Originally posted by: shira
Originally posted by: Athena
This argument really bothers me; a plea agreement between lawyers is not binding on a judge. All plea bargains are subject to approval of the court and nothing is binding until the judge lowers the gavel. The idea that a plea agreement is an inviolable perogative of the defendant is misguided. Judges ignore plea agreements (and in some cases jury verdicts) quite frequently. Polansky's recourse was to submit to a trial and appeal if he was not satisfied with the result.
There are thousands of people in prisons across the country who a) got a worse deal that they were expecting out of a deal and/or who fled the jurisdiction while awaiting sentencing and ended up getting worse punishment as a result. The main difference between those folks and Polansky is that he had enough money to flee the country and continue with his life. I just don't see how anyone could think that he is somehow entitled to better treatment that meted out to the average lawbreaker.
You're a little off in your analysis. If a judge agrees to parameters of the sentence pursuant to a guilty plea, then THAT is part of the agreement, too. Yes, the judge can change his mind until the gavel falls, but in that case no agreement exists and a motion to retract the guilty plea would automatically be granted.
Note also that if a judge DOES renege on the agreement subsequent to a guilty plea, he has potentially compromised the prosecution of the case, since the retracted guilty plea is potentially highly prejudicial. For a high-profile defendant such as Polanski, there might be no recourse but to dismiss.
Another aspect of a plea agreement is that the accused and his legal team may "cooperate" with the prosecution in ways that close off viable avenues of defense. If a judge then unilaterally vacates the agreement, the accused's due process options may have been compromised.
Polanski is entitled to no more than the same treatment as anyone else. He SHOULD be prosecuted on the flight charge. Attempting to sentence or prosecute him on the sex charges is, I believe, going to be very problematical.