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Myths Of The Criminal Justice System: Part 2

First Posted: 06/22/11 10:48 AM ET Updated: 08/22/11 06:12 AM ET

Criminal Justice System Myths

Note: As part of this week's launch of the HuffPost's Crime vertical, senior writer and criminal justice reporter Radley Balko outlines 10 popular myths and misconceptions about the criminal justice system. Read Part 1 here. Part 3 will appear on Friday.

Myth 4: We have appeals courts to check and verify jury verdicts.

Appeals courts review claims that a defendant wasn't afforded his rights under the U.S. Constitution, or the constitution of a particular state. They also review claims that the prosecution or judge did not follow the proper rules of criminal procedure and decide whether those lapses resulted in in an unfair trial. But they almost never second-guess a guilty verdict by reconsidering the evidence.

In a 2008 article published in the Columbia Law Review, Brandon L. Garrett, a law professor at the University of Virginia, reviewed how appeals courts handled the first 200 cases in which DNA testing exonerated a defendant who had previously been convicted of rape or murder. Of those 200 convictions, just 18 convictions were at one point reversed by appellate courts. Another 67 defendants' appeals were denied without even a written ruling. In 63 cases the appellate court opinion described the defendant as "guilty," and in 12 cases referred to "overwhelming" evidence of guilt. In the remaining cases, the appeals courts either found the defendant’s appeal without merit or found that the errors in the case were "harmless" -- there were problems with the case, but those problems were unlikely to have affected the jury’s verdict -- due, again, to the convincing evidence of guilt.

Myth 5: Due to their position, law enforcement officials are held to a higher standard of conduct than regular citizens.

A strong argument can be made that they're actually held to a lower standard. Unlike any other profession in America, prosecutors and judges are protected by the doctrine of absolute immunity, which completely shields them from civil liability for the decisions they make in the course of their jobs. The courts have ruled that prosecutors can't be sued even if they intentionally manipulate or manufacture evidence that results in the conviction of an innocent person.

Police officers and most other government officials are protected by qualified immunity, which holds that even if they violate a citizen's rights, they can only be held liable if a reasonable person would have known their actions were illegal. And unlike private sector workers, most government employees -- including police officers -- are not expected to have specialized knowledge of the laws governing their professions.

Many states have also passed a "police officer's bill of rights," a special set of protections for officers accused of serious misconduct, including acts that could result in criminal charges. In many jurisdictions, police officers get a "cooling off period" after a shooting or allegation of excessive force. During this period, which can range from 48 hours to 10 days, the officers under investigation cannot be asked any questions about the incident. In most states, police officers also can't be questioned about misconduct without a union representative or attorney present. If any part of the police bill of rights protocol isn't followed, even officers who commit egregious misconduct can find themselves back on the force, often with back pay.

In most places these extra rights only pertain to internal, administrative investigations, not criminal investigations -- but the internal investigations usually take place first. That means bad cops can use those protections to gain advantages not afforded to those who don't happen to work in law enforcement.

Unlike other professions, police officers and other public officials also can't be fired from their jobs or disciplined for invoking their Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.

Myth 6: Dangerous criminals frequently escape punishment by "getting off on a technicality."

A regular viewer of Bill O'Reilly or Nancy Grace could be forgiven for thinking our criminal courts are heavily stacked in favor of child molesters, drug dealers and cold-blooded killers. In truth, the conviction rate for federal prosecutors is 90-95 percent. For state prosecutors it varies by jurisdiction, but convictions rates generally fall between 60 and 85 percent.

It also isn't true that appeals courts are setting criminals free en masse because of technical errors that occur in the police station or the district attorney's office. Even when an appeals court does overturn a conviction, the defendant usually remains in custody until the state decides whether to retry the case, and isn't released unless acquitted at the new trial.

But reversals aren't as common as one might think. Though data is difficult to come by, according to a 2005 study in the Florida State University Law Review, from the mid-1940s until about 2004, 87 to 99 percent of federal guilty verdicts were upheld on appeal. A look at 2006 affirmance rates in criminal appeals published in the Marquette University Law Review put the reversal rate of guilty verdicts at about 12 percent. It's even more difficult to find data at the state level, but the same Marquette article looked at a multi-state study from the late 1980s that found about 70 to 80 percent of guilty verdicts were upheld on appeal.

