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Anti Federalist
03-30-2011, 02:31 PM
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A man who was on death row, at one point weeks away from execution, sued the state of Louisiana because prosecutors illegally sat on exculpatory evidence, for years, that was eventually used to find him innocent.

SCROTUS rules today that he has no right to sue the prosecutor, who was only one of two things in this case: corrupt or incompetent.

And people wonder why I'm so opposed to capital punishment. :mad:



Supreme Court Firms Up State Immunity From Wrongful Conviction Lawsuits

Tuesday, March 29th, 2011

http://www.theagitator.com/2011/03/29/supreme-court-firms-up-state-immunity-from-wrongful-conviction-lawsuits/

By a ideologically right-left, 5-4 vote, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled today (PDF) that a wrongly convicted Louisiana man—who at one point was just weeks away from execution—isn’t permitted to sue the DA’s office that for 14 years sat on the evidence proving his innocence.

Jacob Sullum wrote about Connick v. Thompson in March of last year. As Sullum pointed out, while it’s clear that prosecutors knew about the evidence for years (a bloody piece of cloth), there are competing theories about whether they knew they had to turn the cloth over and willfully withheld it anyway, or if they simply didn’t know they were obligated to turn it over. (As Sullum also noted, it’s hard to decide which scenario is worse.) The latter seems rather unlikely, even though during the civil trial, Orelans Parish District Attorney Harry Connick and his assistants apparently couldn’t articulate the Brady Rule, the law requiring the disclosure of such evidence. Of course, the former—the willful misconduct—is also much harder to prove.

In any case, the Court’s ruling today, taken with past rulings, further illustrates how the old mantra that “ignorance of the law is no excuse” seems to apply to everyone except actual members of law enforcement.

The majority opinion, written by Justice Clarence Thomas, found that the failure of Connick (fun side note: he’s the father of crooner Harry Connick, Jr.) to train his assistants on their obligations to turn over exculpatory evidence isn’t negligent enough to subject the government that employs him to liability. Connick and his assistants themselves (an office with a long history of misconduct) were already protected from any personal liability by absolute prosecutorial immunity, a concept the Supreme Court essentially invented from whole cloth.

Keith Findley, President of the Innocence Network, comments:


“Basically, what the Court is saying is that because they are lawyers, there was no reason for the District Attorney to believe that his prosecutors might need training to be sure they are fulfilling their constitutional obligations to disclose information that might be useful to their defense. This logic completely ignores the reality of what happened to John Thompson who was sentenced to death by prosecutors who repeatedly failed in their obligation to disclose exculpatory information. No other profession is shielded from this complete lack of accountability.”

The ruling also negates a $14 million jury award to John Thompson, the man wrongly convicted. It also means that for his 18 years in prison, 14 of which he spent on death row, Thompson will now at most get $150,000, the maximum compensation for a wrongful conviction allowed under Louisiana law.

fisharmor
03-30-2011, 03:14 PM
Wrongly sit in prison for 18 years: max $150,000.

Spill McDonald's coffee on your own motherfucking lap: final decision, $640,000.

Pericles
03-30-2011, 03:39 PM
Wrongly sit in prison for 18 years: max $150,000.

Spill McDonald's coffee on your own motherfucking lap: final decision, $640,000.
What a country! When the system comes down on you - that is the end of you. It is good to be a part of the Mandarin class.

Sola_Fide
03-30-2011, 03:42 PM
scrotus?

Anti Federalist
03-30-2011, 03:43 PM
scrotus?

Say it three times and you can keep it.

jkr
03-30-2011, 03:57 PM
scrotus!
scrotus!
scrotus!


i like it, lets see if it sticks...

Stary Hickory
03-30-2011, 04:12 PM
Yea this is total BS, 150,000 dollars does not even begin to approach the damage done to this mans life. There is no way to really repay him for what he lost. In fact you would have to ask him personally what amount of money in his eyes might make sense in light of the travesty he suffered, If you ask me the man should not have to worry about working for the rest of his life.

Kylie
03-30-2011, 04:18 PM
What a miscarriage of justice. Is there any way to take up a donation for him or something, and introduce him to our way of thinking? He could be very good in showing the emotional side of our screwed up system.

Stary Hickory
03-30-2011, 04:43 PM
Well if prosecutors willing withheld evidence that might have freed this man they should be subject to criminal proceedings, that is the next step. They need to go and be locked up themselves. If they knew this man was innocent or withheld evidence that could clear him? They need to pay for it.

AJ Antimony
03-30-2011, 05:14 PM
The majority's logic is:

By suing the DA in his official capacity, Thompson is suing the municipality, which can be liable for damages. To prove liability, Thompson must show that the DA's office has a 'policy' or 'custom' of screwing people over by ignoring the Brady rule. Because Thompson wasn't able to show there was a 'policy' of ignoring the Brady rule, he wasn't able to show that the municipality as a whole was liable for damages.

Thompson might have gotten more than $150,000 if he perhaps sued the DA and ADAs in their personal capacities, but since the municipality has deep pockets he tried his luck suing the DA in his official capacity.

Immunity sucks balls.

LibForestPaul
03-30-2011, 05:55 PM
Thompson might have gotten more than $150,000 if he perhaps sued the DA and ADAs in their personal capacities, but since the municipality has deep pockets he tried his luck suing the DA in his official capacity.
.

Connick and his assistants themselves (an office with a long history of misconduct) were already protected from any personal liability by absolute prosecutorial immunity, a concept the Supreme Court essentially invented from whole cloth.

Kylie
03-30-2011, 06:00 PM
Sounds like prosecutorial immunity plays well for only one person.

The prosecutor. I don't like it.

Why isn't the entire system that fucked him able to be redressed? Isn't that one of our 1st amendment rights?

Anti Federalist
03-30-2011, 06:41 PM
Connick and his assistants themselves (an office with a long history of misconduct) were already protected from any personal liability by absolute prosecutorial immunity, a concept the Supreme Court essentially invented from whole cloth.

That ^^^

Anti Federalist
04-03-2011, 03:01 PM
Conservative=Evil

Posted by Lew Rockwell on April 3, 2011 11:54 AM

http://www.lewrockwell.com/blog/lewrw/archives/84568.html

Dahlia Lithwick calls a recent Supremes’ edict “cruel,”but it is far worse than that. Led by Cheney henchman Clarence Thomas, and including all the other conservatives, the gang of 5 held that a man who spent 14 years on death row, and was almost murdered by Louisiana 7 times thanks to prosecutorial abuse, has no recourse. The victim is only alive because a guilty prosecutor confessed, on his deathbed, to withholding exculpatory evidence. Unfortunately, he confessed to another prosecutor, who kept the truth secret for five years. In this Supremo decision we see the true nature of neocon, Federalist Society justice: prosecutors must never, ever be held responsible for their crimes. As Bill Anderson and Paul Craig Roberts have shown, the prosecutors constitute a criminal gang of immense use to the American police state.

Dr.3D
04-03-2011, 03:14 PM
Well, if he can't sue, then I suppose they won't feel bad if he finds a different way to get justice.