{"id":2388,"date":"2014-04-16T19:55:24","date_gmt":"2014-04-16T23:55:24","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.peoplevstate.com\/?p=2388"},"modified":"2014-04-16T19:55:24","modified_gmt":"2014-04-16T23:55:24","slug":"somethings-very-rotten-in-our-system","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.peoplevstate.com\/?p=2388","title":{"rendered":"“Something’s very rotten in our system.”"},"content":{"rendered":"
That’s Douglas Berman, Ohio State law prof and author of the Sentencing Law and Policy blog, as quoted in the NYT in a story titled Obama Commutes a Prisoner\u2019s Sentence, Lengthened More Than 3 Years by a Typo<\/a>. “It\u2019s a shame that we need presidential action to take care of something everybody agrees was a mistake,\u201d said Berman. He has much more to say in a post on his blog<\/a>, which begins:<\/p>\n The more I reflect on the typo-correction sentence commutation of federal prisoner Cesar Huerta Cantu (basics here<\/a>), and especially after re-reading\u00a0this 2255 dismissal order<\/a>\u00a0that followed Cantu’s own effort to have a court fix its own significant sentencing error, the more disgusted I feel about the modern federal sentencing system and especially about the U.S. Department of Justice and those federal prosecutors most responsible for Cesar Cantu’s treatment by our Kafkaesque system.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n He concludes:<\/p>\n I am hoping Bill Otis or other current or former federal prosecutors will help me feel better about the work of our federal sentencing system and the Department of Justice in the wake of the Cantu commutation. \u00a0Especially because Prez Obama has been so stingy with his clemency power, I want this latest commutation to be a reason to celebrate rather than curse our justice system. \u00a0But unless and until someone can metamorphasize my understanding of the work of federal prosecutors in this case, I have a hard time not thinking that Josef K. and Cantu have far too much in common.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Compare this recent State-friendly decision of the Indiana Supreme Court in State v. Lotaki<\/em><\/a>, overturning and reversing this Indiana Court of Appeals decision<\/a>, which had found that the State was not authorized to bring its (untimely) appeal of the trial court’s denial of its most recent motion to correct erroneous sentence, and that “this [procedural] apple has been devoured.”<\/p>\n In related news, The Indiana Law Blog notes today<\/a>:<\/p>\n Scott H. Greenfield, a NY attorney, writes in Simple Justice<\/strong><\/a>, A Criminal Defense Blog<\/strong> about our Supreme Court’s March 25th opinion<\/a> in Joanna S. Robinson v. State of Indiana<\/em>, a case where the testimony of the arresting officer and the record from his video camera were somewhat at odds. A Public Defender Blog<\/strong>, from “I am Gideon. I\u2019m a public defender in the fictional state of Connecticut,” has a less measured response<\/a>.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n The Indiana Supreme Court in Robinson<\/em><\/a> (a case out of Elkhart County), in overturning the Court of Appeals, which had held<\/a> that the trial court wrongly denied Robinson’s motion to suppress and had reversed her conviction, found that “The trial court found, as a matter of fact, that to the extent Deputy Claeys’s testimony conflicted with the video, the former was more reliable than the latter.”<\/p>\n I kid you not.<\/p>\n The majority then concluded that the standard of review bound it to defer to this “finding” by the trial court, and upheld the trial court’s denial of Robinson’s motion to suppress and her conviction on the basis of this “finding.” The lone dissent, quoting the trial court’s order, argued that the trial court had “plain[ly]” not<\/em> based its denial of the motion to suppress on something so palpably unreasonable [the latter four words are mine, not the dissent’s], while unreasonably agreeing with the majority that “had it done so that would be the end of the matter.” The majority responded to the dissent in a footnote:<\/p>\n That is not how we read the trial court’s conclusions, but even if it were, affirmance would still be proper.<\/small> . . . Here, the officer’s testimony that Robinson crossed the fog line twice\u2014which the trial court appeared to find credible\u2014supports a legal finding of reasonable suspicion for the traffic stop. Thus, we may\u2014and do\u2014affirm the trial court.<\/small><\/p><\/blockquote>\n The dissent responded in his own footnote:<\/p>\n Although an appellate court has permission to affirm on any basis in the record, I would be particularly reluctant to do so here based on record evidence that the trial court itself did not appear to credit.<\/small><\/p><\/blockquote>\n Compare this recent post<\/a> by Will Baude at the Volokh Conspiracy, about a suppression hearing in Chicago during which, in what the Chicago Tribune described as “a ‘Perry Mason’ moment,” the defense played a police video that contradicted the preceding sworn testimony of five officers. In stark contrast to Robinson’s case, a “furious” judge believed the video over the officers and suppressed the search and arrest. The officers were then “put on desk duty pending internal investigations.” Baude comments (in a short post, which is how I justify quoting virtually all of it):<\/p>\n