Myth 7: No one confesses to a crime he didn't commit.

False confessions are more common than one might think. In a 2008 op-ed for the Los Angeles Times, Washington, D.C., Detective Jim Trainum wrote about a case in which he was able to extract a murder confession from a suspect. The confession included details about the murder only the perpetrator could have known. Trainum was later shocked to learn that the woman who had confessed to him couldn't possibly have committed the crime. He went back to review the tape, and found that he had inadvertently revealed details about the crime during his interrogation.

According to the Innocence Project, about one in four convictions that have been overturned by DNA testing involved defendants who at one point had actually confessed to the crime for which they were later exonerated.

Minors and the mentally disabled are especially prone to false confessions, but anyone under considerable duress or who has endured an unusually long or harsh interrogation can be susceptible. Rob Warden and Steven A. Drizin point out in the book "True Stories of False Confessions," an anthology of reports of 48 people who confessed to felonies they didn't commit, the confession often puts a halt to the investigation, even when the confessions "aren't corroborated or don't fit the facts of the alleged crimes."

RELATED: Myths Of The Criminal Justice System: Part 1

Coming Friday: Misconceptions about sex offenders, eyewitness testimony and wrongful convictions.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST CRIME

Note: As part of this week's launch of the HuffPost's Crime vertical, senior writer and criminal justice reporter Radley Balko outlines 10 popular myths and misconceptions about the criminal justice s...
Note: As part of this week's launch of the HuffPost's Crime vertical, senior writer and criminal justice reporter Radley Balko outlines 10 popular myths and misconceptions about the criminal justice s...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Daveh88
SLTFATF
09:35 PM on 06/23/2011
This is why we need more accountability with law enforcement and more oversight, to protect us from them
03:13 PM on 06/23/2011
This is why it is referred to as "The Judicial Industry".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Souris9
Academic librarian
12:18 PM on 06/23/2011
Wow. Who is ignorant enough to believe any of those?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jabbaciv
So it goes.
11:06 AM on 06/23/2011
This is why I want to become a criminal defense paralegal and then attorney.

"The courts have ruled that prosecutors can't be sued even if they intentionally manipulate or manufacture evidence that results in the conviction of an innocent person."
^ Makes me mad. People can die because a DA wanted a conviction in time for re-election.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Steve Lehto
09:07 AM on 06/23/2011
False confessions are EASY to obtain in many jurisdictions. The cops put the defendant in a small room, yell at them for ten or fifteen hours without food or sleep and then explain to them that they will get the death penalty if they are convicted after a trial. In that mental condition, many innocent people will confess to crimes they did not commit because they think it is the only way to save their life.

The police are often happy to get anyone to confess to a crime; they don't care if it is the actual perpetrator or not. They clear crimes off of books like accountants working balance sheets.
RedneckLiberal
Redneck is not synonymous with Conservative
06:29 AM on 06/23/2011
This article should be required reading for every person out there who believes the police and courts are here to help them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sheldon archer
Facebook name is Yuyun Archer
07:30 PM on 06/22/2011
Welcome to the Land of Freedom and Justice. Just another big business for "We the Corporations."
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sail Away
04:49 PM on 06/22/2011
Rarely do I instigate Democrat/Republican arguments as I can’t stand either. However, the demise of the US justice system is attributed to collective Democratic philosophies. Granted, draconian criminal punishments stem from Right-minded Republican philosophies, but the demise of our justice system was born from the need for these draconian punishments to be collectively administered. Democratic senator Ted Kennedy sponsored the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984, (co-sponsors Jamie-D, Williams-D) introducing mandatory minimums, abolished parole and non-negotiable sentencing guidelines. This Act ensured that Judges no longer had the latitude to “judge” and defendants who ”made a mistake” were treated the same as those who were “malicious”. The collective no-judging capacity, harsh sentencing, no parole, set minimums and no chance of leniency guaranteed that defendants wouldn’t risk a trial. In lieu of a trial, defendants pursued plea bargains. Once plea bargains became the status-quo, prosecutors were principal justice administrators. If a prosecutor thought you were guilty, you were “extorted” into a draconian plea agreement. If a prosecutor thought you were innocent, he/she couldn’t drop the case, as prosecutors are basically graded on their “conviction rate”. Hence, a prosecutor would coheres an assumed “lesser guilty” individual into a lesser plea. Judges hear very little in these cases which gives prosecutors too much power.

