Pubdate: Tue, 4 May 2010 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Copyright: 2010 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Chris Herring Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Bronx BRONX ACQUITTALS SET RECORD High Arrest Rate, Tense Relations Mark Borough; 'Let the Guy Walk' Bronx jurors in felony cases found defendants guilty only 43% of the time last year, the lowest conviction rate in New York City since the state began tracking such data 22 years ago. The Bronx stands in stark contrast to the other boroughs, all of which had felony conviction rates of 70% or higher last year, according to the New York State Unified Court System, which tracks the data. For the first two months of 2010, the latest data available, the Bronx conviction rate was 48%. High arrest rates may have contributed to the low conviction rate. In closing arguments of a felony drug trial last week, Bronx defense attorney Seann Riley hammered home a message he'd been suggesting to the jury all along: You can't trust the police. "In this case, they have a motive to lie," said Mr. Riley, who argued that an undercover officer had wrongly identified his client as a drug seller. "To them, getting a guilty verdict would mean they've done a good job. An acquittal would mean they didn't do a good job." His client was acquitted. Anthony Schepis, an executive assistant district attorney for Bronx County, defended the district attorney's conviction rate numbers, saying that felony jury trials account for only a small proportion of the office's cases. He added that the conviction rate is near 90% when plea deals are factored in. Mr. Schepis said the district attorney's office didn't view jurors in the Bronx as unfair. "If others want to characterize it differently, that's fine," Mr. Schepis said. "But we're not going to do that." "We know jurors here will make us prove our cases beyond a reasonable doubt," he said. The Bronx-which has been the location of notorious cases such as the police shooting of Amadou Diallo in 1999 and Larry Davis's shootout with police in 1986-has seen tensions between the police and the community run high over time. Some say those tensions have contributed to the low conviction rate. "There's no doubt that with [conviction rate] numbers like that you've got some Bronx juries that say 'guilty' mentally, but let the guy walk anyway," said Eugene O'Donnell, a lecturer at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice and former prosecutor in the Brooklyn District Attorney's office. "The Bronx has a healthy mistrust for the police and that has a part in why there are so many acquittals," says defense attorney Ron Kuby, who has represented many Bronx defendants, including Mr. Davis. "It has an impact because so many cases in the Bronx are drug-related and depend almost exclusively on testimony from police officers." Walking out of the Bronx County Hall of Justice after an acquittal last month, juror Fredina Renee, 23 years old, said her group's not-guilty verdicts were based on scant evidence, not a mistrust of law-enforcement officials. "It wasn't really about the police's word in the case-it was about the evidence," she said. "I think right away [in deliberations] everyone kind of thought there needed to be more proof than there was." The crime rate in the Bronx and the city alike has fallen in the past decade. The Bronx saw 113 homicides last year, down more than 40% from 2001; citywide, murders are down more 27%, from 641 in 2001. Violent crimes in the Bronx are down about 27% since 2001, and are down 34% citywide. Still, the Bronx has the highest adult arrest rate of the five boroughs. The adult arrest rate in the Bronx last year, 88.1 arrests for every 1,000 residents, was far higher than that of the next closest borough, Manhattan, at 64.6 for every 1,000 residents. The number of adult arrests in the Bronx has grown 36% since 2001, outpacing other boroughs. More than 100,000 arrests were made in the borough last year. Mr. O'Donnell said the high arrest rate contributes to the high level of acquittals: "If the DA put its foot down, the arrest rates might lower, and the conviction rate might be higher." Chief police spokesman Paul Browne defended the arrests in the borough, saying, "Most of them are so strong that people decide not to go to trial." A Bronx native himself, Mr. Browne said that the policing of the borough over the past few years has made the Bronx safer, and that relations between the community and the police have "never been better." Aamir Thompson, 33, Mr. Riley's client who was acquitted last week, said divisions between the community and the police grow each time someone is acquitted. He lost his job in building security in 2008 after being charged with selling drugs to an undercover officer. "That's exactly why they can't be trusted," he said. "They arrest people and they don't have enough evidence to prove things." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake