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I just read your piece in Slate. Outstanding, I agree 100%. I am looking foreword to your book, will pick it up locally. Thanks for a great read.

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Your article was a fast read and it certainly resonates… I think that we've all learned a fair number of nasty problems in the CJ system over the last
1.25 years in a variety of problem areas. There were problems with
police misconduct in the Duke case as well and it is unclear as to whether these will come to any meaningful light…Not all of the students had the resources to fight the DA and some had to borrow it. Legal costs ran $80K per defendent per month and even a lot of upper-middle-class families would be stressed by the costs alone.

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Monday

My latest Slate piece...


Think the disbarment of Duke prosecutor will do any good? Think again.

Party Hacks--The New Immigration Judges

This new analysis of Bush's picks for immigration judge makes clear that instead of real qualifications, the administration uses ideology as the determinant in deciding who will be an immigration judge. will be an immigration judge


No longer blind or even visually impaired

Military Judges Dismiss Charges

Military Judges Dismiss Charges for 2 Detainees

Time to bring back Habeas Corpus.