Gitana, you sound like you versed in Arkansas law. Couple of questions if you don't mind. First, when I used the word "conviction" in " ", I was referencing the "convictions" entered following the jury trials, not the guilty pleas. In the eyes of the law, once the trial court granted the new trial, it had to set aside THOSE "convictions", so THOSE "convictions" do not exist.
Secondly, regarding the guilty pleas and attendant SIS (not expungement, which is different). It sounds to me like you are saying an SIS works differently in Arkansas than where I am at. Where I am, after successfully completing an SIS, you do NOT have to disclose it as a conviction/guilty plea for employment purposes and it would not show up on a criminal background check run by a potential employer. If asked, under oath, "Have you ever been convicted of or plead guilty to a felony or misdemeanor?" the witness could honestly and under oath answer "No.". That is NOT to say that their case file is destroyed or disappears. That is not to say, if later arrested, that LE would not see it or consider it. I've asked it before and I guess what I'm wondering, is are you saying that Arkansas specifically handles it differently? And again, I'm not talking about expungement but rather the simple effect that successful completion of an SIS has. TIA
I get ya'. Yes, those convictions were totally vacated. That's very true.
Nor did I suggest as much. I've seen judges overturn convictions and refuses guilty pleas before though, and were I a judge I'd feel morally obligated to do so when the body of evidence proves innocence, wouldn't you?
I'm aware of the fact that people violate their ethical obligations, both prosecutors and otherwise. I've seen no evidence to suggest such depravity is inherent to prosecutors though, or even typical, and vague allusions to the few cases the Innocent Project have dealt with don't come anywhere close to proving such corruption is anything close to as ubiquitous as you proclaim.
Rather, misrepresentations of evidence was the subject of their appeals both to the courts and to the public over the past two decades, but the body of evidence in this case remains conclusive beyond any reasonable doubt. Hence all the people typing in caps and arguing in circles around even such simple matters of fact as
where Echols lived at the time of the murders and making wildly exaggerated claims about
the timeline and circumstances of Misskelley's initial confession.
The body of evidence does not "prove innocence". It does not appear enough to prove guilt anymore, however. This is not a black and white case no matter how many people on either side think it is. The WM3 had enough in their appeals to create a deal which was a compromise for both sides. That happens a lot in the legal system. If the prosecution felt their evidence was strong enough of really believed in their case, they would not have let three baby killers go free. They would have demanded the appellate process go on. That's my experience.
And while the WM3 waited for a new trial, they would still be in prison, Echols still on death row. So, the judge was not morally obligated to refuse to accept the plea, not by a long shot. But let me turn the question on it's head again: Wouldn't the judge be morally obligated to uphold the convictions of three baby killers if the body of evidence proved they were guilty?
No, depravity certainly isn't inherent to prosecutors. But there are not a few cases dealt with by the Innocence Project. There are hundreds. I never said corruption was ubiquitous (ever present). With utmost respect, please do not misquote me or twist my words.
However, it is sadly not completely rare when it comes to the state hiding evidence, influencing witnesses and it is quite common for prosecutors to refuse to play ball when it comes to overturning convictions of clearly innocent convicts, even when DNA evidence proves otherwise or witness evidence proves fallible, etc. We just had two such cases in the news recently:
Judge Katherine Mader's ruling eviscerated the case against Register, 53, who was convicted mainly on eyewitness testimony that his attorneys say was false. They also said police and prosecutors suppressed evidence that would have helped Register's defense, accusations that Mader found credible.
Vanderkam worked at the same LAPD station as the detectives investigating the shooting. She said she tried to tell one of them that Brenda Anderson had lied.
"The detective placed his finger over his mouth (like a shush sound) and just stared at me," she said in her declaration. "He made it very clear to me, without actually saying anything, that I was to stay out of it."
Sharon Anderson also told police that they had they wrong man, she said in court papers. After the shooting, police showed her six photographs, including one of Register.
"Your sister, Brenda Anderson, said it's him — this one, right here," Sharon Anderson recalled them saying, according to court papers.
She said she replied: "Well, it's not the same guy I seen."
Police threatened to lock her up for the stolen Avon package, she said. She didn't waver.
Police and prosecutors never disclosed what Sharon Anderson said to the defense, Register's attorneys said. She did not testify during his trial.
Register's attorneys expect him to be released soon. Los Angeles County prosecutors said they would decide by next month whether to appeal her decision or retry him.
http://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-innocence-hearing-20131108,0,5797031.story#axzz2kYVPuQaB
A Missouri man freed Tuesday after his murder conviction was overturned thanked what he described as "an army" of supporters who backed his claims of innocence through nearly a decade behind bars for the death of a newspaper sports editor.
Ryan Ferguson was released after the Missouri attorney general decided Tuesday not to retry him for the 2001 slaying of Columbia Daily Tribune sports editor Kent Heitholt. His release came one week after a state appeals court panel overturned Ferguson's conviction, saying the prosecutor's office withheld evidence from Ferguson's attorneys and he didn't get a fair trial.
Last week's appeals court ruling said an investigator in the Boone County prosecutor's office should have shared details about an interview he had with Trump's wife that would have raised questions about Trump's account. The appeals panel cited that as part of a pattern in which prosecutors failed to disclose evidence to Ferguson's attorneys.
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/11/1...-after-conviction-in-2001-killing-overturned/
The body of evidence simply does not prove their guilt beyond a reasonable doubt or they would never be free. The DA is a political office and their decisions are political. Letting three killer sof children go free is a ighly charged decision that reflects badly on the prosecutions office, politically. So it was not done lightly. No one has convictions vacated (as their original convictions were) based on "misrepresentations of the evidence". It just doesn't work that way. Because there is a team of prosecutors and investigators and the legal system as a whole that would fight hard to show that there were misrepresentations made in the appeal, rather than throw in the towel via an Alford plea deal that frees three baby killers.
See, you appear to insist that no judge or prosecutor would accept such a plea deal if they knew the defendant was innocent, but have no problem believing a judge and prosecutors would accept such a deal, freeing the defendants, if they knew they were guilty. That is illogical, IMO.
But you see, this is the kind of circular argument I'm talking about. It's not a logical debate, IMO, much of the time. Too much anger and too many unfounded statements on both sides, sort of screaming (it seems to me) about "misrepresentations of the evidence", "beyond a reasonable doubt" or how "the convictions will be overturned when the real killers are investigated, tried and convicted."
But look at this! Now I'm going down the rabbit hole myself and that's not what I want to do. I respect all of you posters on here and totally understand both sides. I just wanted to clear something up, not get sucked in!!! I guess I can see how easy that is to do!!!
But I am always interested in new evidence on either side, and what the three are up to. I found a long article recently about Echols in Salem, MA. I wonder if it was posted to the finally free thread?