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Re: Is Ted Cruz Satan? Discuss.
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If anything, those events added the nuance that, when police defendants are involved, the prosecutor should be a federal or other independent agency rather than the local DA who depends on the police, but that's not an incoherence. Just a recognition of where conflicts make it difficult to exercise discretion appropriately. I would still want the agency to have discretion. What pisses me off so much in this context was that they faked it -- they didn't want to say "we aren't prosecuting," but in Ferguson especially (to my understanding) they intentionally fucked up the proceeding to lose it. I simply could not imagine a prosecutor putting a witness he knew was lying to testify in favor of a defendant in any normal grand jury proceeding. |
Re: Is Ted Cruz Satan? Discuss.
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But the charade that seems to have happened in Ferguson - and apparently happens routinely in cases with cop defendants - is not okay. |
Re: Is Ted Cruz Satan? Discuss.
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But it doesn’t bother me that others see it differently. Prosecutors should lose elections when they do not reflect their constituents’ idea of justice, on that we seem to agree. I just don’t like the idea of a Plan B for unfiled criminal charges because I see no logical end to that. |
Re: Is Ted Cruz Satan? Discuss.
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Most people who get mistreated by police don't have a lot of social or political capital. Obviously. So to say that police officers should only be prosecuted when people with political capital want it to happen is to say that they mostly shouldn't be prosecuted. I would rather the decision to prosecute have more to do with the actual facts of the particular case, and less to do with whether it upsets the right kind of citizen. |
Re: Is Ted Cruz Satan? Discuss.
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Of course, I happen to think U.S. Attorneys and 100% of the FBI are amoral assholes, so that might be coloring my thinking here. |
Re: Is Ted Cruz Satan? Discuss.
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Re: Is Ted Cruz Satan? Discuss.
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Re: Is Ted Cruz Satan? Discuss.
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Yeah, I don’t like the BART Board either — they’re appointed by other politicians, but that’s because it’s a JPA, not for the purpose of insulating them from voters. The only people we intentionally protect from politics are federal judges, the Fed chairman, and schoolteachers. I do not favor expanding that list. |
Re: Is Ted Cruz Satan? Discuss.
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I think this is unrealistic for a number of reasons. First, the way it's stated -- I don't know if you mean it this way -- suggests that you don't believe prosecutors should ever "settle", as in accept a plea to a lesser crime when they believe they can prove a more serious crime. Again, I don't know if you mean it that way (depends on whether you mean "bring charges" to refer only to the actual charging phase, or to pursuing charges through trial). If you do, you certainly know that's unworkable without a lot more courts and money. If you don't, then the minute you accept that prosecutors, or any other person within the state structure, can settle a case, you've accepted that discretion has a place within the system. Second -- and this may be a chicken-and-egg issue -- criminal statutes have proliferated in a way that makes all kinds of charges available for any given kind of conduct. In that way, the statutes allow for discretion, and almost require it. The "chicken/egg" issue is that this is often designed, I believe, to maximize the prosecutors' ability to leverage a plea. Consider the death penalty example. How many "special circumstances" are there in California now? Several dozen? Virtually any murder can be tried as a capital crime. I don't think that is desirable, nor practical. Finally, once you introduce the concept of judgment - i.e., when a prosecutor thinks he can get a conviction -- then you have introduced some form of discretion, no? These things are not always yes/no questions. How sure does a prosecutor need to be that she can get, say, a first-degree murder conviction, before she should decide to charge only second-degree murder or manslaughter? Anyhoo. Discussing this stuff reminds me of how much I hated my Crim Law professor (who would have turned this discussion into a lecture about Hegel), and how complex it all is, especially when so much of our societal structure has developed around choices that are in many ways bad. Perhaps we should go back to topics where we all just bunker down in our zones of self-assuredness and lob curses at each other (and at Hank). |
Re: Is Ted Cruz Satan? Discuss.
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Re: Is Ted Cruz Satan? Discuss.
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Re: Is Ted Cruz Satan? Discuss.
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Re: Is Ted Cruz Satan? Discuss.
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I used this hypo because it seems stupid to me to lay out a fact pattern about police who commit crimes since the news is littered with them. TM |
Re: Is Ted Cruz Satan? Discuss.
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Re: Is Ted Cruz Satan? Discuss.
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