Title: Forensic Ethics Prosecutors
1Forensic EthicsProsecutors Obligations
- Michael E. Keasler
- Judge, Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
2Before Brady
- Mooney v. Holohan, 294 U.S. 103 (1935).
- It is a requirement that cannot be deemed to
be satisfied by mere notice and hearing if a
State has contrived a conviction through the
pretense of a trial which in truth is but used as
a means of depriving a defendant of liberty
through a deliberate deception of court and jury
by the presentation of testimony known to be
perjured. Such a contrivance by a State to
procure the conviction and imprisonment of a
defendant is as inconsistent with the rudimentary
demands of justice as the obtaining of a like
result by intimidation.
3Before Brady (contd.)
- Pyle v. Kansas, 317 U.S. 213 (1942)
- Petitioners papers are inexpertly drawn, but
they do set forth allegations that his
imprisonment resulted from perjured testimony,
knowingly used by the State authorities to obtain
his conviction, and from the deliberate
suppression by those same authorities of evidence
favorable to him. These allegations sufficiently
charge a deprivation of rights guaranteed by the
Federal Constitution, and, if proven, would
entitle petitioner to release from his present
custody. They are supported by the exhibits
referred to above, and nowhere are they refuted
or denied.
4Pyle v. Kansas (contd.)
- The record of petitioners conviction, while
regular on its face, manifestly does not
controvert the charges that perjured testimony
was used, and that favorable evidence was
suppressed with the knowledge of the Kansas
authorities. No determination of the verity of
these allegations appears to have been made. The
case is therefore remanded for further
proceedings.
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6Before Brady (contd.)
- Napue v. Illinois, 360 U.S. 264 (1959).
- Principal states witness testified in response
to prosecutors question that he had not received
any promise of consideration in return for his
testimony. - Prosecutor knew that this statement was false
but did nothing to correct it.
7Napue v. Illinois (contd.)
- It is of no consequence that the falsehood
bore upon the witnesss credibility rather than
directly upon the defendants guilt. A lie is a
lie, no matter what its subject, and if it is in
any way relevant to the case, the district
attorney has the responsibility and duty to
correct what he knows to be false and elicit the
truth. (unanimous opinion)
8Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963)
- In Napue v. Illinois, we extended the test
formulated in Mooney v. Holohan when we said,
The same result obtains when the State, although
not soliciting false evidence, allows it to go
uncorrected when it appears. - We now hold that the suppression of
evidence favorable to an accused upon request
violates due process where the evidence is
material either to guilt or to punishment,
irrespective of the good faith of the
prosecution.
9U.S. v. Agurs, 417 U.S. 97 (1976) (7-2 decision)
- Defendant claimed self-defense in murder trial
- Murder victim had a record for assault and
carrying a deadly weapon. - Prosecutor did not disclose this fact to
defense. - But defense didnt ask for any evidence of
victims prior convictions.
10U.S. v. Agurs (contd.)
- Brady rule applies in three quite different
situations - Prosecutors case includes perjured testimony and
prosecution knew, or should have known, of the
perjury. In these cases, the Court applies a
strict standard of materiality, not just because
of prosecutorial misconduct, but because they
corrupt the truth-seeking function of trial
process.
11U.S. v. Agurs (contd.)
- (2) Cases characterized by a pretrial request for
specific evidence (as in Brady). In Brady, the
Court held that the suppression of one of the
co-defendants statements (all of which were
requested by Bradys counsel) deprived him of due
process, noting specifically that the statement
was material. Implicit in the requirement of
materiality is the concern that the suppressed
evidence might have affected the trials outcome.
12Note
- Supreme Court granted cert in Brady to decide
whether constitutional violation vitiated the
entire trial. - Held that he should only receive a new trial on
punishment but since the evidence was not
material on guilt (according to the Maryland
Court of Appeals), the entire trial was not
lacking in due process.
13U.S. v. Agurs (contd.)
- In Brady, the request was specific. It gave
the prosecutor notice of exactly what the defense
desired. Although there is, of course, no duty
to provide defense counsel with unlimited
discovery of everything known to the prosecutor,
if the subject matter of such a request is
material, or indeed if a substantial basis for
claiming materiality exists, it is reasonable to
require the prosecutor to respond either by
producing the information or by submitting the
problem to the trial judge. When the prosecutor
receives a specific and relevant request, the
failure to make any response is seldom, if ever
excusable.
14U.S. v. Agurs (contd.)
- (3) In many cases, however, exculpatory
information in the possession of the prosecutor
may be unknown to defense counsel. In such a
situation, he may make no request at all, or
possibly ask for all Brady material of for
anything exculpatory. Such a request really
gives the prosecutor no better notice than if no
request is made. We conclude that there is no
significant difference between these two
situations.
