Monday, February 26, 2007

Kubby kicks off weekly "radio address" series

No, it's not the technological state of the art -- that's not the point. The point is for a Libertarian presidential candidate to take up the tradition of the "weekly radio address" that's been a staple of American politics since FDR's "fireside chat" days, and to do so in a very accessible way.

So, no bumper music or cheap sound effects -- just Steve Kubby, calling in from wherever he happens to be to chat with America.

It's also not long -- 3-5 minutes is what we're shooting for. We want dialup users to be able to listen in conveniently.

You can listen to it right here, or at the campaign web site, or at the Gcast site. You can subscribe to it via iTunes, Yahoo!, Google, MSN, newsgator or your preferred RSS client. Oh, yeah -- feel free to embed it on your blog too if you like. Gcast offers a variety of styles and sizes, and it's maintenance-free. Once you've put the code in, updates for new episodes take care of themselves.

Enjoy.



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Sunday, February 25, 2007

Pro Bono Barratry

Somewhere in the neighborhood of 98% of criminal cases in the courts end in conviction -- and 92% of that 98% is due to the pernicious practice of conveyor-belt "plea bargaining." Prosecutors have discovered that most defendants will bend over and take a "gentle" screwing if they're offered a credible threat that demanding a trial will get them the same result sans lubricant.

With that in mind, I find this story particularly disgusting:

Armstrong Teasdale LLP has announced that it has partnered with City of St. Louis Circuit Attorney, Jennifer M. Joyce, to develop an innovative program designed to support the community and give young attorneys hands-on trial experience. ... [several attorneys with the firm] will be sworn in as special prosecutors under the program. After training with the Circuit Attorneys' Office, these attorneys will assume a docket of felony criminal cases."


A St. Louis Post-Dispatch story of February 2nd, 2007, clarifies what this docket will consist of. You guessed it ... "Firm will lend five associates to prosecute drug cases."

If Armstrong Teasdale wants to "support the community," the last place it should be offering pro bono legal support is in the drug prosecution department of a prosecutor's office.

The war on drugs has been a failure in every respect except one: It's a bonanza for corrupt prosecutors. It allows them to bulk up their conviction rates at the expense of the community in every sense of the word.

It's a plea bargain promoter's wet dream, since draconian sentencing laws and the prevailing de facto presumption of guilt make it a virtual guarantee that the guy with one joint in a baggie in his glove compartment will "plead out" rather than risk being treated as a "trafficker." The biggest feed stock for this assembly line injustice is marijuana prosecution -- more than 800,000 arrests every year!

Anyone who's ever sat through a preliminary hearing in a drug case (yes, I have) knows that judges will bend over backward to cut through any inconvenient Fourth Amendment obstacles and hand the prosecutor a "case" based on even the flimsiest of evidence, after which the offer is made and the victim gets to decide whether to take the easy way out (a fine and probation) or go up against an opponent with a judge in pocket and, for all intents and purposes, an unlimited budget.

Bouvier's Law Dictionary defines barratry as "the habitual moving, exciting, and maintaining suits and quarrels, either at law or otherwise." That's pretty much the whole prosecutorial end of the war on drugs in a nutshell. More drug cases for a prosecutor mean more easy "plea bargain" convictions and a better "conviction rate." They also mean more ruined lives, more seized assets, and more dangerous streets, but no biggie ... since they allow the prosecutor to piss and moan about being "overworked" while simultaneously piling up yet more of the same kinds of cases.

If Armstrong Teasdale wants to "support the community" with pro bono work, here's an idea -- put those five attorneys to work defending drug cases. Give the victims a chance to put up a real defense in a game that's rigged against them. Let them tell the prosecutor to go pound sand when a "deal" is offered, and exercise their right to a speedy public trial before a jury of their peers. Bring Jennifer Joyce's assembly line sausage-grinder to a halt and force her to go looking for real crimes to prosecute. That would be a public service.