HOME . . . . . . CLASSES . . . . . . PUBLICATIONS . . . . . . VITA . . . . . . . BLOG . . . . . . LINKS

Cop in the Hood

Never mind "The Wire." Here is the real thing. --The Wall Street Journal


Buy Cop in the Hood from Amazon.com


Cop in the Hood is an explosive insider’s story of what it is really like to be a police officer on the front lines of the war on drugs. Harvard-trained sociologist Peter Moskos became a cop in Baltimore’s roughest neighborhood —the Eastern District, also the location for the critically acclaimed HBO drama The Wire. He provides an unforgettable window into this world that outsiders never see. Those who read it will never view the badge the same way.

Showing posts with label prosecution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prosecution. Show all posts

Saturday, April 19, 2008

It's all about the numbers

There's a quota system in place for attorneys working in the office of U.S. Attorney Thomas P. O'Brien in Los Angeles.

As reported in an article in the L.A. Times , O'Brien says: "This office does not and never will have quotas for its criminal prosecutors.... To suggest that any attorney in this office must charge a certain number of defendants each year or face discipline is simply not true."

To bad he's lying. Or at least that's what attorneys working for him say.

The problem I have is the idea that our court system should be "efficient." A factory should be efficient. A bicycle racer should be efficient. Justice is not supposed to efficient. It's supposed to be fair. In the real world, prosecutorial "efficiency" is just another word for plea-bargain. And a plea-bargain is not justice.

In this case, the motivation seems to be that more prosecuted cases equals more federal funding. The Prison-Industrial Complex in action.