15U.S. v. Agurs (contd.)
- We now consider whether the prosecutor has any
constitutional duty to volunteer exculpatory
matter to the defense, and , if so, what standard
of materiality gives rise to that duty.
16U.S. v. Agurs (contd.)
- Because we are dealing with an inevitably
imprecise standard, and because the significance
of an item of evidence can seldom be predicted
accurately until the entire record is complete,
the prudent prosecutor will resolve doubtful
questions in favor of disclosure. But to
reiterate a critical point, the prosecutor will
not have violate his constitutional duty of
disclosure unless his omission is of sufficient
significance to result in the denial of the
defendants right to a fair trial.
17U.S. v. Agurs (contd.)
- As to the argument that the prosecutor should
turn over anything that might affect the jurys
verdict - A jurys appraisal of a case might be
affected by an improper or trivial consideration
as well as by evidence giving rise to a
legitimate doubt on the issue of guilt. If
everything that might influence a jury must be
disclosed, the only way a prosecutor could
discharge his duty would be top allow complete
discovery of his files a matter of routine
practice.. The constitution surely does not
demand that much. The mere possibility that an
item of undisclosed information might have helped
the defense, or might have affected the outcome
of the trial, does not establish materiality in
the constitutional sense.
18U.S. v. Agurs (contd.)
- Nor do we believe the constitutional
obligation is measured by the moral culpability,
or the willfulness, of the prosecutor. If
evidence highly probative of innocence is in his
file, he should be presumed to recognize its
significance even if he has actually overlooked
it. Conversely, if evidence actually has no
probative significance at all, no purpose would
be served by requiring a new trial because an
inept prosecutor incorrectly believed he was
suppressing a fact that would be vital to the
defense. If the suppression results in
constitutional error, it is because of the
character of the evidence, not the character of
the prosecutor.
19U.S. v. Agurs (contd.)
- The proper standard of materiality must
reflect our overriding concern with the justice
of the finding of guilt. Such a finding is only
permissible if supported by evidence establishing
guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. It necessarily
follows that if the omitted evidence creates a
reasonable doubt that did not otherwise exist,
constitutional error has been committed. This
means that the omission must be evaluated in the
context on the entire record. If there is no
reasonable doubt whether or not the additional
evidence is considered, there is no justification
for a new trial. On the other hand, if the
verdict is already of questionable validity,
additional evidence of relatively minor
importance might be sufficient to create a
reasonable doubt.
20U.S. v. Agurs (contd.)
- Since the arrest record was not requested and
did not even arguably give rise to any inference
of perjury, since after considering it in the
context of the entire record, the trial judge
remained convinced of respondents guilt beyond a
reasonable doubt, and since we are satisfied that
his firsthand appraisal of the record was
thorough and entirely reasonable, we hold that
the prosecutors failure to tender the record
to the defense did not deprive respondent of a
fair trial as guaranteed by the Due Process
Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
21U.S. v. Bagley, 473 U.S. 667 (1985)
- 9th Circuit case
- Bagley indicted for federal narcotics and
firearms violations - Lawyers filed discovery motion asking for info
about any deals, promises or inducements made to
witnesses in exchange for testimony - Bagley waived jury, tried before judge in 1977
- Found guilty on narcotics not guilty on firearms
22U.S. v. Bagley (contd.)
- 1980 --- Bagley discovered that ATF had made a
deal and signed a contract with 2 govt. witnesses
to pay them in exchange for working undercover
and providing info about crimes committed by
Bagley. - Prosecutor testified that he didnt know about
the deals and would have disclosed them if he had
known about them.
23U.S. v. Bagley (contd.)
- Trial judge found beyond a reasonable doubt
- If info had been disclosed before trial, it
would not have changed his verdict - Almost all these witnesses testimony dealt with
firearms charge wherein Bagley was acquitted - As to narcotics issues, these witnesses
testimony tended to be favorable to Bagley - Therefore, the impeachment evidence would not
have been helpful to Bagley and would not have
affected the trials outcome. - Therefore, all relief denied.
24U.S. v. Bagley (contd.)
- 9th Circuit reversed Supreme Court granted
cert. - Holding
- Prosecutors failure to assist defendants by
disclosing evidence that might be helpful on
cross examination is a constitutional error only
if the evidence is material under the Brady rule
and - Undisclosed evidence is material for purposes of
that rule only if it is reasonably probable that
the outcome of the trial would have been
different if the evidence had been disclosed. - Therefore, the 9th Circuit is reversed.
(surprise, surprise!)
25Arizona v. Youngblood, 488 U.S. 109 (1988)
- In sexual assault case, police did not properly
refrigerate underwear and t-shirt that had DNA
evidence on them. - Expert testimony at trial revealed that timely
performance of tests on properly preserved
evidence could have produced results that might
have exonerated defendant who claimed mistaken
identity. - No bad faith on the part of the state.