The SRA is just another example of how the Democratic, collective agendas destroys society. Standardized education is another example. The list of failed socialist governments is yet another. Collectivism isn't the answer!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bugweed
06:52 AM on 06/23/2011
The SRA was signed into law by the icon of the right, Ronald Reagan. As President he had the power to veto this socialist agenda as you so incorrectly call it. In 2003, congress enacted the Feeney PROTECT act which removed nearly ALL ability of Federal Judges to deviate or modify sentences under the SRA of 1984. Again, a law signed by a republican President, and passed by a congress firmly in control of the republicans. This "reform" was not born of a wide spread crisis in the Judiciary, but out of congressional fears that somehow Judges were handing out too many light sentences, and that congress wanted to appear "tough" on crime. I suggest that you review the issue of law and order, the so called frustration politicians from both parties have with a Judge's latitude in sentencing, and how the entire issue has been the political football for a guaranteed re election campaign. Know any politician that campaigns on being soft on criminals?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sail Away
09:03 AM on 06/23/2011
The bill was formulated by Democrat architects in a predominately Democrat Congress. Rarely do presidents use powers of veto especially when voter perception in involved, as you pointed out. I believe that if you reread my OP, I referred to SRA as a collective accomplishment. Collectivism is the basis for socialist agendas.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sail Away
09:20 AM on 06/23/2011
By the way that reply was not intended to defend the buffoonery of the Regan Administration. Regan's efforts at destroying this country run much deeper than SRA.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
John P Slevin
http://www.winliberty.com
09:37 AM on 06/23/2011
Sail Away,

It's simply not possible to claim that one of the major parties bears greater responsibility for our problems with runaway prosecutors and judges...just as it is not possible for any thinking person to assert that there is any significant difference between the GOP and the Democratic Party.
At the very least the GOP bears equal responsibility. There are a number of indicators that the GOP has been shameless in their expansion of prosecutorial and judicial misconduct, especially towards the constitution, here are just 2:

The GOP instigated the War on Drugs (Nixon administration---as their response to a complaint personally lodged with them by Katherine Graham, who wanted someone to get all those "pushers" off the streets of D.C.); each subsequent GOP president proceeded to nominate absolute slime to the US Supreme Court and to every available federal bench slot which allowed them to absolutely GUT the 4th and 5th amendments---it's an ongoing process of course, but the 4th and 5th are hanging from some of their last stringy fibers...see Illinois v. Gates)

Sure, D's haven't been stalwart in opposition, even have been partners in crime, but it's not at all accurate to say the D's have been worse than the GOP.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sail Away
11:16 AM on 06/24/2011
Very very true. I've reread the OP myself and would like to edit the third sentence form ....'the demise of our justice system was born...' (from Democratic principals) to .'the demise of our justice system was PREDOMINATELY born...' (from Democratic principals). As I noted in the OP I can't stand either party, each represents evil (like the SRA) from a different perspective. However, if someone held a gun to my head and was attempting to force me to support one part or the other...I'd have a hole in my head!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
whoknew---
04:30 PM on 06/22/2011
well that's just grand....

it's a good thing I have my ACLU membership up to date---

geesh....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sail Away
04:58 PM on 06/22/2011
FYI, status-quo Democrats are no longer ACLU fans. Constitutionalists, Libertarians and even Tea-Baggers are the new ACLU donors. The civil liberties platform left the Democrats with the 1960s "stick-it-to-the-man" hippies. These people are now the "stick-it-to-the-man" tea-baggers.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
whoknew---
05:15 PM on 06/22/2011
uhhh....I don't know about that....

