Conviction Machine; Standing up to federal prosecutorial abuse

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Americans have recently witnessed the perhaps unprecedented abuse of our federal law enforcement agencies, especially the FBI and the Department of Justice, to target the opposition political candidate, morphing into an effort to cripple President Donald Trump upon his unexpected election in 2016. In the process, the FBI and the special counsel, Robert Mueller, targeted not only the president but his closest associates and advisors, looking for anything that might be “pinned” on them. But the long-awaited Mueller Report found no “collusion” between Russia and anyone in the Trump campaign, and it did not recommend prosecution for obstruction of justice. Evidence is coming to light by the day revealing that the entire “Russian collusion” and obstruction narratives were a concoction of the political opposition and high-ranking officials in what used to be our most trusted (at least by many) law enforcement institutions. However, abuse of prosecutorial power is hardly a partisan phenomenon. It is systemic. The ability of prosecutors to “pin some offense” on anyone they choose is the subject of Harvey Silverglate’s book Three Felonies a Day: How the Feds Target the Innocent (2009/2011).3 As Silverglate demonstrated, the average busy professional going about his business will unknowingly commit three felonies in a normal day because there are so many criminal laws in the code. Through statutory analysis, case law, and the experiences of criminal lawyers defending cases across the spectrum of federal statutes, he showed how federal agents and prosecutors are able to prosecute virtually any person and any undertaking or transaction on felony charges. The feds need only to target somebody who has become an object of prosecutorial interest for any reason whatsoever. Today, the federal criminal justice system is dangerously effective at turning citizens into convicts. More than twenty million Americans have criminal convictions, while nearly one-third of Americans have a criminal record. The author discusses the reforms that are needed based on real life examples of recent abuses.

Author(s): Harvey Silverglate, Sidney Powell
Year: 2020

Language: English
Pages: 171
Tags: Prosecution—United States; Public prosecutors—United States; Criminal justice, Administration of—United States; Politics;Government;Department of Justice;DOJ;FBI;Prosecutorial Misconduct;Malicious Prosecution;Malfeasance;Plea Bargains;Ethics;Political Corruption;Investigations;Subversion;Perjury;Entrapment;Plea Bargain;wwg1wga

Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Preface
Chapter One: Catch 22: What Talking to the FBI Can Do to You
Chapter Two: There’s Nothing Grand about Grand Juries: Except Their Size
Chapter Three: Acts of God: Discovery and the Hide-and-Seek Problem
Chapter Four: What Does the Law Require of Us?: The Conundrum of Criminal Intent
Chapter Five: Plea Bargaining: Dancing with the Devil
Chapter Six: An Offer He Can’t Refuse: Use Immunity Statutes—Not Backroom Deals—to Compel Testimony
Chapter Seven: Prosecutorial Misconduct: Who Will Prosecute the Prosecutor?
Chapter Eight: Where Have All the Judges Gone?: Federal Courts Have Supervisory Power over Federal Criminal Justice, and It’s High Time They Used It
Chapter Nine: Once Is Not Enough: Restore habeas corpus and coram nobis, Repeal the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996
Coda: Action Items for Criminal Justice Reform
Acknowledgments
Appendices
Notes
Index