A couple of notes:
(1) For those interested, I have a
long
piece at Minding the Campus examining the overall decline of due process
involving campus allegations of sexual assault—and asking why colleges are so
reluctant to treat rape what it is: a crime. In short, a combination of
pressure from the Office for Civil Rights, a general indifference to due
process by some administrators, and an aggressive attempt by campus ideologues
to introduce a system that makes rape convictions easier explain the
development.
(Update: I also have a
shorter MTC piece on poor coverage of procedure in the media, including some Group of 88-like tweets from a Journalism professor.)
(2) An interesting item a few weeks ago from the Supreme
Court. The Court declined to hear the appeal of a case called
Martin v. Blessing, where the issues
included what Justice Alito termed the “highly unusual” practice of a New York
district court judge, Harold Baer, of setting racial and gender quotas for
attorneys in class action cases. (Baer, it seems, would fit right in with the
Group of 88.) The Court chose not to hear the appeal, but Alito
penned an
interesting opinion strongly condemning Baer’s practice, what
Scotusblog’s
Tom Goldstein described as “
a warning shot
that some anomalous practices should be stopped without the Court ever having
to get involved.”
Alito’s opinion was interesting for one other reason. The
justice commented that, to the best of his knowledge, Baer was the only federal
judge who demanded that law firms in class action cases before his court employ
racial and gender quotas in “The uniqueness of this practice,” Alito wrote, “weighs
against review by this Court, but the meaning of the Court’s denial of the petition
should not be misunderstood.”
We’ll likely never know why the Supreme Court declined to
hear the appeal of the 4th Circuit’s ruling to let Durham off the
hook in the lacrosse civil suit. But it’s worth noting that Alito’s observation
would seem to apply to the facts of the lacrosse case as well—it’s extremely
rare, almost unprecedented, in recent years to have a prosecutor usurp control
of a police investigation (with the cooperation of police higher-ups) and then
manufacture evidence to obtain indictments, which were critical for his
short-term political goals. Perhaps the Court simply concluded that since we
weren’t likely to see a Mike Nifong again anytime soon, the “uniqueness” of the
lacrosse case’s facts weighed against review.
That said, the denial left in place the deeply flawed 4th
Circuit ruling, holding that at least in the circuit, no federal civil rights
violation occurs when a prosecutor conspires with police to frame innocent
people, provided that the police are candid in discussions with the prosecutor
that no real inculpatory evidence exists—and the prosecutor obtains a grand
jury indictment, even if the police mislead the grand jury about the nature of
the evidence.
[Update, Fri., 9.47am: Those wishing a chuckle
can examine the ravings of pro-Nifong crank Sidney Harr (whose Justice for Nifong committee roster includes convicted murderer Crystal Mangum). Harr and the Duke attorneys can battle it out between them.]
Hat tip: J.R.
4 comments:
That's the way, aha, aha
I like it, aha, aha
That's the way, aha, aha
I like it, aha, aha
That's the way, aha, aha
I like it, aha, aha
That's the way, aha, aha
I like it, aha, aha
Is Harold Baer a Communist?
The Atlanta Journal Constitution reported on Saturday, the 21st, that the three Morehouse students arrested on charges of rape nine months ago have not yet been indicted. They have been released on bond and suspended from Morehouse. The problem: no evidence of male DNA on the accuser. The Fulton County DA can't proceed with the case but he can't drop it either. Why not? No comment from the DA's office. Three young African-American basketball players have had their lives side-tracked.
Big Al
"the three Morehouse students"
Starting to sound like "Duke lacrosse prosecution, II"...
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