{"id":1223,"date":"2011-08-26T03:13:13","date_gmt":"2011-08-26T07:13:13","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.peoplevstate.com\/?p=1223"},"modified":"2011-11-13T15:53:39","modified_gmt":"2011-11-13T19:53:39","slug":"prosecutors-are-not-your-friends","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.peoplevstate.com\/?p=1223","title":{"rendered":"Prosecutors are not your friends. (Updated X 2)"},"content":{"rendered":"
Some defense attorneys who have blogs seem to be fans of D.A. Confidential, and revel in their professional cordiality. Me, not so much. Here’s #7 on his Top Eight list of why win\/loss tallies are pointless<\/a>:<\/p>\n 7. None of us should be afraid to try the hard cases. Sometimes we have cases where we are convinced the person is guilty, but maybe for evidentiary reasons, we also know it’ll be hard to prove it. The defense knows it, too, so won’t plead. I think sometimes we have to try and convince a jury in those instances, even if the risk of losing is high. It’s simply the right thing to do. And, you know, sometimes when we do that, we win.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Yeah, and sometimes when you do that, you convict an innocent man. Congratulations.<\/a><\/p>\n Prosecutors should never lose.<\/a> Losing for a prosecutor is a disgrace<\/a>, and prima facie<\/em> evidence that he’s personally and morally responsible for the imprisonment of innocent people.<\/p>\n UPDATE: I mean, do we take the requirement that guilt must be proven<\/em> “beyond a reasonable doubt” before we’ll lock a human being up in a cage like an animal, and the adage that it is better that a hundred guilty persons go free than for 1 innocent to suffer, seriously, or not? In the video linked from the word “Congratulations” above, Tony Serra, a former prosecutor, tells the jury in his closing argument in the Ted Binion murder trial: “There’s an old adage in the prosecution world: It’s easy to convict the guilty; the real challenge is to convict the innocent!”<\/p>\n