June 14, 2007
Jeff Taylor checks in on the Duke case to see if Mike Nifong's implosion shows any sign of slowing down.
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I wish I could be surprised that NC lawyers are trying to make it easier for the Nifongs of the world to get away with it.
Seems to me that the key story here, is that the judicial system routinely railroads the defendants that pass through it. It's so routine that the participants forget they're able to get away with it because nobody's watching. In this case the defendants had enough juice to push back the rock and expose all the grubs. These defendants beat the rap, and Nifong is going to take the fall. The system however, will continue to scale and gut the tons of small fish that get caught in it's drift nets.
I'd like to know why Mainstream Media is still witholding the name of the discredited accuser. Do they think she's innocent? Is it now against the rules to publish the name of a rape "victim" who lied about the whole thing? What the hell?
good article, Jeff
"This duty is rooted in the notion that the prosecution has no
client but justice itself; that it doesn't "win" a case with just
any conviction, only in convicting the guilty. Incredibly, this
distinction still seems to escape Nifong and his legal team."
My impression is that that distinction not only escapes Nifong, but
the public at large, sadly.
Good article.
So does this mean I should stop basing my impression of the
criminal justice system on Law & Order episodes?
"Seems to me that the key story here, is that the judicial
system routinely railroads the defendants that pass through
it."
I think this is absolutely correct. I had a recent unfortunate
run-in with the legal system a bit like the Duke folks (though for
a much less serious accusation), and my experience was that the
Nancy Grace's of the world are the rule, not the exception, in
prosecuting offices.
For local prosecutors, its all about touting conviction rates in
their assembly line system of plea bargains.
If you read between the lines here, what Nifong apparently hoped
was that his public statements and withholding of evidence wouldn't
matter because the case would be plead out long before it reached
the point where this stuff would ever come out.
Here is a great prediction from Thomas Sowell in May '06.
http://capmag.com/article.asp?ID=4668
His analysis of how this story would play out was fascinating then
and is even more so now.
Every time I read more about this story, and see how Nifong didn't really care about guilt or innocence, the more I think how appropriate it would be to put him and make him share a cell with a *real* rapist. (But as Richard Nixon, might say, "That would be wrong.")
Think they'll review Nifongs previous cases?
Doubt it. It's an "isolated incident," you see.
WHY have we heard NOTHING about the legal costs of the boys parents in this case? Seems that would shed some light on just how many past cases were probebly "Nifonged" because 'victims' didn't have an extra $5 MM or so for a defense.
To read more about the legal defense fund and the latest news on this case visit, FODU
Is Richard Alpert, Tarrant County (TC) Prosecutor (Ft. Worth,
Texas) another Nifong? Get your answer at choose2question.com. If
you have questions like we do, help us get answers. Lacking media
support and outrage like the Duke lacrosse players, we have created
choose2question.com to highlight the case of another African
American male being wrongfully imprisoned. I am Laura
Adams-Jenkins. My son is Roy Adams, Jr. who was convicted of
intoxication manslaughter and sentenced to 12 ½ years in prison in
the death of Grapevine, TX Police Officer Darren Medlin. I believe
this was a horrific accident and that my son has been wrongfully
convicted and imprisoned. I don't believe my son was intoxicated or
impaired. Instead, I believe this accident happened as a result of
my son having an epilepsy seizure. A neurologist who specializes in
epilepsy testified he believed the seizure was a cause of the
accident. We understand the sorrow and passion associated with the
death of an on duty white police officer. My son's father is a
retired DEA professional. However, we had hoped and prayed for
justice.
We believe Richard Alpert was instrumental in the wrongful
conviction of our son. Go to choose2question.com for a full
explanation of my son's case. Here are a few examples of the
questionable actions. 1. First person to interact with my son at
the scene testified she turned off her video camera to explain the
missing tape segments from her in-car video. 2. TC Lead
Prosecutor's office directed my son's blood draw be handled
differently than the regular process and had it go to the TC
Medical Examiner's lab rather than the normal process. 3. TC
Medical Examiner testified there were "small, small" things that
needed to be changed in the lab to meet certification requirements.
We learned after the trial that the lab was not in compliance with
11 essential requirements. Not meeting one essential requirement
means the lab failed.
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