woolfe9999
Diamond Member
- Mar 28, 2005
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That's a very good point. We want to think the DA doesn't have the same 'issues', but it's also a relatively secret, secluded process.
There are various ways minorities get taken afdvantage of. I recall 'insider stories' of car salesman who really treat blacks much worse and overcharge.
Speaking of overcharging, I'd sure hope the same tyoe if taking advantage isn't as systemic for DA's. The capital punishment, sentencing, and other statistics for blacks have been terrible, though.
Well with car salesmen, the bigger problem is the way they treat women actually. Believe it or not, this still goes on. One of these guys started in on my wife one time when we were shopping for a car, telling her she doesn't know what she is talking about and can he please speak to her husband. The poor sod didn't know who he was dealing with. Suffice it to say that he was pretty much a eunuch by the time she was through with him.
Amusing personal anecdotes aside, DA's have immense discretion over criminal defendants. They decide whether to charge the defendant under the most severe statute or some lesser statute, and whether or not to add boatloads of lesser but related charges. For example, two guys are caught selling pot within 100 yards of a school - one gets charged under a special statute for selling drugs within a 100 yards of a school, and get 3 years, and the other is charged with generic trafficking, and gets 3 months. It happens every day and this discretion is, for the most part, totally unreviewable. The DA also, of course, decides whether or not to ask for the death penalty, and determines what sort of plea deals are offered to defendants. Once you have been arrested, your ass and future are largely in the hands of DA. In a sense, they have more power than judge or jury, because they decide what risks you will face in court before you even get there.
When the SCOTUS temporarily threw out the death penalty in Furman v. Georgia, if I recall correctly, it was based on data about racial discrimination in application of the death penalty, and DA charging discretion was one of the data points.
- wolf