[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Sounds Like They're Trying to Get Ghislaine Maxwell out of Prison

Mississippi declared a public health emergency over its infant mortality rate (guess why)

Andy Ngo: ANTIFA is a terrorist organization & Trump will need a lot of help to stop them

America Is Reaching A Boiling Point

The Pandemic Of Fake Psychiatric Diagnoses

This Is How People Actually Use ChatGPT, According To New Research

Texas Man Arrested for Threatening NYC's Mamdani

Man puts down ABC's The View on air

Strong 7.8 quake hits Russia's Kamchatka

My Answer To a Liberal Professor. We both See Collapse But..

Cash Jordan: “Set Them Free”... Mob STORMS ICE HQ, Gets CRUSHED By ‘Deportation Battalion’’

Call The Exterminator: Signs Demanding Violence Against Republicans Posted In DC

Crazy Conspiracy Theorist Asks Questions About Vaccines

New owner of CBS coordinated with former Israeli military chief to counter the country's critics,

BEST VIDEO - Questions Concerning Charlie Kirk,

Douglas Macgregor - IT'S BEGUN - The People Are Rising Up!

Marine Sniper: They're Lying About Charlie Kirk's Death and They Know It!

Mike Johnson Holds 'Private Meeting' With Jewish Leaders, Pledges to Screen Out Anti-Israel GOP Candidates

Jimmy Kimmel’s career over after ‘disgusting’ lies about Charlie Kirk shooter [Plus America's Homosexual-In-Chief checks-In, Clot-Shots, Iryna Zarutska and More!]

1200 Electric School Busses pulled from service due to fires.

Is the Deep State Covering Up Charlie Kirk’s Murder? The FBI’s Bizarre Inconsistencies Exposed

Local Governments Can Be Ignorant Pissers!!

Cash Jordan: Gangs PLUNDER LA Mall... as California’s “NO JAILS” Strategy IMPLODES

Margin Debt Tops Historic $1 Trillion, Your House Will Be Taken Blindly Warns Dohmen

Tucker Carlson LIVE: America After Charlie Kirk

Charlie Kirk allegedly recently refused $150 million from Israel to take more pro Israel stances

"NATO just declared War on Russia!"Co; Douglas Macgregor

If You're Trying To Lose Weight But Gaining Belly Fat, Watch Insulin

Arabica Coffee Prices Soar As Analyst Warns of "Weather Disasters" Risk Denting Global Production

Candace Owens: : I Know What Happened at the Hamptons (Ackman confronted Charlie Kirk)


Dead Constitution
See other Dead Constitution Articles

Title: Did Obama Wimp Out on a Rape Case?
Source: Daily Beast
URL Source: http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2009-03-07/death-row/
Published: Apr 24, 2009
Author: Radley Balko
Post Date: 2009-04-24 15:41:27 by bush_is_a_moonie
Keywords: None
Views: 182
Comments: 4

The president who was once a champion of defendant's right to DNA evidence as a senator in Illinois has now let his Justice Department oppose that right at the Supreme Court. What happened?

This week at the Supreme Court, the Obama administration took a position that both surprised and dismayed the president’s supporters in the criminal-justice and civil-rights communities. The Department of Justice’s action was “pretty disappointing,” says David C. Fathi of the civil-rights organization Human Rights Watch. "It isn't consistent with Obama's history of fighting for more access to DNA testing."

At issue in District Attorney's Office for the Third Judicial District v. Osborne is whether the US Constitution allows state governments to withhold potentially exonerating DNA evidence from defendants who have duly exhausted all appeals. The defendant, William Osborne, was convicted of a rape and kidnapping in Alaska in 1993. At that time, primitive DNA tests on a degraded semen sample narrowed the field of possible perpetrators to 16 percent of black men, including Osborne.

The state concedes that modern DNA testing would establish conclusively whether Osborne is guilty or innocent, and Osborne's attorneys at the Innocence Project offered to pay for the $1,000 test. Yet Alaska has refused to turn over the semen sample, on the grounds that Osborne’s trial produced more than sufficient proof that he committed the crime. “If there was other doubtful evidence,” Ken Rosenstein, the state’s lead attorney on the case, told the Anchorage Daily News, “things might be different."

Alaska is one of six states that provide no statutory right to post-conviction DNA testing. Osborne’s lawyers hoped to establish a constitutional right to that testing. But, surprisingly, the new administration backed the state of Alaska.

While Obama was a state senator in Illinois, the Chicago Tribune and a Northwestern University journalism class uncovered serious deficiencies in the way the state was prosecuting death-penalty cases. Eventually, 18 death-row inmates were exonerated in Illinois, prompting Gov. George Ryan to declare a moratorium on executions.

Obama co-sponsored a bill in the Illinois legislature that ensured access to potentially exonerating DNA evidence. When he ran for president, his website touted a 1999 article in which Obama called for more widespread access to DNA testing.

Asked about the apparent contradiction between those actions and the DOJ’s position on Osborne, Department of Justice spokesman Matthew J. Miller said in a written statement, “The president has supported legislation giving access to post-conviction DNA testing in appropriate circumstances, and to date 44 states and the federal government have enacted DNA testing statutes. The solicitor general’s position in the case does nothing to draw into question the validity of, and the great need for, DNA testing statutes.”