- Jury found him guilty anyway.
26Arizona v. Youngblood (contd.)
- Supreme Court held
- Unless defendant can show bad faith on the part
of the police, the states failure to preserve
potentially useful evidence --- of which no more
can be said than that it could have been
subjected to tests, the results of which might
have exonerated the defendant --- does not
constitute a constitutional violation - Accordingly, no due process violation occurred
here since - the failure to refrigerate could at worst be
described as negligent - none of this information was concealed at trial
and - the evidence --- such as it was --- was made
available to the defendants expert, who declined
to perform any tests on the samples.
27Kyles v. Whitley, 514 U.S. 419 (1995)
- Capital case --- Death is different.
- 5-4 decision
- Majority Souter, joined by Stevens, OConnor,
Ginsburg, and Breyer - Dissent Scalia, joined by Rehnquist, Kennedy,
and Thomas - now retired
28Kyles v. Whitley (contd.)
- Majority
- Accused was entitled to a new trial because the
prosecutor didnt disclose favorable information
to the accused concerning his possible innocence - The net effect of the withheld evidence raised
a reasonable probability that the evidences
disclosure to competent counsel would have
produced a different result - The states disclosure obligation turns on the
cumulative effect of all such suppressed
evidence - The prosecutor remains responsible for gauging
that effect regardless of any failure of the
police to bring favorable evidence to the
prosecutors attention. - Good faith-bad faith irrelevant.
29Kyles v. Whitley (contd.)
- Under this case, a reasonable probability
means that the likelihood of a different result
is great enough to undermine confidence in the
outcome of the trial.
30Note
- Retreat from Bagley
- Very complex, involved facts.
- Capital case
- Sharply divided court
- Four of the nine now gone
- Kennedy voted with dissent
-
31Connick v. Thompson, 131 S. Ct. 1350 (2011)
- Prosecutor suppressed exculpatory evidence, and
defendant was convicted. After this was
discovered years later, defendant was granted new
trials and acquitted. - Defendant then filed a federal 1983 suit against
New Orleans District Attorney Harry Connick, Sr.
for failure to provide Brady training for
prosecutors and was awarded a 14 million
verdict.
32Connick v. Thompson (contd.)
- U.S. Supreme Court reversed.
- 5-4 Decision
- Prosecutorial immunity
- Withering questioning of Connicks appellate
counsel - Wake-up call
33Smith v. Cain, 132 S. Ct. 181 (2012)
- 8-1 decision (Thomas dissenting)
- Another case out of New Orleans
- Evidence impeaching an eyewitnesss testimony
may not be material if the States other evidence
is strong enough to sustain confidence in the
verdict. Here, however, the eyewitness testimony
was the only evidence linking Smith to the crime,
and the eyewitnesss undisclosed statements
contradicted his testimony. The eyewitnesss
statements were plainly material, and the States
failure to disclose those statements to the
defense thus violated Brady.
34Recent Texas Cases
- Ex Parte Miles, 359 S.W.3d 647 (Tex.Crim.App.
2012) - Exculpatory evidence held by police, but unknown
to prosecutor (two undisclosed police reports) - Evidence found to be material under Kyles v.
Whitley - Lack of prosecutorial bad faith is not
controlling. - Evidence was definitely admissible for
impeachment. - 8-0 decision
35Pena v. State 353 S.W.3d 797 (Tex.Crim.App. 2011)
- The audio portion of a videotape of the
defendants traffic stop was withheld from the
defendant and his attorney. - It contained statements that were clearly
exculpatory - The defense did not and could not have known of
its existence the prosecutor affirmatively
represented that it did not exist. - The prosecutor either knew or clearly should
have known of its existence.
36Pena v. State (contd.)
- Brady violation new trial ordered.
- Unanimous decision
37The Good Prosecutor
-
- "Nothing better can come out of this meeting of
law enforcement officers than a rededication to
the spirit of fair play and decency that should
animate the federal prosecutor. Your positions
are of such independence and importance that
while you are being diligent, strict, and
vigorous in law enforcement you can also afford
to be just. Although the government technically
loses its case, it has really won if justice has
been done
38The Good Prosecutor (contd.)
-
- The qualities of a good prosecutor are as
elusive and impossible to define as those which
mark a gentleman. And those who need to be told
would not understand it anyway. A sensitiveness
to fair play and sportsmanship is perhaps the
best protection against the abuse of power, and
the citizens safety lies in the prosecutor who
tempers zeal with human kindness, who seeks truth
and not victims, who serves the law and not
factional purposes, and who approaches his task
with humility. - ---Robert H. Jackson,
- U.S. Attorney General, 1940
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