By Kevin D. Williamson
Sunday, May 31, 2015
As the old Vulcan proverb has it, “Only Nixon can go to
China.” And only Nixon’s political heirs can fix the persistent — and
terrifying — problems that continue to plague this country’s law-enforcement
agencies and prosecutors’ offices.
Exhibit A: Orange County, California.
The sunny Southern California county with a population
surpassing that of nearly half the states has a Republican district attorney,
Tony Rackauckas, and a big problem on its hands: Its entire prosecutorial
apparatus — all 250 lawyers in the district attorney’s office — have been
disqualified from participation in a high-profile capital-murder case following
revelations that the office colluded with the Orange County sheriff’s
department to systematically suppress potentially exculpatory evidence in at
least three dozen cases, committing what legal scholars have characterized as
perjury and obstruction of justice in the process.
One of the questions involves a secret database of jail
records related to confessions obtained via informants. Sheriff’s officers
denied the database even existed, and their deception was abetted by
prosecutors, leading an exasperated judge to issue an order noting that they
“have either intentionally lied or willfully withheld material evidence from this
court during the course of their various testimonies. For this court’s current
purposes, one is as bad as the other.” The judge unsubtly recommends
prosecution.
The database tracking inmates’ movements around the jail
and the reason for those movements is significant, because Orange County law
enforcement and prosecutors were in the habit of placing targeted suspects in
proximity to criminal informants, who were rewarded with reduced sentences,
favors, or money — payments in some instances ran into the six figures — for
helping put together cases against jailed suspects. This practice is illegal.
It is one thing if a suspect in custody speaks about his crimes and an
informant comes forward to report that confession; it is another thing to
operate a program under which the interrogation of suspects is effectively
delegated to incarcerated felons who are secretly on the county’s payroll. The
lack of present legal counsel is only the beginning of what is wrong with that
practice.
To operate such a program is ipso facto a violation of
the law and of ethical standards for jailers and prosecutors both. To lie about
it is a serious crime. It may turn out to be a lucky thing after all that these
defective prosecutions will probably open up a great many jail cells: Orange
County is going to have to put these sheriff’s officers and prosecutors
somewhere.
The despair-inducing details of the case can be located
in the pages of OC Weekly, but the climax so far is this:
Superior Court Judge Thomas M. Goethals made an unprecedented, historic move after announcing he’d lost confidence in Orange County homicide and gang prosecutors to obey simple legal rules of conduct. Goethals, a onetime prosecutor and campaign contributor to the DA, recused Rackauckas and his entire staff from People v. Scott Dekraai, the capital case stemming from the 2011 Seal Beach salon massacre.
What this means is that the prosecutors’ office is, in
effect, an example of that other O.C.: organized crime.
A secret cache of electronic records containing
information that is potentially embarrassing to political figures, and the
criminal handling of that database, is of course an all-too-familiar story to
those of us who have been following the saga of Hillary Rodham Clinton’s
e-mails, which were originally in digital form, were converted into paper
printouts, and are now in the process of being redigitized before they are
handed over to investigators, a process that only the naïve would believe
exists for any purpose other than tampering with the evidence. The Orange County
authorities had been using their database, called TRED, for a quarter of a
century. Prosecutors were aware of it, and the sheriff’s officers who testified
before Judge Goethals had made thousands of entries in it. Yet they could not
quite recall its existence when honor, duty, and the law obliged them to do so.
This is not a one-off. Prosecutorial misconduct is a
plague upon these United States, from the vodka-pickled Democratic political
jihadists in Austin to California, where judges complain of an “epidemic” of
prosecutorial misconduct abetted by Democratic attorney general Kamala Harris,
who is seeking to replace retiring Barbara Boxer in the Senate.
The Democrats have long been acculturated to the climate
of corruption that attends government agencies that are largely free of
ordinary accountability, where a carefully cultivated lack of transparency
shields operatives from scrutiny and normal oversight. Republicans can rouse
themselves to action, if only barely, when this involves the federal Internal
Revenue Service or Environmental Protection Agency. But deference to police
agencies and prosecutors is so habitual among the members of the law-and-order
party that they instinctively look for excuses when presented with obvious
examples of police misconduct, and twiddle their thumbs in the 99 percent of
cases of prosecutorial misconduct that do not involve a Republican elected
official.
But only the Republican party has the credibility and the
political capital to take on the difficult and sure-to-be-thankless task of
reining in rogue police agencies and abusive prosecutors — and they may as well
take a look at our scandalous prisons while they are at it. Some Republican
leaders, notably Texas’s former governor Rick Perry, have been active and
energetic partisans of reform, largely under the banner of the excellent Right
on Crime campaign. But this is not really a job for presidents or even
governors: This is a job for mayors, city councilmen, district attorneys,
sheriffs, and police chiefs. In the bigger cities, Republicans are thin indeed
in those ranks. But that is not the case in Orange County. In Orange County,
Republicans have no excuse.
Democrats may have ruined Detroit, Baltimore, Cleveland,
etc., and they are well on their way toward doing the same thing to Los
Angeles, Philadelphia, New York, etc. If Republicans want to show that they can
do better, then fixing the mess in Orange County, a community more populous
than Chicago, would be an excellent place to start.
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