If you mean his OWN incompetence, I agree completely! That's pretty much the point I'm trying to make.
Oh, come on, Scarlett. It was a LOT more than just a difference of perspective. Alex Hunter was KNOWN for this kind of BS. Here's a little excerpt for those who don't want to wait for December:
The DA's office in this case merits special attention. It probably tells you all you need to know about the DA's conduct in this case when you find out that their biggest supporters were and are the prime suspects, the prime suspects' lawyers and a whole mess of







defense lawyers, including Larry Pozner, who believes that everyone is innocent until proven guilty and even then they're innocent, because every single cop is a fascist bulldog, and Alan Dershowitz, whose latest claim to fame is giving legal succor to those within the government who think it's okey-doky to torture people. Let's take a look at an exchange between him and Det. Thomas from Larry King Live in 2000:
DERSHOWITZ: A prosecutor should bring a case only when on the basis of admissible evidence the case would be proved to satisfaction of a jury beyond a reasonable doubt. That's the constitutional standard. That's the standard we respect all through this country, and I think that Mr. Hunter was absolutely right in not bringing this country, and I think that Mr. Hunter was absolutely right in not bringing this case. I've looked at the Thompson book. It's full of speculation, theory, innuendo. He says his hypothesis is this. You know, that wouldn't even be a close case.
First of all, it's Thomas. Alan continued:
I think that Alex Hunter is, although he's become criticized, I think he's a constitutional hero. He's a man who has made a decision to take the barbs and the slings, and there are going to be many, because it's much easier to bring the case. It would take no courage to bring the prosecution, and then if the jury acquitted, blame it on the jury. But it takes a lot of courage for a district attorney to bite the bullet and take the hard decision, and say there was a murder, maybe it's even likely certain people did it, but likely isn't enough.
THOMAS: Well, let me make one comment. Mr. Dershowitz is with all due respect, a notorious criminal defense attorney. Where is a Vincent Bugliosi or a Rudy Giuliani sitting next to Mr. Hunter, these guys, who I consider hero prosecutors making that argument.
Ben Thompson, a Boulder County politician running for office at that time, summed it up on the same program: "It's political, the reason that it hasn't been prosecuted. And we have a district attorney's office that is more political than it is a prosecutor's office. I'm sitting here listening to those two talk, or those three talk, and it's strange to me that Alex sounds more like a defense attorney than a prosecutor, and that's part of the problem. Let me say there is a cancer in our DA's office, and whenever anybody points it out, what happens is they attack whoever points it out instead of addressing the issue and trying to solve the problem."
Patsy Ramsey had unqualified praise for the DA, Alex Hunter:
"I like the fact that he's determined to find out who did this and he wasn't going to rubber stamp the police decision."
Boy, that's just heartwarming. You're known by the friends you keep.
Alex Hunter did not want this case. He had been in office for almost thirty years without having to do much of anything. He hadn't taken a murder case to trial in almost ten years, he'd never brought the death penalty against anyone, and if not for the fact that trying to get a real, tough-on-crime prosecutor in the DA's office in Boulder is like trying to raise the Titanic remains with tweezers, probably would not have been in office so long. But Boulder has a crime rate that anyone would wish for, so he was kind of like a star on top of a Christmas tree. Then this case came along. He was cruising toward an easy retirement. He set up a definition of beyond a reasonable doubt that no one could meet. It's supposed to be "beyond a reasonable doubt, not beyond any doubt whatsoever and then some. Hunter had to eliminate unreasonable doubt, as well. It has been said, only half-jokingly, that Alex Hunter would need a DNA match, a videotape of the perp committing the crime and a signed confession just to cut a deal. He gave the Ramseys so much evidence that the FBI was aghast and said he was a fool, and suggested that the police file malfeasance charges. He was BUSINESS partners with the Ramseys, as I mentioned. A blue-collar ironworker in the projects wouldn't get that kind of consideration. And he was weak. The police wanted to arrest the Ramseys, let them stew in jail for a while, and see which one cracked first. That is a STANDARD ploy in cases like this. It helps to remember that in cases of domestic homicide, guilty verdicts are not usually won on forensic evidence, since the kind of evidence you would expect to find in a case, such as hairs, fibers, DNA, etc., is expected to be there, since it's usually the killer's own house. In cases of domestic homicide, and there are several state and federal prosecutors who will bear me out on this, you solve it the old-fashioned way: you arrest both parties, throw them in jail, and if necessary, give them each the third degree in separate rooms until one of them confesses. In 1990, Lisa Steinberg, the illegally adopted daughter of Joel Steinberg and Hedda Nusbaum, was found beaten to death in her New York apartment. With no other recourse, the NYPD arrested both parents and jailed them. Hedda Nusbaum cracked. She hired a lawyer (Barry Scheck, who worked for OJ Simpson and the Boulder Police) and testified against her husband in exchange for immunity from prosecution. Joel Steinberg went to prison. What happened with the Steinbergs is exactly what the Boulder police wanted to do with the Ramseys. The "Dream Team" lawyers told them to do it, Chief Beckner suggested that they do it, but Hunter wouldn't do it. Too bad. I guess he figured it was too "police-state-ish" for his taste. Worse than that, the man undercut his own witnesses!
And this wasn't the first time he'd done this kind of thing. Just ask Kirk Long.