ACLU doesn't do political parties they represent even folks most people would consider questionable politically....

so if your civil liberties were in jeopardy you wouldn't consider a august body such as the ACLU to help you in your most desperate hour?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
marco01
11:30 AM on 06/23/2011
Sorry, liberals have been fans of the ACLU for a long time.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sail Away
03:06 PM on 06/22/2011
In the book Rule of Empires, Parsons cites five common characteristics that are inherent to fallen Empires. Number three on his list is a corrupt justice system. Silverglate echos this statement in his Three Felonies a Day book (referenced in part 1 of this HP article). Silverglate noted a recent example of this erosion of a Justice system was in the USSR (just prior to its fall). As I recall, Silverglate noted that the cliche' the USSR's police was 'show me the man and I'll show you the felony'. This strategy is very much alive and kicking in the US's system as confirmed by Silverglate's analogy of 'the average working professional committing an average of three felonies each day'. If you get a chance read Three Felonies a Day and then read The Big Short by Michael Lewis. You'll have better understanding of why Goldman, JPM, BofA, Citi, Deutsch, CS executives are grabbing record profits, exclusive summer homes while the average American (especially if you are male or minority) entertains great potential for prison on a daily basis.
02:37 PM on 06/22/2011
Myth # XX: You are safe from being shot to death by the police if you are home asleep in your bed and not a violent criminal.

http://www.theagitator.com/2011/06/22/william-cooper-update/

And they'll never try to frame you after the fact.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kathryn_Johnston_shooting

I could go on, but it's too depressing.... Awe, heck, just go read the whole ugly list:

http://www.drugwarrant.com/articles/drug-war-victim/
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sail Away
05:19 PM on 06/22/2011
Police killing people has gotten out of hand. I live in Denver where police killed more people than any other city (per capita). We made it to #1 in nation for complaints of excessive force. Police here killed people with toy guns, people who were unarmed, people who were attempting suicide, people casing burglars. They even tazed a homeless man to death that was in handcuffs (while sitting on him). One guy was killed by a SWAT sniper as he was carrying a cash register (unarmed).

Police training fully endorses the use of deadly force for liability reasons. If an officer is injured and and becomes dependent on disability, that costs the city money. Therefore, it's best to shoot to kill, just to be on the safe side. Do any animal species do this?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jabbaciv
So it goes.
11:08 AM on 06/23/2011
"Do any animal species do this?"

Probably most of them. Look into the social interactions of wolves. If you're from outside the pack, you're probably going to get killed approaching an existing pack.
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BannedInBoston
Everyone is entitled to my opinion.
02:03 PM on 06/22/2011
Interesting about the "absolute immunity" of judges and prosecutors. I seriously doubt this extends to defense lawyers. Prosecutors in particular ought to be liable if they, as often happens, skew or make up evidence, especially if these activiities result in the conviction of an innocent person.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
syhy71
06:10 PM on 06/23/2011
I agree, if they were held liable there would be a lot less B.S. and innocent people wouldn't be going to prison.....
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lookintomyeye
what do you see?
02:01 PM on 06/22/2011
the criminal justice system needs a complete overhaul. It is archaic, barbaric and totally out of control. Sometimes I wonder if there aren't some of the most sadistic people running it...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zetacplus
Conservatism has failed America
02:01 PM on 06/22/2011
Who in their right mind would pass a law relieving law enforcement from punishment for wrong doing? When they know they can get away with it, Isn't that what causes them to do wrong in the first place? To protect prosecutors and judges goes against our system of fairness. They say justice is blind, but that is a complete lie.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
xmlman
Proud godless heathen
03:33 PM on 06/22/2011
Cop worshiping/fellating politicians, that's who.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jabbaciv
So it goes.
11:09 AM on 06/23/2011
The politicians do it because it's popular with the voters.

Voters, particularly here in America, get off on being hard-on-crime tough guys.
02:00 PM on 06/22/2011
police officers get a "cooling off period" after a shooting or allegation of excessive force. During this period, which can range from 48 hours to 10 days, the officers under investigation cannot be asked any questions about the incident.

In NYC it's called "gettings your lies straight".
02:47 PM on 06/22/2011
Not sure why they'd need to get a story together:

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/30/us/30lima.html

Tarika was a single mother of six. Lima police executed a SWAT raid with guns drawn to arrest her boyfriend on small-time drug dealing charges. Officer Joseph Chavalia was upstairs when the sound of the other officers shooting Wilson’s dogs downstairs startled him. He shot and killed Tarika, who was unarmed, on her knees, holding her 14-month-old son and complying with orders to get down on the floor (her son was shot twice but survived).

Officer Chavalia was cleared of any wrong-doing.