"If you want justice, go to a brothel. If you want to get fucked, go to court".---Richard Gere, PRIMAL FEAR
Forget LAW & ORDER. Forget John Grisham. Jury trials in America have gone the way of the VHS and wedding night virgins. Seventy-five percent of all state trials end in conviction. Ninety-five percent of federal trials end in conviction. (Ask Martha Stewart or Elizabeth Holmes, who both spent tens of millions of dollars just to get themselves convicted.) In fact, you stand a better chance of being acquitted in a court martial than in a civilian trial. This means that not only the jury but the judge and the public or private defendant have become largely irrelevant in American judicial life. The prosecutor is the only figure that really counts in criminal cases. Angela Davis, former political prisoner and one of the few people to ever beat a federal court rap, back in 1971, herewith explains why this has happened and how it is dangerous to democracy. First we have the usual suspects. Starting in the late Sixties tougher state and federal drug laws ensured that the vast majority of court cases involved the poor and people of color who could not afford to go to trial. (And, if you think a public defendant is going to save your hind quarters you belong in an asylum, not jail.) Second, mandatory minimum sentencing took away the judge's prerogative to deal out punishment with complete independence. Last, and inevitably, most legal cases are plea-bargained, some 97% of federal crimes, meaning you, the defendant either take the first deal the prosecutor offers or face trial and receive the maximum sentence. Angela (yes, I've met her at my alma mater and her ex-employer, UCLA) offers no panacea but only a package of reforms that would make prosecutors more responsible directly to the public, not the government. I pray she is right, but note that criminal justice reform, a pledge made by all the Democrats who ran in the 2020 primaries, has been ghosted.