Pubdate: Tue, 02 Sep 2003 Source: Orange County Register, The (CA) Copyright: 2003 The Orange County Register Contact: http://www2.ocregister.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/321 Author: Michael Arnold Glueck, M.D., and Robert J. Cihak, M.D. THE OTHER DESTRUCTIVE TRIAL LAWYERS Rogue Prosecutors With A Big Bag Of Dirty Tricks Take Huge Toll Around U.S. We hear a lot about the excesses of private practice trial lawyers. But another group of trial lawyers has been left alone to go about their dirty work with few restrictions - and all at taxpayers' expense. And their abuse isn't just a taxpayer issue; it should also be seen as a justice issue, a privacy issue and a civil liberties issue. We refer to government prosecutors who abuse their positions to further their careers and power while spending your money. They use high-publicity cases, such as those involving the hot "drug du jour" such as OxyContin, as career steppingstones on the backs of the defendants, instead of serving the public or justice. A recent study by the Center for Public Integrity found that prosecutors stretched, bent or broke rules so badly that appeals court judges have dismissed criminal charges, reversed convictions or reduced sentences in more than 2,000 cases since 1970. And these numbers only cover the cases that went to trial - about 20 times as many defendants plead guilty before cases ever get that far. And it's in the pretrial period that the misconduct is the most hidden and the most abusive, up to and including legal extortion. Aside from concerns about individual civil liberties, the impact is felt throughout the country, in various ways on various industries. Take, for example, privacy issues. Medical records and other personal files are fair game in these pretrial fishing expeditions. The targets are often white-collar professionals or foreign-born blue-collar workers, who make easy targets because they don't fight back the way real criminals do. The abuse became so blatant at one point that the Justice Department issued a memo to U.S. attorneys to back off on such prosecutions. But it didn't help, and the abusive practice continues. Defendants are held without trial - sometimes for years - through various stalling tactics, a favorite trick to bring defendants to their knees. Prosecutors know that the more time passes, the more the defendant is unable to earn a living at the same time his legal fees mount, and the better the chances that the victim will make a bad deal just to bring the nightmare to an end. The result, as the Center for Public Integrity puts it: "The prosecutor becomes the judge and the jury." St. Louis dentist Charles Sell continues to languish in prison after more than five years awaiting trial on fraud charges that carry only about a four-year sentence and after the U.S. Supreme Court told the prosecutors they couldn't force mind-altering medications into him without his consent. Sometimes dozens of unrelated charges are piled on in the hope that the frightened defendant will plead guilty to something to make most of the other charges "go away." Yet being found guilty on even one count in these criminal cases can lead to jail and fines. In other cases, drug-dependent patients are arrested and then promised drugs if they will testify against a doctor. Psychiatric patients are threatened with involuntary confinement; senile geriatric patients are coached to change stories. The Center for Public Integrity describes the case of St. Louis prosecutor Nels C. Moss Jr., cited for misconduct in at least 25 cases by Missouri judges. Yet this prosecutor has never faced a disciplinary action, much less jail time or fines, for doing injustice to others. The Center's Web site includes examples of prosecutorial abuse from all 50 states; it's at www.publicintegrity.org/pm/ Kathryn Serkes, a Washington, D.C.-based health and public relations consult ant, is establishing the Coalition Against Prosecutorial Abuse. Serkes is planning a congressional briefing. Those who want to sign up for alerts and information should e-mail her at . Working with courageous former prosecutors and defendants willing to tell their stories, we must end this legal abuse through public education, judicial reforms and the prosecution of law-breaking prosecutors. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk