Saturday, December 22, 2007
New Article Spotlight: Ron Wright and Marc Miller on Innocence and Prosecutorial Discretion
Crimprofs Ron Wright (Wake Forest) and Marc Miller (Arizona) have written the paper Dead Wrong, forthcoming as part of an innocence symposium at the Utah Law Review. The abstract: "DNA-driven exonerations offer many
lessons for police, for prosecutors, and for legislatures. Many
scholars have focused on novel procedures to identify and remedy
wrongful convictions after they occur. Scholars have also concluded
that in our administrative criminal justice system we need prosecutors
who are driven less by testosterone and more by a balanced search for
the truth.
In
our view, the most enduring changes to the work of prosecutors will
focus not on softening their adversarial perspective, but on enhancing
and staying true to the traditional core of their work on the front end
of the process¿the charging decisions.
In our view, accuracy
and honesty in criminal systems face mortal danger when a prosecutor
decides what charges to file based on his or her individual assessment
of the moral worth of criminal defendants or victims. We believe that
errors flourish when the prosecutors' sentencing recommendations aim
above all to reach a deal with the defendant to avoid trial, rather
than pricing the specific crime that the evidence might prove.
To
flesh out these assertions about prosecutors and outcomes we turn to a
case study: two stories from Dallas, Texas. The first episode involves
the work of the current District Attorney in Dallas to cooperate with
the efforts of Innocence Projects as a remedy for an especially high
rate of DNA exonerations from the office in recent years. We describe
his efforts and explore the limits of after-the-fact remedies.
The
second episode from Dallas came to light in a remarkable set of
articles from the Dallas Morning News. These reports indicate that
prosecutors in Dallas go forward with murder cases in too many cases
that deserve lesser charges or no criminal charges at all. At the same
time, the office requests probation as the sentence for a murder
conviction far more often than other jurisdictions in Texas. In short,
the charges and sentences in murder cases in Dallas appear to be both
too high and too low. This pattern of outcomes in homicide cases is
dead wrong.
We believe that unreliable charging is intimately
related to the sort of injustice that drives the innocence movement.
Put another way, the two episodes from Dallas are connected. The high
level of DNA exonerations we find in Dallas grows out of a fixation on
guilty pleas and an indifference to consistent and accurate application
of the criminal code. We glimpse the same forces at work in the pattern
of original charges and sentences in murder cases."
Paper available here.
https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/crimprof_blog/2007/12/new-article-s-1.html