Archive for January, 2010
270 days to go
Jan 9th
A dastardly business, this is. We are businessmen of the worst kind; our currency is not money, but the lives and freedom of others. And with experience and time comes a certain desensitization. I’ve written about this before: 5 years, 10 years, 20…the numbers roll into one another, without much thought.
People become names and names become faces and faces become stories. Most of the time, I pack up at 5, turn off my computer, say goodbye to those I work with and embark on my journey home. “What will I eat for dinner?” I think to myself, or “I really hope there’s something good on TV tonight”. And soon – within minutes really – the day’s events become another closed chapter in a book that is overflowing with the lives of those we will never live.
And yet, every once in a while, a client takes hold of you like some persistent and nagging tune that refuses to let your brain be. Someone for whom you know you’ve done well – very well, even – and yet not even close to enough.
Someone for whom the impossible would be the only just outcome. Someone who, by all accounts, wasn’t entirely innocent, yet any punishment would cause far more damage than that which he may have caused to another. And as I sat with him the morning of his entry into this foreign, cruel and neglected world, I could not help but feel like I was witnessing the start of something terrible. I was watching – shepherding, really – a meek lamb into the mouths of cruel, vicious lions. I was complicit in the sacrifice of a simple man; a man who may have done wrong not out of any salacious desire or evil bent of mind, but rather because of that simplicity.
And the confused stare that greeted me when I set about discussing the morning’s act only served to deepen the anguish. His sentence is not long, really. 9 months instead of what could have been decades. “Appropriate in light of the circumstances”, we love to say. And appropriate it might well be. Yet it is 9 months too long.
Perhaps it is because I see shades of myself in him. Perhaps because I know the other clients I have that will populate the same jails as he will. Perhaps because I know, on some level, that he will come out a vastly different man. Perhaps it is because he believes I failed him. What is it about this particular client, I can only guess.
What I do know is that it has now been 3 days since this man lost his freedom. For me, these have been three long days. For him, they must have been longer still. I know that before he sees the sunlight as a free man again, the world will have gone through several seasons. Winter will pass, leaves and grass will grow, we will all suffer the rigors of maintaining our lawns and we will watch the start of the fall colors, perhaps even hear the first complaint about the impending cold weather again. Some will remark how quickly the summer has passed us.
And one, in particular, will note each interminable passing day, existing in slow motion, a life having changed forever.
There are 270 days to go and I intend to count each one.
Photo by boo_licious.
CT: (not) so soft on cop assaults
Jan 8th
Man, we live in such a namby-pamby sissy state. All our judges are liberal, defendants regularly walk out the door after committing multiple homicides which involve gouging the eyes out of little children and eating their entrails while singing songs of the devil and Hitler (too soon?).
And we regularly condone assaulting cops without handing out as much as a slap on the wrist.
What’s that? We don’t?
A new report from the Office of Legislative Report indicates that CT has the second harshest sentencing scheme of all the northeastern states for assaults on cops (which includes throwing paint). Puts the call for a mandatory-minimum sentence in a whole new light, doesn’t it? Take a look:
Attachment 2: Survey of Neighboring States’ Penalties for Assaulting Public Safety Officers
| State and Statute Citation | Imprisonment | Fine |
| Connecticut
CGS § 53a-167c |
1-10 years | Up to $ 10,000 |
| Maine
Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. t: t. 17-A § 752-A |
Not more than five years | Up to $ 5,000 |
| Massachusetts
Mass. Gen. Laws Ch. 265, § 13D |
Not less than 90 days nor more than two and half years | Not less than $ 500 nor more than $ 5,000 |
| New Hampshire | No Statute | |
| New Jersey
N. J. Stat. § 2C: 12-1(b)(5)(a) |
If victim suffers bodily injury: three to five years
If victim does not suffer bodily injury: up to 18 months |
Up to $ 15,000
Up to $ 10,000 |
| New York
N. Y. Penal Law § 120. 08 and 120. 11 |
Assault: three to fifteen years
Aggravated Assault: three to twenty five years |
Up to $ 5,000 for either assault or aggravated assault |
| Rhode Island
R. I. Gen. Laws § 11-5-5 |
Not more than three years | not more than $ 1,500 |
| Vermont
Vt. Stat. Ann. t: t. , § 1028 |
Not more than one year | not more than $ 1,000 |
Soft on crime indeed.
The objection’s on the other foot
Jan 7th
An interesting and ironic-chuckle-inducing opinion from the Colorado Court of Appeals (via Volokh), where the trial court granted a mistrial in a criminal case. The defendant had been charged with assaulting his estranged wife and one of her friends, with threatening the wife, and with disturbing the peace.
As some of these prosecutions go, there was a defense. The defense was basically that the wife was a liar and would do anything to gain leverage in a contentious custody battle involving the couple’s infant son.
At the beginning and again at the end of opening statement, defense counsel told the jury of the defense contention that the wife would “do anything,” including making false claims against defendant, to keep custody.
