Ask anyone that question and they’ll look at you like you’re crazy (and you might get some interesting responses from those that weren’t born yet). But try it. If you were alive then, think back. Think back to that April day or any other April day that year or the next year or in fact, any day between 1966 and 1972 and tell me where you were specifically between the general periods of any time of day or night.
You can’t. It’s impossible. 44 years have passed since 1966 and 38 since 1972. Yet, for “G.R.H.” of Louisiana it is this lack of photographic memory and the inability to have the foresight to note and document his whereabouts on all those days in those 6 years decades ago that has landed him in jail for the rest of his life.
In 2006, GRH [opinion here] was accused of sexually assaulting a minor, as you may have guessed, between 1966 and 1972. The complainant, 44 at the time of the accusations, had an alleged clear memory of the assaults perpetrated by the defendant, some 40 years ago.
There was no corroboration, no contemporaneous disclosure, no other instances of sexual abuse by this defendant, nothing. Just the say-so of a 44 year old woman, almost an entire lifetime after it allegedly occurred.1
Imagine, as Justice Douglas did, dissenting in United States v. Marion, that the 44 year delay occurred after GRH was arrested and not before. Certainly, none would argue that his right to a speedy trial was not violated. And the concerns with such a delay are certainly mitigated after the institution of a criminal prosecution: you know there is an action pending, so you hire an investigator, document your memories, speak to witnesses and firm up their recollections. When someone is not prosecuted and doesn’t sense one coming (having done nothing wrong), there is no reason why anyone would keep track of whatever alibis they might have had or whatever witnesses may have had to offer.
Justice Douglas, quoting Baron Alderson in 1844:
Baron Alderson said in Regina v. Robins, 1 Cox’s C. C. 114 (Somerset Winter Assizes 1844), where there was a two-year delay in making a charge of bestiality:
“It is monstrous to put a man on his trial after such a lapse of time. How can he account for his conduct so far back? If you accuse a man of a crime the next day, he may be enabled to bring forward his servants and family to say where he was and what he was about at the time; but if the 329*329 charge be not preferred for a year or more, how can he clear himself? No man’s life would be safe if such a prosecution were permitted. It would be very unjust to put him on his trial.”
What would he have thought of a 44 year delay, I wonder.
Yet, the Louisiana Court of Appeals (not even their Supreme Court, mind you, who declined to review the case) squarely placed the burden on the defendant to prove that he suffered actual prejudice; that the 44 year delay did, in fact, somehow prejudice him. The treatment of this important issue by the Louisiana Court of Appeals is very telling: the actual discussion of the issue is limited to two pages at best and is as summarily dispensed with as one can without being called trite.
We find that P.B. did not have problems recalling the inappropriate acts committed by Defendant. However, she did not recall the dates on which these acts occurred. We further find that Defendant cannot prove he was prejudiced by the delay in this case.
This, in polite circles, is called getting f*cked over. The defendant cannot prove the very thing that would help him, because of the very thing that made him unable to prove it. Also known as legal fiction or “how to convict a sex offender in 2 easy steps”.
And some, like me, would argue that the there really needn’t even be a showing that the defendant was prejudiced. Rather, the burden should shift squarely to the State. If they wish to prosecute someone after as gargantuan a delay as in this case, let them prove good reason for waiting so long. Let them prove the reliability of the witnesses and the testimony. Let them prove that this is not some recently concocted scheme by an upset individual.
How easily does the court dispense with that argument? I’ll show you:
Defendant also asks this court to assume prejudice because of the forty-year delay. This has never been the law. and we decline to adopt such a rule. See U.S. v. Beszborn, 21 F.3d 62 (5th Cir. 1994), cert. denied sub nom. Westmoreland v. U.S., 513 U.S. 934, 115 S.Ct. 330 (1994). Defendant further asks this court to issue a bright-line rule that prohibits prosecutions for “offenses such as these” without both corroboration and contemporaneous report to the authorities. We also decline to adopt such a bright-line rule based on the provisions of La.Code Crim.P. arts. 571 and 571.1.
No explanation, no rationale, nothing. A man, charged after a 44 year delay, about to spend the rest of his life in jail, deserves more than that. Our justice system deserves more than a dismissive, impatient wave of the hand.
I’m obviously not passing judgment on whether she was telling the truth or not. She may well be and he may well have done it. That’s not the point. The point is due process. And could this have happened to anyone but a “sex offender”?
That, really, is the rub here. He’s a sex offender. She must be believed and we, the courts, must do everything in our power to ensure that this man doesn’t get set free. Law and justice be damned. The witches shall burn and we shall light the fires.
GRH has filed a petition for writ of certiorari with the Supreme Court. The state did not deign to file a response.
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1. The court had to jump through other hoops to even get to this point. It reasoned that even though at the time of offenses, the death penalty was no longer applicable, it remained a capital offense and thus there is no applicable statute of limitations for rape. The court then also uses recently enacted statutes to justify its decision to not apply the due process clause. Judicial bullshit activism at its best.
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