By Printus LeBlanc
The U.S. Justice system is in trouble, not just the federal system, but
the state and local systems as well. A disturbing trend of politically
motivated prosecutions has emerged across the country. Congress has the
role of oversight, but many Members, themselves former District
Attorneys or U.S. Attorneys, seem hesitant to be critical of the Justice
Department. It could be for fear of tarnishing their own legacy while
they were a prosecutor, or they don’t want to believe a club they
belonged to has gone rotten. Either way, Congress must wake up take a
hard look at the U.S. justice system from the point of view of someone
being falsely accused by a legal behemoth with unlimited resources.
...The misconduct is not limited to state and local district attorneys;
the federal justice system is also rife with bad behavior. The late
Senator Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) was the target of such an unjust attack.
In 2008, 100 days before the elections, Department of Justice prosecutors indicted the Alaskan Senator
on seven counts of making false statements related to gift giving.
Stevens would ask for a speedy trial and be granted one. In October of
2008, Stevens was found guilty of seven counts of making false
statements.
The story doesn’t end there. In February 2009 a whistleblower came
forward with damning claims of prosecutorial misconduct. One of the FBI
agents involved in the case had an inappropriate relationship with the prosecution’s star witness Bill Allen. To further complicate matters, the whistleblower alleged Allen also gave gifts to FBI agents and even helped a family member of an FBI agent get a job.
The prosecutors withheld exculpatory material from the defense,
including witness statements that refuted the prosecution’s case.
A few weeks after the whistleblower came forward, the judge in the case would hold the prosecutors
in contempt calling the conduct outrageous. Six weeks later the Justice
Department would submit a motion to set aside the verdict and dismiss
the indictment with prejudice. At the same time the Department launched
an investigation that lasted three years, concluding with a 525 page report
stating, “The investigation and prosecution of U.S. Senator Ted Stevens
were permeated by the systematic concealment of significant exculpatory
evidence which would have independently corroborated Senator Stevens’s
defense and his testimony, and seriously damaged the testimony and
credibility of the government’s key witness.”
Sidney Powell, a former federal prosecutor, authored the book Licensed to Lie
in 2015, detailing prosecutorial misconduct in dozens of federal cases.
A quick glance at the Robert Mueller-led Special Counsel investigation
into the 2016 election, with the multiple conflicts of interest and
stonewalling of Congress, scream for another chapter in the book.
Congress and Attorney General Jeff Sessions must put their personal
feelings aside, and identify rot in the system when they see it
regardless if it’s coming from the federal, state, or local officials.
People are losing faith in the Justice System and actions must be taken
to restore it before it is too late.
Printus LeBlanc is a contributing editor at Americans for Limited Government.
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
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When I asked a third generation NM lawyer "why doesn't the judge just rule on the statute?" He called it "cirumventing the legislature". Activist judges, lawyers that are complicit with that and churn the case.
The swamp is wide and deep.
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