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An Ethics Meltdown at the Justice Department by Scott Horton

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Jefferson23 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-27-10 12:06 PM
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An Ethics Meltdown at the Justice Department by Scott Horton
September 24, 4:15 PM, 2010

USA Today offers an extraordinary multi-part study of prosecutorial misconduct at the Department of Justice over the last decade, under both Democratic and Republican administrations. The stories generally show prosecutors out to support the political agendas of their bosses. They also indicate a systematic evasion of the requirements of prosecutorial ethics and a collapse of ethics training and enforcement within the Justice Department, where an ethos of “victory at all costs” now controls.

USA TODAY spent six months examining federal prosecutors’ work, reviewing legal databases, department records and tens of thousands of pages of court filings. Although the true extent of misconduct by prosecutors will likely never be known, the assessment is the most complete yet of the scope and impact of those violations. USA TODAY found a pattern of “serious, glaring misconduct,” said Pace University law professor Bennett Gershman, an expert on misconduct by prosecutors. “It’s systemic now, and … the system is not able to control this type of behavior. There is no accountability.” He and Alexander Bunin, the chief federal public defender in Albany, N.Y., called the newspaper’s findings “the tip of the iceberg” because many more cases are tainted by misconduct than are found. In many cases, misconduct is exposed only because of vigilant scrutiny by defense attorneys and judges.

The study quotes former U.S. attorney general Dick Thornburgh, who headed the Justice Department in the first Bush Administration and who was harshly critical of the collapse of ethics standards in the second Bush Administration. Thornburgh surveys the record of the past decade and states that “No civilized society should countenance such conduct or systems that failed to prevent it.”

What does Thornburgh mean by “systems that failed?” The focus of his ire is plainly a culture within the Justice Department that promotes abuse and fails to deal with abuse when it is publicly exposed. Despite his promises to clean the situation up, Eric Holder has done nothing other than arrange some ethics training courses. The Department steadily resists disciplinary action against prosecutors who misbehave and attempts to block public exposure of their misconduct through congressional probes with claims of prosecutorial immunity. Holder refuses even to take questions on the subject at public events (as occurred just this week at an event marking the fiftieth anniversary of To Kill a Mockingbird in Alabama). The U.S. attorney who is perhaps the worst single Bush-era offender remains in her position as Republican senators block efforts to appoint a replacement, and the Justice Department continues to stonewall an investigation into some of the most serious cases of abuse. In recent testimony before the House, Justice Department Inspector General Glenn Fine has acknowledged (PDF) the damage these disclosures have done both to the Department’s morale and to its reputation. Fine’s own office has revealed significant evidence of prosecutorial misconduct, particularly in political cases. Moreover, his reports often show how even his internal team is often blocked from getting to the bottom of abuse stories.


remainder in full: http://www.harpers.org/archive/2010/09/hbc-90007650
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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-27-10 12:08 PM
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1. This Is NOT News, For Anyone Who Has Been Paying Attention
We the People were BushWhacked, and Obama continues it both overtly and covertly by not prosecuting.
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Jefferson23 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-27-10 12:15 PM
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2. Of course not new but more well defined than ever imo. Kudos to
all journalists who are trying to expose this corrupt mess.
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enough Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-27-10 12:17 PM
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3. Which does not mean that reporting about it is not vitally important. (nt)
Edited on Mon Sep-27-10 12:17 PM by enough
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xchrom Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-27-10 12:37 PM
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4. Recommend
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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Sep-27-10 12:48 PM
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5. Prosecutors' conduct can tip justice scales (USAT | 22 Sept)
By Brad Heath and Kevin McCoy, USA TODAY

ORLANDO — ... For more than a week in 2001, the jurors listened to one witness after another, almost all of them prison inmates, describe how Lyons had sold them packages of cocaine. One said that Lyons, who ran clothing shops and nightclubs around Orlando, even tried to hire him to kill two drug suppliers ....

... prosecutors covered up evidence that could have discredited many of Lyons' accusers. They never revealed that a convict who claimed to have purchased hundreds of pounds of cocaine from Lyons struggled even to identify his photograph. And they hid the fact that prosecutors had promised to let others out of prison early in exchange for their cooperation ...

In July, U.S. District Judge Gregory Presnell did more than overturn Lyons' conviction: He declared that Lyons was innocent.

Neither the Justice Department nor the lead prosecutor in the Lyons case, Bruce Hinshelwood, would explain the events that cost Lyons his home, his businesses and nearly three years of freedom. The department investigated Hinshelwood but refused to say whether he was punished; records obtained by USA TODAY show that the agency regulating Florida lawyers ordered him to attend a one-day ethics workshop ...

http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/judicial/2010-09-22-federal-prosecutors-reform_N.htm?loc=interstitialskip
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KoKo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Sep-28-10 02:13 PM
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6. K&R
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