But it does stop well short of endorsing a federal right to such tests. Yet if being able to prove one's innocence is as important as Obama has said it is, why shouldn't the citizens of Alaska (or any of the other five states with similar laws) be guaranteed the same access to testing as the citizens of Illinois?

Obama is no federalist. Nor has he, in the past, subscribed to the sort of “originalist” arguments that say we can’t read rights into the Constitution that weren’t there in the beginning. Yet that is the gist of the federal government's brief in Osborne, which says “There is no tradition in this country of granting convicted criminals post-conviction access to the prosecution’s evidence locker…. And constitutional rights do not spring into existence simply because science has advanced.”

On the other side, one amicus brief filed on Osborne’s behalf by several former prosecutors (including former US Attorney General Janet Reno) points to several cases in which prosecutors vigorously fought DNA testing for years. When the tests were finally done, they not only cleared the defendant, but, by using DNA databases, identified the actual culprit, who in some cases had gone on to commit more crimes. It also noted that there have been earlier cases, similar to Osborne’s, in which defendants convicted on apparently “overwhelming’ evidence” of guilt were later exonerated by DNA testing.

In the end, the more likely explanation for the Obama Justice Department’s position in Osborne is inertia and deference to tradition. The Bush administration wasn't obligated to take a position Osborne, but it did anyway, filing a brief just days before Bush left office. That's the brief that Obama's deputy solicitor general defended on Monday, continuing the tradition by which a new administration generally argues the old administration's positions in holdover federal court cases.

The argument is that this tradition somehow preserves the integrity of the solicitor general's office. But the solicitor general serves at the pleasure of the president, and is supposed to represent an administration's opinion of what the law is, or ought to be. A change of party in the White House is of course going to bring a change in legal philosophy.

If you happen to be someone wrongly incarcerated in one of the six states that don't guarantee post-conviction DNA testing, hoping for access to the evidence that could set you free, it must be pretty hard to swallow the idea that reverence for some procedural tradition may have prompted the "hope and change" president to argue you have no right to prove your innocence.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: bush_is_a_moonie (#0)

Where's Barry Scheck when you need him?


I've already said too much.

MUDDOG  posted on  2009-04-24   16:36:12 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: bush_is_a_moonie, PSUSA, ROTARA, Prefontal vortex (#0)

How long have I been saying in this 4um that the LegalIndustrialComplex is NOT concerned with justice, but rather control, power and MONEY.

Barry Sotoro: Change you can believe in!

Ironically enough, this Commie Leftist actually wants to force DNA to be extracted from all arrestees, even though they are presumed innocent. Newborns are probably next. It will all be "for the chil'ren!" Of course, allowing fingerprints to be taken from arrestees and kept on file even after being found innocent in one of our kangaroo courts is also an unconstitutional travesty which we've allowed forever, as are the collection and dissemination of personal info such as consumer and credit information to businesses, employers and others. The ameriKan Sheople are to blame for everything that happens to them.

What few rights were not destroyed (with our silent consent) by Bush and his predecessors (over the last several scores of years) will soon be set ablaze by Barry and his band of Leftist jesters, dykes, fags and Jews.

Expatriation looks better every day.

--Jack Mehoff

Law Enforcement Against Prohibition

IndieTX  posted on  2009-04-24   17:28:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: IndieTX, All (#2)

They have already floated several trial balloons.

Here is one example I had on my old site. Another fine example of pigs doing what pigs do:

---------------------------------------------------

www.politechbot.com/2007/...colorado-sheriff-creates/

I've been behind on Politech recently, but this story made me irritated enough to catch up on things.

The Gilpin County Sheriff's Office in Colorado, a rural area not that far west of Denver, recently set up a highway checkpoint where motorists were stopped and, at least in some cases, not allowed to leave until they gave breath, blood, and saliva samples for the benefit of a private research firm. A report by Ernie Hancock says the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration was involved as well.

A Denver Post article is here: http://www.denverpost.com/headlines/ci_6922089

More: http://cw2.trb.com/news/kwgn-invasive-checkpoint,0,2092732.story http://worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=57733 http://freedomsphoenix.com/Discussion-Page.htm?InfoNo=024006

The Post says the private organization in question is the Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, or PIRE, in Calverton, MD. Their Web site seems to be down but can be viewed here: http://web.archive.org/web/20050826173038/www.pire.org/

This seems to be a fine opportunity for Politech readers to let PIRE executives and Gilpin County supervisors know what they think about police abusing their authority at the demand of a private research firm.

Click for Privacy and Preparedness files

PSUSA  posted on  2009-04-24   18:48:50 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: PSUSA (#3) (Edited)

The Gilpin County Sheriff's Office in Colorado, a rural area not that far west of Denver, recently set up a highway checkpoint where motorists were stopped and, at least in some cases, not allowed to leave until they gave breath, blood, and saliva samples for the benefit of a private research firm. A report by Ernie Hancock says the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration was involved as well.

Good thing I didn't run into this checkpoint. Not allowed to leave until giving breath blood saliva?? That would have been when one of my many lines in the sand was crossed. In fact, I will not be stopping at any checkpoints, all of which are unconstitutional, regardless of what some robed whore lawyer judge has decided.

Law Enforcement Against Prohibition

IndieTX  posted on  2009-04-24   18:59:16 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]