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1 2/11/00
Pressing Issue Of Justice
Paul
Craig Roberts
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
The American criminal
justice system is so severely broken that it is not capable of getting the right
people in jail and keeping them there. Earlier this month a Maryland state
undercover agent, Edward M. Toatley, was murdered. The suspect, Kofi Apea
Orleans-Lindsay, "a native of Ghana" according to The Washington Post,
is a drug dealer free on probation despite having failed to show up for eight
probation appointments, 61 drug tests, and a substance abuse treatment program.
For violating his terms of probation, Orleans-Lindsay faces 10 years on one
charge and four years on another, but the Maryland Division of Parole and
Probation could not get around to picking him up. Now he has killed a policeman.
As of this time of writing, he has not been apprehended.
Probation officials are
not pleased that a person under their supervision killed an officer. But they
plead case overload, not enough money. What, then, is the system doing putting
more criminals on probation than the system can supervise?
While Orleans-Lindsay and
his many counterparts run free, 200,000 innocents languish in prisons, victims
of incompetent or corrupt prosecutors, police and lawyers. Two of them are
Christophe Yves Gaynor and Carl H. Graf.
Gaynor coached a
skateboard team in Arlington, Va. He took the team to a competition in New York.
While there, a team member attempted to purchase drugs. Enraged, Gaynor
threatened to tell the boy's parents. But the boy struck first by claiming that
Gaynor sexually molested him.
The team knew different,
but Gaynor's Arlington trail was marked by many irregularities. Maneuvers
prevented defense witnesses from testifying in Gaynor's behalf. The feminist
prosecutor sent an innocent person to jail, where he languishes, with no
evidence against him except a self-serving accusation by a misbehaving boy.
Graf is a New Hampshire
case. He is guilty of befriending a woman's neglected son. According to Graf,
when he refused the woman's sexual approaches, she retaliated by charging him
with sexually abusing the boy. The only evidence in the case is the accusation.
Graf has been in prison
many years. He is not eligible for parole, because he maintains his innocence.
In the U.S. criminal justice system, only the guilty can be paroled. Like Kofi
Apea Orleans-Lindsay.
There is no more pressing
problem for our new president than the breakdown in the American justice system.
In Wenatchee, Wash., 25 innocent adults were imprisoned on fabricated child sex
abuse charges during 1994-95 for no other reasons than to justify the budget for
the local office of Child Protective Services, a division of the Department of
Human Resources.
A local pastor, Robert
Roberson, and his wife had God's courage to stand up to the witch hunt. He got
the story out to columnists, whose articles attracted the interest of
investigative reporters and eventually brought in attorneys from the University
of Washington Law School's Innocence Project.
Twenty-four of the 25
wrongfully convicted have been released, and the case of the last, Michael Rose,
went before the state court of appeals on Nov. 7.
The Wenatchee mayor, the
Chelan County sheriff, the Wenatchee police chief, and the detective, Bob Perez,
who coerced and framed his victims, have all departed the scene, tarnished but
unpunished. But the CPS officials and prosecutors who made possible the gross
miscarriage of justice are still in place.
Prosecutor Gary Riesen
has fought tooth and claw against court ordered releases by threatening to
appeal each case through every step to the state supreme court. This adds years
to the incarceration of the innocents. Turning this to his advantage, Mr. Riesen
then protected his conviction rate by offering to withdraw his appeals and agree
to the releases if each of the wrongfully convicted would admit to one sex
offender charge that would be covered by time served.
Many agreed to end their
travail, without understanding that the release agreement made them technically
a sex offender, a designation that prevents them from regaining their children
from foster care.
In Washington, as in
Massachusetts with the Amirault case, in New Hampshire with Graf, in Virginia
with Gaynor, and in every other state, it is impossible to correct injustice.
The "justice system" protects itself to the hilt. Wenatchee innocents
gained release by admitting to something they did not do and giving up their
children.
Mr. Riesen will not be
indicted for wrongful prosecution. Police turn deaf ears to charges from Donna
Everett, Mr. Perez's chief child witness, now 16, who says Mr. Perez broke both
her arms (reported as a sledding accident) in coercing her to make false charges
against Wenatchee adults. The real child abuser has walked away a free man
protected by a self-serving "justice system."
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