The
Police State Abolishes the Trial
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Recently
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.: Obama
Blinks
Several years
ago, the police entered the office of a young professor at a reputable
university and arrested him for an online crime. They took the professor
away, booked him, and then offered him a deal: admit guilt and get
off easy. The professor said to the few people to whom he was permitted
to speak that this was crazy because he was innocent. His lawyer
warned him: fight this and you could get life; admit guilt and you
will get a suspended sentence. He took the deal. It was a trick.
Now he languishes in jail, his life wrecked as far into the future
as he can see.
This doesn’t
happen in America, does it? Yes, it does. Not only that, it is increasingly
the norm. Those raised on a steady diet of courtroom television
shows believe that they are true to the way justice is meted out.
This is completely naive. Trials in federal criminal cases are rare.
Nine in ten cases are settled in pleas like the above case. Only
3 percent of the cases go to trial. Among those that go to trial,
the defendant wins once in every 212 times.
What this means
is that there is no way out for the accused. The prosecutors have
all the power. Not even the judge has discretion because lawmakers
have mostly taken that liberality away in the name of cracking down
on crime. This happened all through the 1980s and 1990s, and the
prosecutorial dictatorship has entrenched itself to become the norm
since 2001. For the last ten years, the police state has had free
rein.
It was not
"liberals" or "conservatives" who did this.
It was both parties acting with massive support of the American
public, as tyrants in the public sector licked their chops. This
was a result of security-minded madness, and even now hardly anyone
cares.
Today, every
single citizen, no matter how free he or she may feel in daily life,
is in reality a sitting duck. You can be made to disappear. There
is essentially no way you can escape once the feds sweep you into
their net. There is no justice. The total states of the past used
to pretend to have trial-based convictions. The total state of the
present doesn’t even bother. It just puts a sack over your head
and takes you away.
What happens
then? Your loved ones cry. They try to move close by to where you
are holed up, typically several states away. They are bankrupted
and ruined. And what of your coworkers, your friends, your social
set? They might want to help. They might feel bad for you. But the
fact is that you pleaded guilty, and you have not even a chance
to tell your side of the story. For all anyone knows, you got exactly
what you deserved. So they do the only thing they can do: they forget
about you.
And there you
languish until the system decides you are taking up too much room.
Perhaps it is ten years. Maybe twenty. At some point, the doors
open again and you are free. But you are ruined: bitter, talentless,
emotionally changed, physically debilitated, and – if you are young
and slim – gang raped. There is no point in contacting the friends
that abandoned you. Members of your family have moved on; they have
lives, too, and had to live them out. In terms of employment, you
are a washed up ex-con.
The US has
the largest prison population in the world – 2.3 million people.
That’s more than 1 in 100 people. That’s more than the population
of Latvia or Slovenia. That’s nearly the entire population of Nevada.
That’s Wyoming, DC, North Dakota, and Vermont combined. If the prison
population had Congressional representatives, they would have four
seats.
These
people are politically, socially, culturally, and economically invisible.
How many are actually guilty? We can’t know. How many could be let
out today to make a wonderful contribution to building a productive
society? We don’t know. How many are completely nonviolent, not
even guilty by any normal standard of law but only guilty according
to the letter of the current dictatorship? Probably a majority.
Perhaps a large majority. In
the New Testament, visiting prisoners is equated, as a good deed,
to visiting the sick. And we do not think of the sick as guilty.
Yet the rise
and entrenchment of the American police state are rarely questioned.
Public opinion is mostly happy with the whole thing. There can never
be too much prosecutorial power, never too many police, never too
many prisons, never sentences that are too long. No one says: "We
should not be so tough." The entire ethos is the opposite.
A rare story such as the one in the NYT
recently is too little to wake anyone up.
How
could this have happened in America? Well, looking back, it seems
that it all stems from a single flaw: the belief that the most essential
institution in society is the state that protects us from criminality
and must maintain a monopoly over justice. Some of the greatest
defenders of freedom otherwise have been happy to make this one
concession to the state. And this one concession is now a major
source of our undoing as a free people.
There are reforms
that we can make. No more plea bargains in federal cases. Restore
basic human rights. Give judges and juries back their discretion
to evaluate each case, and permit them to rule on the merit of the
law, too, in the common-law tradition. A push back to grant basic
Constitutional protections would be a good first step.
However, in
the end, what is really needed is a fundamental rethinking of the
notion that the state rather than private markets must monopolize
the provision of justice and security. This is the fatal conceit.
No power granted to the state goes un-abused. This power, among
all possible powers, might be the most important one to take away
from the state.
September
27, 2011
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail], former editorial assistant to Ludwig von Mises and congressional
chief of staff to Ron Paul, is founder and chairman of the Mises
Institute, executor for the estate of Murray N. Rothbard, and
editor of LewRockwell.com.
See his
books.
Copyright
© 2011 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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