The wife was the first witness against defendant. Defense counsel began cross-examination by asking several questions about the then-ongoing marriage dissolution and child custody proceedings. The prosecution objected – stating “we’re here on a criminal trial not on the divorce case” – but the court overruled the objection and allowed this line of questioning to continue. While allowing defense counsel “a little bit of latitude” in this area, the court did urge counsel to “cut to the chase.”
Further questioning established that the wife had taken the couple’s son when she left defendant (before the nightclub incident) and the courts were deciding custody. Two questions followed:
Q. You know that [defendant] is from Africa?
A. Yes.
Q. You know that if he is found guilty of this he’ll be deported? The prosecution objected before the second question was answered, stating it was “completely improper to bring that up in this proceeding.” The court promptly ordered a recess.
Outside the jury’s presence, the prosecutor moved for a mistrial. He argued the jury had been “irrevocably tainted” by questioning that was “a ploy to invoke sympathy for the defendant” and amounted to “probably the worst violation [he had] ever seen.” Defense counsel responded that the question went to the “heart of our defense” and defendant was constitutionally entitled to ask it. Counsel proffered that she had spoken with defendant’s immigration attorney, that this assault conviction would lead to deportation, and that the wife “knows all of that.”
The trial court then granted the prosecutor’s motion for mistrial (yes, I did not type that incorrectly), while “vehemently disagreeing” with defense counsel (seems that this judge has learned from my tips for objections).
The fruit of the poisonous confession
Jan 1st
We at this blog, and as a consequence you as an observant reader, have known for quite some time now that false confessions are an underrated scourge in the world of wrongful convictions. Some 15-20% of all exonerations have seen the original convictions brought about by these false confessions. The causes of false confessions have been explored before: mental acuity, extremely long interrogations, psychological manipulation and outright lies.
A new paper soon to be published by Saul Kassin – one of the leading experts on false confessions – and others does a tremendous job of highlighting the history of the law on confessions, their admissibility and challenges to these confessions in US and UK courts. The paper is notable for three reasons: 1) It lays out this legal history, the current state of the research and the history of the development of this research in detail, 2) It offers some reform proposals and most interestingly 3) it posits that a false confession can have an adverse effect on how the jury perceives the remaining evidence in a case. For all of these reasons, it is an absolute must read for all criminal defense lawyers and even those prosecutors who are driven by the interests of justice.
What I want to do in this (extremely lengthy) post is to highlight some of the important and relevant points of the paper, but let me assure you: nothing I write here will be an adequate substitute for you actually reading the paper. It is that good and that important.
The problem with confessions using our current models starts at the beginning: with police interrogation. As opposed to the UK, which uses a “fact-finding” model of interviewing suspects, US police departments for the most part use the “confession” model. The goal of most interrogations in the US is to confirm the suspicion of the interrogator by obtaining a confession. These “trained” interviewers rely essentially on hunches, which are based on flawed beliefs of body language:
Often, however, it is based on a clinical hunch formed during a preinterrogation interview in which special ‘‘behavior-provoking’’ questions are asked (e.g., ‘‘What do you think should happen to the person who committed this crime?’’) and changes are observed in aspects of the suspect’s behavior that allegedly betray lying (e.g., gaze aversion, frozen posture, and fidgety movements). Yet in laboratories all over the world, research has consistently shown that most commonsense behavioral cues are not diagnostic of truth and deception (DePaulo et al., 2003). Hence, it is not surprising as an empirical matter that laypeople on average are only 54% accurate at distinguishing truth and deception; that training does not produce reliable improvement; and that police investigators, judges, customs inspectors, and other professionals perform only slightly better, if at all—albeit with high levels of confidence (for reviews, see Bond & DePaulo, 2006; Meissner & Kassin, 2002; Vrij, 2008).
The most famous of police interrogation techniques is the Reid Nine-step:
A nine-step process then ensues in which an interrogator employs both negative and positive incentives. On one hand, the interrogator confronts the suspect with accusations of guilt, assertions that may be bolstered by evidence, real or manufactured, and refuses to accept alibis and denials. On the other hand, the interrogator offers sympathy and moral justification, introducing ‘‘themes’’ that minimize the crime and lead suspects to see confession as an expedient means of escape.
Compounding the problem of these questionable police interrogation techniques is the apparent contradiction in US courts’ treatment of confessions in the criminal justice system: on one hand, courts recognize the awesome power of a confession and yet on the other seem indifferent to the voluminous research that tends to show that most techniques are coercive and unreliable. Originally governed by the corpus delicti rule, confessions are now viewed through the lens of the “trustworthiness” rule, after Opper v. United States (for a CT discussion see State v. Hafford). This rule is intended to permit the admission of only those confessions that can be independently corroborated. However, in practice, the rule doesn’t provide the benefits it seeks to:




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